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€0.00/ Night


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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 104-room design hotel in central Buenos Aires, with interiors by Lázaro Rosa-Violán, a 13th-floor sky bar, an eighth-floor pool and a Spanish restaurant.
Check in from 14:00; check out before 12:00.








€0.00 for 1 Night

Location
Maipú 907, C1006 Cdad. Autónoma de Buenos Aires, Argentina
Hotel Pulitzer stands on Maipú in the Microcentro of Buenos Aires, steps from Plaza San Martín and the Florida shopping street, within walking distance of Recoleta and the Teatro Colón. Aeroparque (AEP) is about 15 minutes by car, Ezeiza international (EZE) roughly 45–50. The hotel offers airport transfers and bicycles.
Last Updated: 2026-06-15

Expert Review
Origins
Hotel Pulitzer stands in the Microcentro, the dense downtown grid of Buenos Aires, a few steps from the leafy Plaza San Martín and the shop-lined Calle Florida. It is the first hotel outside Europe for Grupo Regina, the Barcelona family group behind the Pulitzer hotels in Barcelona and Paris, and it carries the same idea south: sleek, design-led, good value, and firmly urban.
Unlike its older European cousins, the Buenos Aires Pulitzer is a purpose-built modern tower, by the Argentine architect Guillermo Roitenberg — but its character comes from inside, and from one name. The interiors are the work of Lázaro Rosa-Violán, the Barcelona designer (and the hand behind Madrid's Only YOU), who took his cues here from the Art Deco of Argentina's Golden Age. The result runs through all 104 rooms and the public spaces: a cool, graphic palette of aquamarine, white and black, steel-trimmed modular furniture, mirrors and trompe l'oeil panelling, crisp and cosmopolitan rather than obviously Latin American.
The building is designed to be lived in vertically. A glass-ceilinged library lounge sits on the first floor; an outdoor pool and solarium occupy the eighth, open through the Argentine summer; and the thirteenth floor is given over to the Sky Bar, the rooftop that has become the hotel's social heart and one of the better sunset spots in the city. Down at street level the Boca de Toro restaurant and its late-night BdT Club draw a local crowd. It is, in truth, on the larger side for a boutique hotel — somewhere between a design hotel and a smart business one — but it is independent, stylish and very central, and it wears its size lightly.
Top Secret
The hotel is built around its views, and the pay-off is right at the top. Thirteen floors up, the Sky Bar is an open-air rooftop that looks clean across the rooftops of downtown Buenos Aires, and it is at its best in the hour before dark: order a cocktail, take a seat against the skyline, and watch the lights of the Microcentro come up as a mix of hotel guests and in-the-know porteños fills the tables around you. There is live music through the warm season. Most guests come for a nightcap and stay for the view.

The Review
Hotel Pulitzer is one of the more stylish places to stay in central Buenos Aires, and the draw is design and position. It is a contemporary tower in the Microcentro, steps from Plaza San Martín, with interiors by the Barcelona designer Lázaro Rosa-Violán — the same hand as Madrid's Only YOU — who drew on the Art Deco of Argentina's Golden Age for a cool, graphic look in aquamarine, white and black. At 104 rooms it sits between a boutique and a business hotel, and it is honest about being a polished, urban base rather than an intimate retreat.
The rooms are compact but well designed, from 27-square-metre Standards to 44-square-metre Suites with their own small library, all crisp linens and black-tiled bathrooms. The life of the hotel, though, is in its shared spaces stacked up the building: the first-floor library lounge under its glass ceiling, the eighth-floor pool and solarium for the summer, the Boca de Toro restaurant and BdT Club at street level, and above all the thirteenth-floor Sky Bar, a genuine destination in its own right.
It suits design-minded travellers and couples who want a central, sociable, well-priced base over a quiet or residential one — this is downtown Buenos Aires, walkable to Florida, Recoleta, the Teatro Colón and the tango clubs, lively by day and night. For a stylish city hotel in the heart of the centre, with one of the best rooftops in town, it is hard to better.
