Gran Hotel Ciudad De Mexico vs Boutique Hotel de Cortes
Both properties are highly recommended by reviewers writing for major publications. Overall, Gran Hotel Ciudad de Mexico ranks significantly better than Boutique Hotel de Cortes. Gran Hotel Ciudad de Mexico ranks #14 in Mexico City with positive reviews from 11 reviews including Afar Magazine, Lonely Planet and Fodor's.
Gran Hotel Ciudad De Mexico
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Av 16 de Septiembre 82, Col. Centro Historico City 06000
From $92 /night
- Bar/Lounge
- Free Internet
- Room Service
- Free Breakfast
- Laundry Service
- Concierge
Jetsetter
"Art Nouveau landmark steeped in Old World elegance and located right on Mexico City’s famous Zocalo."
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Fodor's
"Ensconced in a former 19th-century department store, this freshly renovated hotel has rooms furnished in a modern style."
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Lonely Planet
Top Choice
"The Gran Hotel flaunts the French art nouveau style of the prerevolutionary era."
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Rough Guide
"Large hotel right on the Zócalo with sumptuous public areas... though some of the older rooms don’t match the glamorous lobby."
DK Eyewitness
"This 19th-century hotel, fronting the Zócalo, features a magnificent Art Nouveau lobby with a beautiful 1908 Tiffany stained-glass ceiling."
Boutique Hotel de Cortes
Av. Hidalgo 85, esq. Reforma, Centro Historico, Frente Alameda Central City 06300
From $92 /night
- Bar/Lounge
- Free Internet
- Room Service
- Free Breakfast
- Laundry Service
- Concierge
Lonely Planet
"Formerly a hospice for Augustinian pilgrims, this boutique hotel offers tasteful rooms and suites encircling a lovely 17th-century baroque patio."
Full review
Rough Guide
"Very classy boutique hotel in a building dating from 1620, but with rooms that are super-modern and stylish, with wooden deck floors throughout (even in the shower)."
DK Eyewitness
"With small, simple rooms, the hotel is located across from Alameda Central near the Museo Franz Mayer."
Star Service
"This delightful new design diva is being heralded as the first hotel in the Americas (read: oldest), an ornate vestige of colonial rule that opened in 1620 as a refuge for monks."
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