Hotels in Los Angeles
In sprawling Los Angeles, location is everything. The neighborhood you choose as a base can make or break your vacation. If you plan to spend your days at the beach but stay Downtown, for example, you're going to lose a lot of valuable relaxation time on the freeway. For business travelers, choosing a location ...
In sprawling Los Angeles, location is everything. The neighborhood you choose as a base can make or break your vacation. If you plan to spend your days at the beach but stay Downtown, for example, you're going to lose a lot of valuable relaxation time on the freeway. For business travelers, choosing a location is easy: Pick a hotel near your work event -- don't get on the freeways if you don't have to. For vacationers, though, the decision about where to stay is more difficult. Consider where you want to spend most of your time before you commit yourself to a base. But wherever you stay, count on doing a good deal of driving -- no hotel in Los Angeles is convenient to everything.
The relatively smog-free beach communities such as Santa Monica and Venice are understandably popular with visitors -- just about everybody loves to stay at the beach. Book ahead because hotels fill up quickly, especially in summer.
If they're not at one of the beach communities, most visitors stay on the city's Westside, a short drive from the beach and close to most of L.A.'s colorful sights. The city's most elegant and expensive accommodations are in Beverly Hills; a few of the hotels in these neighborhoods, such as the Beverly Hills Hotel, have become visitor attractions unto themselves. As well as being one of the focal points of L.A. nightlife, West Hollywood is also home to the greatest range and breadth of hotels, from $300-plus-per-night boutique spots to affordably priced motels.
There are fewer hotels in Hollywood than you might expect. Accommodations are generally moderately priced and well maintained but unspectacular. Centrally located between Downtown and Beverly Hills, just a stone's throw from Universal Studios, Hollywood makes a convenient base if you're planning to do a lot of exploring, but it has more tourists and is less visually appealing than some other neighborhoods; the trendier parts; however, are quite congested at night.
With the exception of a couple quirky boutique hotels, Downtown lodging options are generally business-oriented, but thanks to direct Metro (L.A.'s subway) connections to Hollywood and Universal Studios, the demographic has begun to shift. The top hotels offer excellent deals on weekend packages. But chances are good that Downtown doesn't embody the picture of L.A. you've been dreaming of; you need a coastal or Westside base for that.
Families might want to head to Universal City to be near Universal Studios, or straight to Anaheim and Disneyland. Pasadena offers historical charm, small-town ambience, easy access to Downtown L.A., and Stepford-Wives beauty, but driving to the beach can take forever.
Rack Rates -- The rates quoted in the listings are the rack rates -- the maximum rates that a hotel charges for rooms. But rack rates are only guidelines, and there are often many ways around them. Always check each hotel's website for package deals and special Internet rates.
The hotels listed in this guide have provided their best estimates for 2012. Be aware that rates can change at any time and are subject to availability, seasonal fluctuations, and plain ol' increases.
The prices given in this guide do not include state and city hotel taxes, which run from 12% to 17%, depending upon which municipality the hotel is based in. Most hotels in densely populated parts of the city charge for parking (with in-and-out privileges). Also, some provide a free airport shuttle; if you're not renting a car, check to see what your hotel offers before you call a cab.
Pet Policies -- I indicate those hotels that generally accept pets. However, these policies may have limitations, such as weight and breed restrictions; may require a hefty deposit and/or a signed waiver against damages; and may be revoked at any time. Always inquire when booking if you're bringing Bowser along -- never just show up with a pet in tow.
