€159.30 for 1 Night


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€159.30/ 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 design and art-led city boutique hotel of 73 rooms in Singapore's Civic District, with a street-art facade, a pixel-video lobby and a rooftop infinity pool.
Naumi provides a beautiful welcome gift for each guest on arrival.
Check in from 14:00; check out before 12:00.












€159.30 for 1 Night

Location
41 Seah Street Singapore 188396
Naumi is at 41 Seah Street in the Civic District, a few doors from Raffles and a five-minute walk from City Hall MRT, with Suntec about eight minutes away. Changi Airport is roughly 20 to 30 minutes by taxi. Central and walkable, near Marina Bay.
Changi International Airport
18km
Last Updated: 2026-06-25

Expert Review
Origins
Singapore packs an extraordinary amount into a small island — a financial capital, a food obsession, a tropical-modern skyline of supertrees and rooftop pools, and one of the densest concentrations of museums and galleries in Asia. The Civic District, where Naumi stands, is the cultural heart of it: the old colonial core around the Padang, the National Gallery and the Bras Basah arts quarter, with Raffles Hotel a few doors down Seah Street and the Marina Bay waterfront a short walk away.
Naumi opened here in 2007 as a design-led boutique hotel, and design has remained its defining idea. Over the years it has grown into something close to a working gallery: the facade carries a four-storey street-art mural by the Singaporean graffiti artist Tr853-1 — a wry, oversized scene of a traffic warden and a clamped sports car — while the lobby holds Aiman's "The Day You Told Me A Story", a video collage of three thousand clips that shifts from morning tai chi to neon-lit night. Lenticular prints by Olivier Henry change as you walk the corridors, and the rooms are furnished with pieces by B&B Italia, Poltrona Frau, Tom Dixon and Artemide.
The hotel has 73 rooms across eight categories, from the compact Habitat rooms up to the 43-square-metre Designer Rooms — one themed on Coco Chanel in monochrome camellia, another on Andy Warhol with a limited-edition Gaetano Pesce armchair. The signature space is Cloud 9, the guest-only infinity pool on the tenth-floor roof, with skyline views and a daily happy hour. It makes an arty, well-placed base in the middle of the city — more about design, service and the rooftop than about scale, and the better for it.
Top Secret
Treat the building as a gallery. Most guests come for the rooftop pool, but the art is the real signature: start at the four-storey Tr853-1 mural on the facade — the policeman and the clamped red sports car, a nod to the wardens who work the nearby streets — then find Aiman's shifting three-thousand-clip video collage in the lobby, which changes character through the day, and watch Olivier Henry's lenticular prints move as you walk the corridors. Ask at reception which Designer Rooms are free to look into; the Coco Chanel and Andy Warhol rooms are the standouts.

The Review
Naumi Hotel Singapore is among the more characterful boutique hotels in the city — a design and art-led address on Seah Street, in the Civic District, that has put genuine creative thought into the building rather than relying on a single rooftop trick. It opened in 2007 and reads as part hotel, part gallery: a street-art facade, a video installation in the lobby, design furniture in the rooms, and a guest-only infinity pool on the roof.
The pleasures are the art, the pool and the location. The Cloud 9 rooftop, ten floors up, has some of the better skyline views available from a hotel pool this central, with a daily happy hour thrown in; the location, a few doors from Raffles and a short walk from City Hall MRT, the galleries of Bras Basah and the Marina Bay waterfront, is excellent; and the design — from the Tr853-1 mural to the Coco Chanel and Andy Warhol Designer Rooms — gives the place a personality most city hotels lack. Service draws consistent praise, and small touches like the free minibar and Nespresso machine are unusual at this level.
The honest notes are worth knowing. As is normal in Singapore, the rooms run small, and a few of the lower categories are windowless, so it is worth booking up a category or asking for a room with a view. Breakfast gets mixed reviews and is the weakest part of the offer. And the rooftop's food-and-drink service has been pared back, so it is best thought of as a pool with a happy hour rather than a full rooftop restaurant — check what is open when you book. For art, design and a central, sociable city base, it remains a strong choice.