boutique hotels – EuroCheapo's Budget Travel Blog https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog EuroCheapo editors take on the world of budget travel. Tue, 18 Nov 2025 18:54:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.8.3 New York Unchained: Budget-friendly, non-chain hotels near Times Square https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/times-square-unchained-small-and-cheap-hotels-near-times-square.html https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/times-square-unchained-small-and-cheap-hotels-near-times-square.html#respond Thu, 22 Aug 2013 12:17:46 +0000 http://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/?p=34152 A few weeks ago, my sister brought her family out to visit me, and as the children had never been to New York before, she decided that the Marriott Marquis would be a fun place to stay. Situated directly on Times Square the Marquis is a glittery, if anonymous, behemoth, always buzzing with activity (and always very crowded). It is a fine » Read more

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A few weeks ago, my sister brought her family out to visit me, and as the children had never been to New York before, she decided that the Marriott Marquis would be a fun place to stay. Situated directly on Times Square the Marquis is a glittery, if anonymous, behemoth, always buzzing with activity (and always very crowded). It is a fine hotel, but in many ways the opposite of the hotels we choose to feature on this site. It is not cheap, for one, and it also lacks the character of our favorite smaller hotels. Plus there are (exorbitant) charges for things like Internet and other “extras.”

The hotel was exactly what my sister wanted, but my daily visits there left me suffering from a bit of road rage and some serious chain-hotel ennui. Still, I am well aware many travelers to New York want to be in the center of the action.

With that in mind, I’ve picked out my favorite non-chain hotels near Times Square—all affordable and all with distinctive personality. For comparison’s sake, I also did a rate search, for a few weeks from now. On the weekend of September 13-15, the least expensive double room at the Marquis will set you back $337 per night. My hotel picks? Well…

The Milford

Double room rate 9/13-9/15: $230/night
Type: Essential New York

Most folks choose to stay in Times Square because it feels quintessential New York. Well, you don’t get much more “New York” than The Milford, which sings a love song to the city on every floor and and in every room. From its opening in 1925  to its ’80s ads featuring twirling bellhops serenading America with the “Lullaby of Broadway,” this mammoth building has long been a New York figure.

A recent renovation gave the hotel a new name (from “Milford Plaza Hotel” to “The Milford”) and a fresh look featuring lifelike photos of New York City neighborhoods in the hallways and “bedtime billboards” in the guest rooms. It has some of the trappings of a big hotel (read: expensive Wi-Fi), but also the benefits (fitness center, bar) and much more character than your average chain hotel. Read review

ameritania hotel

The Ameritania’s lobby looks like Judy Jetson’s party scene.

Ameritania Hotel

Double room rate 9/13-9/15: $325/night
Type: Stylish sleep

Situated just on the northern end of Times Square, this three-star beauty offers the fashionable Cheapo stylish digs and the benefit of being a five-minute walk from hubbub without being constantly in it. For even further quiet, Central Park is just a few blocks north.

Rooms sport a funky-fresh style, and the far-out lounge is a great place to unwind with a drink. Wi-Fi is again an extra charge, but guests can borrow a hotel iPad to log on for free in the lobby. Read review

Novotel New York Times Square

Double room rate 9/13-9/15: $230/night
Type: Room with a view

Full disclosure: The Novotel is technically a chain (but the only U.S. outpost branch of the French hotel), and it’s not, for this weekend anyhow, much cheaper than the Marquis.

Why include it? I’m glad you asked. The Novotel may be business class, but it has boutique style and oh, those views. Most rooms offer stupendous views overlooking Times Square, but the hotel has the benefit of being just outside the heart of the chaos (meaning your blood pressure won’t boil every time you try to return).

Other pluses in the Novotel’s column include a free business center (Wi-Fi, unfortunately, costs extra) and a fitness center worth raving about. Seriously, I tend to find hotel fitness center’s depressing, but this one is not only airy and well stocked with state-of-the-art equipment, it also offers—you guessed it—views. Read review

Mayfair New York

Double room rate 9/13-9/15: $240/night
Type: Old New York

A glamorous mecca for performers, the Mayfair has been feeling rather worn since Madison Square Garden (formerly located across the street) moved away. Still, it’s one of the cheapest rooms in town, especially in this area. The cozy-classic feel, from the polished wood walls of the lobby to the toile de Jouy that bursts from the walls of the 78 tiny guest rooms, also comes with a side of classic hospitality (and free Wi-Fi). Read review

hotel at times square

We love original building details like this mail shoot at the Hotel @ Times Square.

