Hotel Rubenshof vs Hotel De Witte Lelie Antwerp
Both properties are praised by professionals. Overall, Hotel De Witte Lelie Antwerp ranks significantly higher than Hotel Rubenshof. Hotel De Witte Lelie Antwerp is ranked #1 in Antwerp with accolades from 10 reviews such as Hideaway Report, Concierge and Travel + Leisure.
Hotel Rubenshof
Amerikalei 115-117, Antwerp B2000, Belgium
From $45 /night
- Free Internet
- Restaurant
- Breakfast buffet
- Baggage storage
Lonely Planet
"The big selling point is that breakfast is served in a fabulous art nouveau dining room adjoining a partly gilded neo rococo salon: this was once the Antwerp second home of Belgium’s cardinals."
Full review
Fodor's
"Once a cardinal's residence, this budget hotel shows remnants of its former glory with a mixture of turn-of-the-20th-century styles."
Full review
Lonely Planet
Top Choice
"The big selling point is that breakfast is served in a fabulous art nouveau dining room adjoining a partly gilded neo rococo salon: this was once the Antwerp second home of Belgium’s cardinals."
Full review
Hotel De Witte Lelie Antwerp
Show All Reviews
Keizerstraat 16 - 18, Antwerp 2000, Belgium
From $272 /night
- Pet Friendly
- Bar/Lounge
- Free Internet
- Room Service
- Shuttle Bus
- Laundry Service
Concierge
"This elegantly renovated, but still creaky, 17th-century town house is cloistered away in the student district across a narrow street from the Latvian consulate."
Fodor's
"Three step-gabled 17th-century houses have been combined to create Antwerp's most exclusive hotel."
Full review
Travel + Leisure
"A perennial favorite, this whitewashed hotel (the name, after all, means "white lily") is comprised of a row of three 17th-century restored town houses that contain a total of 10 spacious guest rooms."
Full review
Michelin Guide
"This historic abode fully justifies its reputation for poised sophistication and graceful hospitality."
DK Eyewitness
"An atmospheric five-star B&B in Antwerp’s historical core, the whitewashed De Witte Lelie (“The White Lily”) is constructed out of three converted 17th-century canal houses."