Luxe Beat Magazine JUNE 2015 | Page 31

Travel Happy Place Means a Happy YOU “We’re known for our service now and smiling employees,” Portillo continued. “Anyone in the hotel business can smile at a guest but it’s irrelevant if that person is not happy inside. We have a great team here. We have lunch together, do activities together and help each other out. And we send our guests to places chosen only by us.” The staff knows the latest about leisure, culture, business and gastronomy in Madrid, a city famous for its late nights, avant-garde dining and just plain fun. Their choices come from an insider’s point of view, away from common places with a goal to anticipate visitors’ tastes and preferences and adapt to them. Management believes making the difference in a guest’s hotel stay lies in paying close attention to detail. Once the name was settled upon and amenities intact, laudable interior designer Lázaro Rosa-Violán created a style that mixes an English private club with Chinese-style mosaics and impeccable contemporary art. “We wanted to combine art history with our personal history,” said Portillo. Colors throughout are a vivid blue and white, which are the brand colors of the Palladium Hotel Group, based in Ibiza, Spain and the parent company to Ayre Hoteles. Vintage regional maps of Spain, and especially Madrid, are throughout the hotel, with some etched on glass doors. “It feels like a personal house when a guest walks in,” Portillo said, summing up the reception area that is inside the hotel, not at the front entrance. That decision removed the mental barrier of walking into a hotel. And what a reception area it is: small and welcoming, complete with a back wall of vintage suitcases painted white. Two small elevators are disguised behind a wall of blue and white tiles. The intimate space allows the reception staff to see who’s entering the elevators. There’s no other access to the rooms. Chesterfield couches and fabricated mounted trophies, especially the rhinoceros over the fireplace, accent the Blue Lounge. The former book store became the Coctelería El Padrino bar and kept its original façade and signage. It’s at the front of the hotel, perfect for foot traffic that doesn’t go through the hotel. Inside the bar the walls are wood, some lined with books, to create that inviting ambiance only a great bar can exude. It’s a buzzing spot for locals and tourists, especially with the nineteenth-century Teatro Infanta Isabel across the street. Getting the nod from The New York Times soon after opening, as a featured bar to visit in Madrid is an unbeatable accolade, combined with the hotel’s consistent top ranking on TripAdvisor. Dining at Only YOU translates to an innovative à la carte menu with an edge, created by a young team led by 31