Aria Hotels

09 / 10 · Destination

Colombia

The Andes to the Caribbean.

Where heritage, rhythm and natural wonder meet — from the dynamic Andean capital of Bogotá to the sun-kissed Caribbean coast of Cartagena. Aria's first properties in South America.

3 hotels in Colombia

Colombia — Aria Hotels

Colombia is a country of two altitudes: the thin, mineral air of the Andes and the warm, wet weight of the Caribbean. Between them lies a landscape of coffee slopes and cloud forest, pre-Columbian gold and Spanish stone, cumbia rhythms and third-wave espresso bars. It is the country that produced Gabriel García Márquez — and once you have spent a week there, you understand why the world felt magical to him.

Aria's first Latin American residences trace that geography from cordillera to coast. Aria Bogotá anchors the collection in the capital's cultural corridor — a place of colonial squares, contemporary art and Andean weather that changes four times a day. Aria Maria settles into the Walled City of Cartagena, behind bougainvillea and coral-stone façades, five hundred kilometres and eight degrees hotter, on the edge of the Caribbean Sea.

Together they are not a circuit. They are a country in miniature — one that we suggest you take slowly, with a week in each city and a boat trip to Playa Blanca in between.

Arrival

Two cities, one country.

Direct flights from Madrid, Miami and New York land in Bogotá's El Dorado. From there, a one-hour domestic hop drops you into the tropical heat of Cartagena de Indias. We suggest three nights in the Andes to acclimatise, then five on the Caribbean coast — a rhythm the country itself seems to prefer.

Culture

Gold, García Márquez and street art.

In Bogotá, the Gold Museum holds the largest collection of pre-Columbian goldwork in the world; the Botero Museum, a block away, is the quiet counterpoint. In Cartagena, the Walled City is a UNESCO site you can walk in a morning — colonial churches, plazas dedicated to García Márquez, and the mango-yellow façades that appear on every book cover about the country.

The table

Coffee, cacao and Caribbean seafood.

Colombian coffee has spent the last decade becoming, quietly, the best in the world — single-estate lots from Huila and Nariño now rival anything from Ethiopia. In Cartagena the kitchen turns to the sea: red snapper with coconut rice, ceviche with mango and lime, and the slow, spiced sancocho that shows up at every long lunch.

Day trips

Rosario Islands & Monserrate.

From Cartagena, an hour by lancha reaches the Rosario archipelago — Playa Blanca, coral reefs and a lunch of freshly caught fish under palm shade. From Bogotá, the funicular up Monserrate delivers you to 3,150 metres and the best panoramic breakfast on the continent. Both are day trips we help arrange, privately, from the front desk.

What to do

  • ·Walking the UNESCO Walled City of Cartagena
  • ·Colombian coffee & cacao tastings
  • ·Sunset at Plaza de Santo Domingo
  • ·Boat trips to the Rosario Islands & Playa Blanca
  • ·Street-art tours in Bogotá
  • ·Sunrise ascent of Monserrate
  • ·Gold Museum & pre-Columbian heritage
  • ·Traditional Caribbean cooking classes

Nearby & notable

  • ·Walled City, Cartagena (UNESCO)
  • ·Castillo San Felipe de Barajas
  • ·Cathedral of Santa Catalina
  • ·Rosario Islands & Isla Barú
  • ·La Candelaria, Bogotá
  • ·Gold Museum, Bogotá
  • ·Monserrate
  • ·Usaquén Artisan Market

The hotels

3 in Colombia