Room Mate ValentinavsBoutique Hotel de Cortes
Both properties are recommended by expert writers. Overall, Boutique Hotel de Cortes is preferred by most professionals compared to Room Mate Valentina. Boutique Hotel de Cortes ranks #33 in Mexico City with approval from 4 sources such as DK Eyewitness, Lonely Planet and Rough Guide.
Room Mate Valentina
Amberes 27, Zona Rosa City 06600
From $55/night
- Bar/Lounge
- Free Internet
- Room Service
- Laundry Service
- Concierge
- Restaurant
Fodor's
"The decor is minimalist and quirky: walls are awash with electric colors, the furniture is asymmetrical, the accents are futuristic." Full review
Travel + Leisure
"Magenta sofas and textured wall patterns add a playful touch to the 62 sleek, white rooms. Articles Mexico City's Stylish New Venues." Full review
Gayot
"The hotel acts as an in-the-know Mexico City resident who can offer stylish accommodations and a working knowledge of the city's cultural hotspots."
Oyster
Mid-Range
"Room Mate Valentina is the Mexico City outpost of the trendy Room Mate chain which caters to hip, young travelers who have aged out of the hostel scene but still want to save cash." Full review
Jetsetter
"Streamlined design with a futuristic edge in the Zona Rosa, one of Mexico City’s coolest micro-neighborhoods." Full review
Boutique Hotel de Cortes
Av. Hidalgo 85, esq. Reforma, Centro Historico, Frente Alameda Central City 06300
From $92/night
- Bar/Lounge
- Free Internet
- Room Service
- Free Breakfast
- Laundry Service
- Concierge
Lonely Planet
"Formerly a hospice for Augustinian pilgrims, this boutique hotel offers tasteful rooms and suites encircling a lovely 17th-century baroque patio." Full review
Rough Guide
"Very classy boutique hotel in a building dating from 1620, but with rooms that are super-modern and stylish, with wooden deck floors throughout (even in the shower)."
DK Eyewitness
"With small, simple rooms, the hotel is located across from Alameda Central near the Museo Franz Mayer."
Star Service
"This delightful new design diva is being heralded as the first hotel in the Americas (read: oldest), an ornate vestige of colonial rule that opened in 1620 as a refuge for monks." Full review