Bookstore
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Available as paperback
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Ace Hotel Downtown Los Angeles
Note: This hotel is permanently closed as of January 2024The Ace has won awards for its decision to rehab an old 1920s office building rather than pull it down and start anew—in L.A., this kind of thinking is revolutionary. Fortunately in this case, it also meant the hotel…$$$ -
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Beach House Hotel Hermosa Beach
Staying at this luxurious hotel, tucked between Redondo Beach and Manhattan Beach, is more like visiting a wealthy friend’s beach house in Newport (R.I., not CA). In fact, the breezy split-level studio suites are individually owned and outfitted to meet every need, including a…$$$ -
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Best Western Hollywood Hills Hotel
This basic chain hotel has had some work done, as they say in Hollywood, and the stylish lobby is a delightful surprise after seeing the clunky (though also rehabbed), 1950s facade. The best rooms are in back, away from the traffic noise; they overlook the pool and have views of the…$ -
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Bissell House Bed & Breakfast
The grand, three-story 1887 Victorian-Craftsman hybrid where the Bissell vacuum company heiress once lived on “Millionaire’s Row,” tucked behind hedges on Orange Grove Avenue, is now a classic B&B with a full complement of antiques and chintz. Each room has a different layout and…$$ -
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Cal Mar Hotel Suites
This small hotel, two blocks from the ocean and a 10-minute walk from the Third Avenue Promenade, shares a residential neighborhood with the Fairmont Miramar and the Huntley—and the comparison stops there. If you need to be near the beach but can’t pay luxury prices, this is probably…$$ -
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Carlyle Inn
On an uneventful stretch of Robertson Boulevard just south of Beverly Hills, this four-story inn is one of L.A.'s best midpriced finds. Making the most of a small lot, architects have created an attractive interior courtyard, which almost every room faces, that gives the property a…$$ -
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Casa del Mar
One of Santa Monica’s only hotels right on the beach, this 1926 former Italian Renaissance Revival beachclub has a whiff of a European palace about it. The property was converted into an opulent hotel by the owners of adjacent Shutters on the Beach in 1999, and they did not skimp on…$$$ -
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Chamberlain West Hollywood
The greatest asset of this modern, four-story boutique hotel, a converted apartment building, is its location on a leafy residential street two blocks from both the Sunset Strip and Santa Monica Boulevard. A close second is the generous size of its rooms, each a spacious suite with…$$ -
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Channel Road Inn
This rare West Coast example of a shingled Colonial Revival house, built in 1910, is tucked into woodsy Santa Monica Canyon, north of the city limits. It was restored and opened as a B&B in 1989, and it is simply gorgeous. The gracious living room where afternoon tea, wine and…$$ -
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Chateau Marmont
Everyone, including the Chateau Marmont’s own PR staff, is fond of repeating Columbia Pictures founder Harry Cohn’s 1939 quip, “If you must get in trouble, do it at the Chateau Marmont.” Tucked as discreetly as possible, for a hotel modeled after a French castle, into a curve above…$$$ -
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Élan Hotel
Just a block from the Beverly Center and a mile from Farmers Market and The Grove, the Élan is ideal for visitors who want to save their money for shopping—but its location at the convergence of Beverly Hills and West Hollywood also makes it one of the city’s best values for any…$$ -
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Fairmont Miramar Hotel & Bungalows
It isn’t as intimate as some of its competitors, rooms are smallish, and its perch on a high bluff across Pacific Coast Highway from the beach makes it something less than a resort—yet this hotel’s dedication to guests’ privacy has garnered favor with Hollywood celebrities since…$$$ -
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Georgian Hotel
A pristine Art Deco masterpiece, this eight-story ocean-view (but not quite beachfront) hotel became one of Santa Monica’s first “skyscrapers” when it opened in 1933. It was a favorite haunt for the movie industry elite, and Bugsy Siegel was rumored to have been the man behind the…$$ -
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Hollywood Roosevelt
The last hotel left standing from Hollywood’s glory days was financed in the 1920s by a group that included Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, and Louis B. Mayer. It hosted the first Academy Awards in 1929 and was Marilyn Monroe’s home during her modeling days. Following its…$$ -
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Hotel Erwin
This colorful, ever-so-Venice Beach hotel sits two blocks inland from Ocean Front Walk’s surreal and sometimes seedy carnival, and conveniently near the hip, Abbot Kinney shopping corridor. It followed up a major 2009 rehab with new carpets in beachy colors that enhanced the spacious…$$ -