The Hotel @ Times Square

Double room rate 9/13-9/15: $270/night
Type: The (Cheapo) Hotel with the Mostest

Situated just off of the Times Square madness, the Hotel @ Times Square is a reliable hotel with reasonable rates and an array of perks that are generally absent (or expensive) at most New York hotels.

Example: It’s an affordable hotel with a fitness center, but also doesn’t charge for Internet like the pricier spots. Plus, breakfast is included, a rare perk in New York, and the 19th-century building has got some character (I’m looking at you vintage mail shoot). Read review

 Want more suggestions? Check out all of our favorite budget-friendly hotels in our guide to New York.

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Paris: Who wins when budget hotels go boutique? https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/paris-who-wins-when-budget-hotels-go-boutique.html https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/paris-who-wins-when-budget-hotels-go-boutique.html#respond Wed, 24 Apr 2013 16:39:56 +0000 http://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/?p=27893 Legend has it that Oscar Wilde remarked shortly before his death: “My wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One or the other of us has to go.” The comment pertained to the hotel room where he was staying, which would become his final resting place. These days, the same building houses » Read more

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Legend has it that Oscar Wilde remarked shortly before his death: “My wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One or the other of us has to go.” The comment pertained to the hotel room where he was staying, which would become his final resting place.

These days, the same building houses a different sort of hotel, not the one with the ugly wallpaper—a squalid place called Hotel L’Alsace—but now a Left Bank darling, a luxury hotel simply named L’Hôtel.

Cheapo picks go from “budget” to “boutique”

In the past few years, Paris has seen several instances of inexpensive hotels closing their doors, being renamed and revamped before finally reopening as full-fledged boutique properties. However, the great majority of them had not been fleabags crying for renewal—or corrective closure—but popular and beloved quality budget hotels.

Hotel Sejour Beaubourg - Hotel Georgette Paris

Things went quickly from budget to boutique when the once cheapo Sejour-Beaubourg (top) transformed itself into the Hotel Georgette (bottom). (Top photo by EuroCheapo, bottom photo from the Hotel Georgette’s website.)

Several properties have followed this course of events and EuroCheapo has mourned the loss of each passing budget hotel. The Lyon Mulhouse—my very favorite Parisian hotel for years—became the Hotel Original; the Séjour Beaubourg is now the Georgette, and the Sévigné in the Marais, was reborn as the Émile.

Hotel Crayon by Elegancia, located in an enviable spot in the shadow of the Louvre, is the former Louvre Forum, now thoroughly refurbished and rechristened, while the modern and sophisticated Design Hotel Sorbonne, in the Left Bank, was the Hotel de la Sorbonne in its past life.

Also, smack dab in the middle of the Latin Quarter, two other exceedingly cheapo-friendly hotels have closed their doors. The former Delhy’s, now defunct and in cheapo-heaven, has been transmogrified into Le Clos de Notre Dame. This three-star newcomer, decorated in a design style, has announced its imminent opening, which will be celebrated with free champagne.

On the other hand, the mythic Les Argonautes, a favorite of budget-conscious bohemians and night owls, closed a couple of years ago and its ultimate fate is a mystery.

Almost all these new boutique hotels are doing very well indeed. Their quite fabulous rooms, the bold decor and excellent service have attracted a different legion of fans. The better for them!

Hotel Lyon Mulhouse Paris Hotel Original

The Hotel Lyon-Mulhouse (top) was a EuroCheapo favorite for years. It transformed itself last year into the much fancier (and pricier) Hotel Original (bottom).

Adieu to a favorite cheap sleep

However, I was shocked and saddened when the Lyon Mulhouse closed. That was a neat, utterly comfortable and welcoming place, which boasted an exceptional location—a short walk from Place de la Bastille and the magnificent Place des Vosges (and within walking distance of most of central and east Paris, either of the left or the right bank). The front staff was incredibly courteous and friendly: Nothing seemed too much trouble for them and they were genuinely helpful. The hotel prices were extremely advantageous. A real gem; one in a million.

To get an idea of what the place was like, here is the groovy description that Theadora Brack, EuroCheapo’s chronicler extraordinaire wrote a couple of years ago (“…so start packing your raccoon coats because the Hôtel Lyon-Mulhouse is the real McCoy…”).

All these losses makes EuroCheapo ever more appreciative of those hotels that resist renovating away all of their charms.

