€432.20 for 1 Night


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€432.20/ Night


24/7 Support
Looking for help choosing or for a property we don't list? Message our Private Rates Concierge on WhatsApp for member rates and insider knowledge on the right stay
A wine-and-wellness boutique hotel among the Malbec vines of Luján de Cuyo, Mendoza, with Latin America's first traditional hamam and its own Marantal wine.

Spa Hotels
Check in from 14:00; check out before 12:00.












€432.20 for 1 Night

Location
Guardia Vieja 1998, Vistalba, 5509 Luján de Cuyo, Argentina
Entre Cielos sits on a vineyard estate at Vistalba in Luján de Cuyo, the heart of Mendoza's Malbec country, about 20 minutes from Mendoza city and surrounded by hundreds of wineries to tour. Mendoza's El Plumerillo airport is around 40 minutes away. A car or concierge transfers are the way to explore the wine roads.
Mendoza el Plumerillo Airport
29km
Last Updated: 2026-06-15

Expert Review
Origins
Entre Cielos — the name means "between skies" — is the work of a group of Swiss friends, led by Cécile Adam, who went looking for somewhere to build a different kind of hotel and found it in the Malbec country of Mendoza. In 2009 they bought a twenty-acre plot at Vistalba, in Luján de Cuyo, in the foothills of the Andes, and moved their families out to Argentina to make it happen; the hotel opened in 2011. None of them had grown wine before, but the estate came with an old, neglected vineyard, and reviving it became part of the project.
The idea was holistic from the start: wine and wellness together, in a place to slow down and reconnect. The architecture is deliberately spare — concrete, wood and glass, low among the vines — so that the snow-capped Andes and the big Mendoza sky stay the focus. At its centre is the thing that makes Entre Cielos genuinely unusual: Latin America's first authentic Turkish hamam, a six-stage circuit of steam rooms and bathing pools, paired with a vinotherapy spa that turns the grape into treatments as well as drink.
Around it run around sixteen individually designed suites, each themed on a wine — from Classic and Reserva up to the Gran Cru master suite and a stilted Limited-Edition loft with stargazing skylights — all with private terraces over the vineyard. The restored vineyard now yields the hotel's own label, Marantal, named for a bright star in Orion seen overhead, and the kitchen and tastings make the most of it. The result is one of Mendoza's most characterful places to stay: a small, design-led wine estate built around a spa unlike anything else on the continent.
Top Secret
The vineyard came with the estate, but not in good shape: when the Swiss owners arrived, its Malbec vines were some eighty years old and beyond saving as they stood. Rather than tear them out and start over elsewhere, they restored the vineyard from the roots up, and it now produces the hotel's own wine — Marantal, three labels of it, named after a bright star in the Orion constellation that can be seen in the clear night sky above the vines. Ask to taste the Gran Marantal Malbec, and to hear the story of the star and the vineyard that share the name; it is the essence of the place in a glass.

The Review
Entre Cielos is among the most characterful places to stay in Mendoza, and its appeal is a genuinely original idea: a wine-and-wellness hotel built around the first authentic Turkish hamam in Latin America. It sits on a twenty-acre vineyard estate at Luján de Cuyo, the heart of Argentina's Malbec country, twenty minutes from Mendoza city, with the snow-capped Andes on the horizon and its own vines at the door. Created by a group of Swiss friends who opened it in 2011, it pairs design-led calm with a real sense of place.
The hamam is the signature — a six-stage circuit of steam and bathing pools, with vinotherapy treatments using the grape — but the whole estate is built for unwinding: an outdoor pool facing the mountains, yoga, horse rides through the vineyard, and the hotel's own Marantal wines to taste. The roughly sixteen suites are spare and contemporary, concrete and wood and wine-themed, each with a terrace over the vines; the Nube restaurant and the asado turn out Mendoza cooking to match the wine.
It suits couples and wine-and-wellness travellers who want design, calm and a vineyard setting over a city base or a big resort — somewhere to tour the wineries by day and soak, eat and stargaze by night. The location is ideal for the Mendoza wine roads, with hundreds of bodegas within reach and the city close. For a Mendoza stay that is restful, original and rooted in the wine, there are few to match it.