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Hotel Figueroa
This unabashedly idiosyncratic standby for budget travelers is a love-it-or-hate-it kind of place. Through no doings of its own, it now stands in a rapidly gentrifying patch of Downtown, just a couple of blocks from the lofty Ritz and JW and across the street from L.A. LIVE. The…$ -
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Hotel Indigo Los Angeles Downtown
Of the spate of newly built (2017) hotel high-rises in Los Angeles' downtown district, the Indigo is among the more thoughtful, having based many of its design decisions either on celebrating the city's non-Hollywood history (i.e. its real history) with old photos and allusions, or…$$ -
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Hotel Shangri-La
Built in 1939 in the graceful Streamline Moderne style inspired by the swooping lines of an ocean liner, this Art Deco landmark is a treat for the eyes. That’s a good thing, because standard rooms here are scarcely roomier than a shipboard cabin. Details are perfect, from the silver,…$$$ -
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Huntley Santa Monica Beach
The grand 18-story facade and somewhat lower prices than charged by its coastal kin are alluring, but know going in that this might be the least beachy hotel within view of an ocean, despite being just three blocks from the sand. The onetime apartment building’s transformation into a…$$$ -
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Inn at Marina del Rey
Within this blocky, featureless motel facade beats the heart of a boutique hotel. The pleasant surprise begins at check-in; from the front desk to the housekeeping crew, every member of the staff makes it abundantly clear that your happiness is top priority. Comfortable, modern guest…$ -
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Inn at Playa del Rey
This charming New England-style B&B is another one for winding down rather than sightseeing. Not only is it about a half-hour drive from Los Angeles’ major sights (though less than 10 minutes from LAX), it deserves your full attention—and you deserve its soothing ways. I found it…$$ -
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Inn at Venice Beach
I prefer this calm, sleek hotel to those on Ocean Front Walk; the beachfront scene can morph from fun to tiresome after an hour or so. (f you relish being in the midst of the human carnival, you might like the comparable but somewhat more expensive Venice on the Beach). The quiet…$$ -
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Jamaica Bay Inn
This 4-year-old inn doesn’t look like anything special from the street, but once on the property you do get a whiff of the West Indies as the name promises. Palm trees, sloping lawns, and the adjacent Mother’s Beach, all of which look especially tropical at sunset, support the theme,…$$ -
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JW Marriott Hotel Los Angeles
This member of another high-end Marriott brand occupies the first 21 floors of a tower shared with the Ritz-Carlton. The two hotels up the ante for Downtown, which had been saddled with a skimpy selection of virtually indistinguishable business-oriented chain hotels while rapidly…$$ -
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JW Marriott Santa Monica Le Merigot
If you want something contemporary and spacious, but not too pricey and prestigious, this low-key luxury hotel and spa will fit the bill. Ideally situated on the sandy side of Ocean Avenue in the heart of Santa Monica's beach scene, the 175-room property houses a well-regarded…$$$ -
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Langham Huntington Hotel & Spa
This Spanish Mission Revival-style luxury resort was born as the Hotel Wentworth in 1907 and was soon bought by railroad magnate Henry Huntington, whose name has endured through Sheraton and Ritz-Carlton incarnations and its current union with the international Langham group. It…$$$ -
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Le Parc Suite Hotel
Stylish but not especially distinctive, this all-suite hotel’s unusually large junior and one-bedroom units are well-endowed with living rooms, balconies, fireplaces, kitchenettes, two HD TVs, spacious bathrooms with vanities, and desks equipped with outlets. All got new carpets,…$$ -
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Loews Santa Monica Beach Hotel
L.A.'s finest family-friendly hotel is also a great choice for anybody looking for comfortable accommodations, an A-1 Santa Monica location, outstanding service, and a wealth of first-rate facilities. Loews isn't exactly beachfront—it's on a hill less than a block away—but the ocean…$$$ -
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London West Hollywood
Back in the early 1980s, before West Hollywood became a city, hotel empresario Severyn Ashkenazy (the Mondrian, L’Ermitage …) ran afoul of county height limits when building his new Le Bel Age, just south of the Sunset Strip, and he was forced to leave the 10th floor undeveloped. Bel…$$$ -
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Los Angeles Athletic Club
Let’s get one thing out of the way right now: Rooms in this hotel atop the old-school athletic club are dark. Walls are dark, drapes are dark, and lighting is minimal. Think of it as stepping into a work of film noir, and you’ll be right at home. Which is not to say it’s…$$ -