[Where else would a letter carrier from Denver, Colorado on her first European holiday, rub elbows and fraternize with some upbeat musicians from South America, or enterprising college girls from Taiwan get the first taste of the Vie de Bohème by ecstatically listening to the elocutions of a would-be Arthur Rimbaud, in search of inspiration in the university of life that is Paris? Would you picture these disparate characters in anything other than an utterly romantic, charming hotel as the ones described in detail by the EuroCheapo knowledgeable diarists?]

Deconstructing the trend

This rather recent trend of successful boutique hotels being born from the ashes of highly popular and quality budget ones (rather than from discredited and rundown sleeps, of which there are plenty) implicitly generates a couple of perverse—and wrong—corollaries.

The first is that a budget hotel and a boutique-type one are mutually exclusive. What an absurd notion. While both types have their own core constituencies, they can also sometimes overlap. You can at times book a room in some of the bijou hotels for more or less 100 euros, as Lise Charlebois-Ludot has persuasively discussed in her column “Paris: 5 Budget hotels with boutique style“, or for a little more, as in the sleek and comfortable Design Hotel Sorbonne. So, definitely, there is room for everyone in Paris.

The other notion is that the idea of a “deluxe” type hotel is indisputably a modern one, meanwhile dismissing affordable and simple sleeps as outdated and passé.

Really? We all know about the inflated costs typical of several expensive multi-star hotels, where you have to pay extra not only for the utilitarian Wi-Fi but for a myriad of useless gadgets. But, above all, you’ll be overcharged for the added decoration, at times extravagant and overdone, perpetrated by a designer with an inflated ego.

Hotel Les Argonautes Paris

The quirky lounge of the super cheap Hotel Les Argonautes in the heart of the Latin Quarter. The hotel has now closed, its fate uncertain. Photo: EuroCheapo

Consequences of the boutique craze

As a result of all of this, there are fewer decent budget hotels available to budget-conscious tourists. Consequently, we will have to conform to pay more, now for rooms in properties with lesser quality/price ratios than those of our old favorites. In this scenario of spiraling costs, it’s we who pay in the long run, indirectly bearing the costs of the (usually unnecessary) designers’ oeuvre—as well as playing a part in the overall swelling of property values and real estate speculation.

Many of these reforms are made in the name of “modernity.” However, there is nothing remotely avant-garde or modern about the restrictive concept that sees being wealthy as a prerequisite for being able to travel. On the contrary, this is an archaic—and rather offensive—assumption.

Nor is there anything particularly new about paying a fortune for sojourning in a room that recreates the stuffy ambiance of the “Thousand-and-one Nights'” tales. Maybe that’s cute and extremely exotic, but modern? Maybe it was breathtakingly innovative during the Orientalists’ heyday, a century and a half ago…

In today’s world to be truly modern is to empower the cost-conscious and adventurous travelers, especially young people, to reach their varied goals and broaden their horizons. Budget-savvy travel is a mindset, and goes hand in hand with its natural companion: slow travel.

This is a notion that Wilde would have happily espoused. Now, that is a modern concept!

Share your thoughts!

Who do you think wins when hotels go from budget to boutique? Is this trend perfectly normal and, in fact, good for the consumer? Have you been heartbroken by the closure of your favorite budget hotel? Share your thoughts in our comments section below.

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Santa Margherita: Fit for a Cheapo https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/santa-margherita-fit-for-a-cheapo.html https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/santa-margherita-fit-for-a-cheapo.html#respond Wed, 02 May 2007 15:12:45 +0000 http://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/santa-margherita-fit-for-a-cheapo.html Locals refer to Italy’s Santa Margherita Ligure as “Santa.” You can travel the winding streets and hills between between Santa, Rapallo, and Portofino (or Porto) by car or motorcycle, though these streets become congested during the summer months. If you want to avoid the traffic in high season, you can travel from town to town » Read more

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Locals refer to Italy’s Santa Margherita Ligure as “Santa.” You can travel the winding streets and hills between between Santa, Rapallo, and Portofino (or Porto) by car or motorcycle, though these streets become congested during the summer months. If you want to avoid the traffic in high season, you can travel from town to town by boat.

We also recommend staying at Hotel La Vela Castello, a modern-day castle perched high above the bustling port. The castle was built during the 19th century by a wealthy couple who wanted to live in a dwelling fit for royalty. A room will set you back between €80 and €99 a night.

Here’s a hint. Ask for the large honeymoon suite even if you’re not celebrating your nuptials. Said suite runs €99 a night and includes its own private wrap-around balcony. We were tempted, while staying in this room, to perform a soliloquy from Romeo & Juliet.

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