Santa Fe HOTELS

Travel to Santa Fe, , - hotels selection and destination guides

You can choose and book suitable hotels in Santa Fe from the TOP Santa Fe HOTELS list or make search for hotels using the form. Our destination guides will provide you with information about Santa Fe life, entertainment, history and other useful things for travel to Santa Fe.

TOP Santa Fe HOTELS

Garretts Desert Inn
Rating: 2
Rates: 59 to 99 
Garretts Desert Inn
Inn On The Paseo
Rating: 2.5
Rates: 100 to 101 
Inn On The Paseo
Hotel Santa Fe
Rating: 3.5
Rates: 139 to 394 
Hotel Santa Fe
INN ON THE ALAMEDA
Rating: 3
Rates: 140 to 310 
INN ON THE ALAMEDA
Park Inn and Suites Santa Fe
Rating: 2.5
Rates: 59 to 73 
Park Inn and Suites Santa Fe
Sunrise Springs Inn And Resort
Rating: 3.5
Rates: 145 to 334 
Sunrise Springs Inn And Resort
Territorial Inn and Spa
Rating: 3
Rates: 88 to 166 
Territorial Inn and Spa
BEST WESTERN INN OF SANTA FE
Rating: 3
Rates: 59 to 115 
BEST WESTERN INN OF SANTA FE
Dancing Ground Of The Sun
Rating: 2
Rates: 79 to 170 
Dancing Ground Of The Sun
Hotel Plaza Real
Rating: 3
Rates: 99 to 266 
Hotel Plaza Real
ALL HOTELS in Santa Fe...

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Santa Fe guide

 

Since the early 1980s, SANTA FE has ranked among the chic-est destinations in the US, regularly voted the country's most popular city by upmarket travelers. That appeal rests on a very solid basis: it's one of America's oldest and most beautiful cities, founded by Spanish missionaries as their northernmost colonial capital in 1609, a full ten years before the Pilgrims reached Plymouth Rock. Spread across a high plateau at the foot of the stunning Sangre de Cristo Mountains, New Mexico's capital still glories in the adobe houses and baroque churches of its original architects, while its newer museums and galleries attract art-lovers from all over the world.

As upward of a million and a half tourists every year descend upon a town of just sixty thousand inhabitants, Santa Fe has inevitably grown somewhat overblown; long-term residents bemoan what's been lost, while first-time visitors are inclined to wonder what all the fuss is about. The urban sprawl as you approach from the interstate makes for a lousy introduction, while the rigorous insistence that every downtown building should look like a seventeenth-century Spanish colonial palace takes a bit of getting used to. This is the only city in the world where what at first glance appears to be a perfectly preserved ancient adobe turns out to be a high-rise parking lot, and it would be illegal to build a gas station that didn't resemble an Indian prayer chamber.

There's still a lot to like about Santa Fe, however, with its compact, peaceful downtown and walkable streets. Though Santa Fe style may have become something of a clich, that clich is changing; the pastel-painted, wooden coyotes that were the obligatory souvenir ten years ago have, for example, been replaced by cast-iron sculptures of Kokopelli, the hunch-backed Ancestral Puebloan flute-player. In a town where the Yellow Pages list over 250 art galleries, you'll get plenty of opportunities to buy one.


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