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Magic Castle Hotel
A block away from the stars on the Walk of Fame, this basic hotel is well-located for exploring Hollywood on a budget. The helpful, outgoing staff and free snacks around the clock go a long way toward compensating for lack of a restaurant, room service or fitness center. Its former…$$ -
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Malibu Beach Inn
What if, instead of braving choppy waters and trying not to be seasick, you could go whalewatching without ever leaving your cloud-like bed or setting down your cup of tea? That’s how it’s done at this inn on “Billionaire’s Beach,” between Santa Monica and Santa Barbara. Its…$$$ -
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Metro Plaza Hotel
An older but well-maintained hotel with an accommodating 24-hour front desk, this is a good budget choice for travelers arriving from Union Station (a five-minute walk) and visiting Chinatown, Olvera Street and El Pueblo, and Little Tokyo. The Walt Disney Concert Hall and MOCA are…$ -
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Millennium Biltmore Hotel Los Angeles
The Biltmore is one of those hotels that's worth a visit even if you're not staying here. Built in 1923 and encompassing almost an entire square block, this Italian-Spanish Renaissance landmark is the grande dame of L.A.'s hotels. Chances are you've seen it in many movies, including…$$$ -
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Mondrian Los Angeles
Theatrical, sophisticated—this is the kind of place superhotelier Ian Schrager has created from a once-drab apartment building. Working with designer Philippe Starck, Schrager used the Mondrian's breathtaking views (from every room) as the starting point for his vision of a "hotel in…$$$ -
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Montage Beverly Hills
Smack-dab in the center of the Golden Triangle of Beverly Hills, a credit card's throw from Rodeo Drive, this resort has it all: beautiful rooms, top-notch service, an excellent spa, and a rooftop restaurant and pool with sweeping views of the city. I like the Spanish Colonial…$$$ -
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Montrose West Hollywood
For less than the price of most hotel rooms in the area, this all-suite hotel offers large split-level studio and one-bedroom apartments,on a quiet street only two blocks from the Sunset Strip. Last updated in 2018, the contemporary rooms are plain but modern with plenty of comforts,…$$ -
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Omni Los Angeles
Though designed for business travelers and conventions, this 17-story tower crowning historic Bunker Hill is ideally situated for sampling Los Angeles’ greatly improved cultural offerings. The Museum of Contemporary Art is right next door, and the L.A. Music Center, Walt Disney…$$ -
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Orange Drive Hostel
If L.A.’s boutique hotels are too hard on your wallet, this boutique hostel could be the answer. Set in a mature garden, it occupies a stately 1920s manor home that later became a boarding house for some of Hollywood’s biggest stars early in their careers. You’re within steps of the…$ -
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Petit Ermitage
Bohemian chic—or shabby chic, to some—is the stock in trade for this eccentric hotel, recognizable by its stained-glass street entrance. Vintage furniture, whimsical pieces such as a piano painted to look like a psychedelic face, faded rugs, and distressed (but working) fireplaces…$$$ -
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Saga Motor Hotel
Without trying to hide its heritage as a motel along the old Route 66—its street sign is kitschy, and the low-slung street entrance has a very ’50s, feel—this great alternative to Old Pasadena’s pricey hotels has taken pains to evolve beyond the basic roadside motor court. Except for…$ -
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Sea Shore Motel
A little of the old Route 66 lives on in this small roadside motel plunked in the middle of Santa Monica’s trendy Main Street dining and shopping strip. Just two blocks from the beachfront biking path, it might be the best bargain going for beach-lovers who don’t have to see water…$ -
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Sheraton Universal Hotel
Despite the addition of the sleekly modern Hilton just uphill, the 21-story Sheraton is still considered "the" Universal City hotel of choice for tourists, businesspeople, and industry folks visiting the studios' production offices. Located on the back lot of Universal Studios, it…$$ -
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Shutters on the Beach
This shingled gray and white confection has a small edge over its sibling Casa del Mar, with balconies on every guest room (the two are the only Santa Monica hotels opening directly onto the beach). Rates escalate with the extent of the ocean view, from no view in the least expensive…$$$ -
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Sunset Marquis
You'd never know it was hiding in its green cradle betwen buildings from the outside, which is what makes this insidery, 3.5-acre West Hollywood oasis so cool and uber-L.A. To say a secluded L.A. hotel is a favorite of movie stars and rock musicians might seem redudant, but this one,…$$$ -
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Sunset Marquis Hotel & Villas
A rock-star magnet since it opened in 1963, this sprawling, Mediterranean-style, all-suite hotel has gone so far as to install a state-of-the-art recording studio for such guests as the Katy Perry amd the Rolling Stones. At most hotels, a steady stream of big names can leave the…$$$ -
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Sunset Tower Hotel
Once home to Harlow, Gable, Marilyn, and even reclusive Howard Hughes, the Sunset Tower began life in 1929 as a luxury apartment building. Today it is 15 stories of Art Deco glory rising above Sunset Boulevard. In reviving it in 2005, hotelier Jeff Klein preserved the elegance of a…$$ -
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Terranea Resort
This sprawling, Mediterranean-style luxury resort rose in 2009 on the peninsula once occupied by the old Marineland of the Pacific park, which closed in 1987. Its magnitude and amenities are unequaled in Los Angeles. Commanding 102 acres of hilly coastline, only one-quarter of which…$$$ -
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The Ambrose
Located in a residential neighborhood, this is a nest for the traveler who values peace and quiet above proximity to the beach. Its Arts and Crafts design brings the Asian influences of that movement to the forefront in its serene Japanese garden with reading nooks, a koi pond,…$$ -
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The Beverly Garland
A mile from Universal Studios, the hotel that actress Beverly Garland (Fred MacMurray’s wife on “My Three Sons”) and her husband built in 1972 shed the Holiday Inn brand in November 2013 and undertook a complete redesign, including addition of a new landscaped garden area. Garland’s…$$ -
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The Beverly Hills Hotel and Bungalows
Behind the famous facade (remember the Eagles' Hotel California album?) lies this star-studded haven where, since 1912, legends were, and still are, made: The "Pink Palace" was center stage for both deal- and star-making in Hollywood's golden days. Today stars and industry hotshots…$$$ -
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The Charlie
The shingled storybook bungalows here were originally developed by Charlie Chaplin in the 1920s, on a farm once owned by actress Ruth Gordon’s family, as a pied-à-terre for himself and a hideaway for his Hollywood friends. The restored rooms are named for stars reported to have…$$ -
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The Hotel California
On enviable real estate along Ocean Avenue—right next door to the behemoth Loews—this welcoming hacienda-style beachfront motel embodies the surfer/sun-worshiper ambience you'd expect from Santa Monica lodging. The well-tended complex sits above and across an alley from the beach but…$$ -
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The Mosaic Hotel Beverly Hills
The owners pumped in $3 million to overhaul the former Beverly Hills Inn, and the result is spectacular. The lobby is a showcase of functional art, with gleaming tile mosaics; fabrics in deep, rich tones; and a profusion of artfully arranged orchids. Continuing a trend I fully…$$$ -
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The Prospect Hollywood
The best hotels understand that the key to capturing repeat guests is to capture an idealized spirit of the location outside. The Prospect Hollywood imagines a luxurious version of the heyday of Los Angeles in the 1930s, and each room feels like its own quiet boudoir stashed amid the…$$ -
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The Redbury at Hollywood & Vine
From the four-story trompe l’oeil curtain on the tomato-red building to the movie-marquee entry to the bold (OK, garish) geometric and damask patterns on the mish-mash of quasi-Victorian, mid-century retro and modern chairs, there’s not a subtle square inch in this high-concept,…$$$ -
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The Ritz-Carlton Los Angeles
Legions of well-heeled travelers who stay in Ritz-Carlton properties stay only at Ritz-Carlton, simply because they know they will get nothing but the best every time. This one, built next to the L.A. LIVE entertainment complex in 2010, fits the mold. Luxury reaches its high-tech…$$$ -
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Venice Beach House
Built while Venice’s founder, Abbot Kinney, was dredging canals and building boardwalks and piers, this two-story, National Register-listed Craftsman home is draped in ivy as if trying to ward off the cacophany of today’s Ocean Front Walk, a block away. But history and character…$ -
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W Hollywood Hotel
The W Hollywood, near the corner of Hollywood and Vine (it's directly above its Metro stop), was the first and largest LEED-compliant property in L.A., W Hollywood combines eco-conscious construction with stylish design, luxury finishes, and 305 large studios and one-bedroom suites…$$ -
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Westin Bonaventure Hotel & Suites
The Bonaventure is a terrific hotel. It's certainly not for travelers who want intimacy or personality in their accommodations -- but with numerous restaurants and bars (the 34th-floor BonaVista Lounge slowly rotates 360 degrees), a full-service spa, a monster health club, a business…$$$
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