Ca' di Dio

Hotel · Castello

Ca' di Dio

Hotel · Castello

6

Riva Ca' di Dio, 2183, 30122 Venezia VE, Italy

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Ca' di Dio by Ca’ di Dio
Ca' di Dio by Mirco Toffolo
Ca' di Dio by Mirco Toffolo
Ca' di Dio by Ca’ di Dio
Ca' di Dio by Ca’ di Dio
Ca' di Dio by Ca’ di Dio
Ca' di Dio by Ca’ di Dio
Ca' di Dio by Ca’ di Dio
Ca' di Dio by Mirco Toffolo
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null
Ca' di Dio by null

Highlights

Nestled in a charming 13th-century building along the canal, this stylish hotel boasts modern rooms, a serene courtyard, and a trendy cocktail bar, all just a stone's throw from Venice's artistic hotspots.  

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Riva Ca' di Dio, 2183, 30122 Venezia VE, Italy Get directions

vretreats.com
@cadidio_

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Riva Ca' di Dio, 2183, 30122 Venezia VE, Italy Get directions

+39 041 098 0238
vretreats.com
@cadidio_

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Last updated

Jul 9, 2025

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@michelinguide

"This sestiere, which takes its name from an old fortress that is no longer standing, occupies the 'tail' of fish-shaped Venice. This is the most maritime of Venice’s districts, home to the Arsenale and Museo Navale, and is also the quietest and the most residential of the city’s neighborhoods." - The MICHELIN Guide

The Most Tranquil Hotels in Venice
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@cntraveler

"With a prime spot on the St. Mark’s Basin waterfront, right in front of the Arsenale ferry terminal, no bridges or steps are required to reach the boutique Ca’di Dio. A water taxi can deliver you directly to the hotel’s dock. From the ferry stop, it’s mere steps before reaching the jewel box hotel lounge-meets-lobby. Plush velvet and leather seating and colorful Murano glass are sprinkled about, all courtesy of Spanish designer Patrica Urquiola, who executed a unique retro-modern makeover when the VRetreats hotel opened in 2021. There are 66 rooms, some with lagoon views, others with wooden beam ceilings, all with refined art deco-style glass lighting. In a previous life, the bolthole was a medieval pilgrim's hostel. There are two traditional Altana-raised roof terraces and three internal courtyards, the largest of which is a dreamy, leafy space. If the weather permits, don’t miss breakfast—organic eggs, perfect bacon, and fresh juice—or aperitivo hour in the courtyard, possibly one of the most peaceful spots in the crowd-loving city. —Lauren Burvill" - Sarah James, Anne Hanley

24 Best Hotels in Venice, Italy
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@travelleisure

"Part of the Small Luxury Hotels of the World’s Considerate Collection, this hotel stocks its boutique with items from the Rio Terà Social Cooperative, supporting job training for prison inmates." - Travel + Leisure Editors

These Hotels Are Making Remarkable Contributions to Their Local Communities, and Travelers Are Taking Notice
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@cntraveler

"Why book? Because this fresh, modern take on the Venetian five-star hotel—brilliantly placed for the Art and Architecture Biennales—also has plenty of local character. Set the scene How do you establish an edge over your rivals in an increasingly crowded Venetian luxury hotel scene? New Italian hospitality brand VRetreats’s answer was to call in Spanish designer Patricia Urquiola to renovate what must have been a tough-to-convert building. With origins stretching back to the 13th century, this massive four-square structure on the lagoon-facing Riva promenade near the Arsenale had been variously a pilgrim’s hospice, women’s refuge, and old people’s home over the years. Urquiola wanted to honor, she says, “the human stories of a place that has always been full of life”, but bring this up to date “without doing the usual ‘Venetian luxury’ thing”. The result is as much house as hotel—its intimate charm perhaps best summed up in a suavely stylish Reading Room that, unlike many hotel “libraries,” actually makes you want to sink into an armchair and open a book. At the same time, what was special about the place has been preserved: a secluded inner courtyard, a hidden garden which has become a herb and vegetable plot, and two traditional altana raised wooden roof terraces. Both its chic retro-modern design and its location close by the twin venues of the city’s Art and Architecture Biennales are persuasive baits for the kind of artsy global set that Ca’ di Dio has already begun to attract. The backstory In Italy, travel company Alpitour is a byword for seaside package holidays. Its hospitality wing VOIHotels, which manages 21 Italian and overseas beach resorts, launched boutique label VRetreats in 2021 to move out of that comfort zone and into a new market: upmarket mid-sized hotels converted from historic properties in Italian art cities. All of which is to say that so far the brand is too young and untried to attract a loyal clientele—but Ca’ di Dio is clearly making a pitch for young design-conscious international travelers. The rooms Anonymous corridors that seem to go on forever are Ca’ di Dio’s least stylish element, but the ambience is more welcoming once inside your chosen nest. There’s a common design thread running through all 66 rooms, with lots of warm wood, bathroom fittings in Rosso di Verona marble, convex mirrors that hang on walls clothed in shimmery lagoon-green fabric, and specially-commissioned Murano lamps with a vaguely Art Deco feel. The overall sensation, even in the smallest Deluxe, is that you’ve entered not a hotel room but a chic Venetian apartment. Only 13 rooms have frontal lagoon views, but in our books the best view is the 360-degree sweep over rooftops, bell towers, and water that you enjoy from the private wooden roof terraces of the two Altana Suites. Food and drink Strollers and joggers on the wide pedestrian thoroughfare known as the Riva, a bustle of boats, Palladio’s oh-so-elegant church of San Giorgio across the water—there’s plenty to distract diners on the outside tables of the hotel’s Vero restaurant. But we actually prefer the inner view, in an intimate, clubbish dining room that puts a decidedly Venetian spin on Italian mid-century modern design. Chef Raimondo Squeo disrupts the local tradition with influences from his native Puglia and elsewhere (as in the cheeky but convincing main course, pairing of the very Venetian monkfish with the very Roman amatriciana sauce). Spilling out onto the inner courtyard, Essentia is the hotel’s more casual guests-only, all-day dining space, while Alchemia feels like a vintage 1960s New York hotel bar transported to the lagoon. Fittingly, head barman Diego Filipponi (who used to work at historic Caffè Lavena in Piazza San Marco) is a classic cocktail ace. The spa The hotel’s PURA spa uses products developed by Venetian fragrance and skincare brand, The Merchant of Venice, that channel the former seapower’s trading links with Constantinople and eastern Asia, among them Chinese tea and spice mixes. There’s also a Goldfinger-like anti-aging treatment involving the application of sheets of 24k gold leaf provided by one of the last remaining Venetian artisans to specialize in the ancient craft of hand-beaten gold and silver. The neighborhood As you walk east along the wide Riva promenade from St Mark’s, the lagoon view just gets bigger and bigger. Ca’ di Dio occupies a long swathe of Riva frontage right by the Arsenale waterbus stop. But it’s what’s behind the hotel that is really worth exploring. One of Venice’s most fascinating and unspoiled neighborhoods, Eastern Castello is a maze of lanes studded with good places to eat (Al Covo, Corte Sconta, CoVino), drink (don’t miss the buzzing spritz scene at the Osteria alla Rampa), and shop (like Banco Lotto no. 10, with quirky women’s fashions made in a workshop that operates inside the city’s female penitentiary). And the venues of the Art and Architecture Biennales—the Giardini park and former Arsenale naval shipyard—are both a short stroll away. The service Formerly a chapel, the impressive lobby looks like the lounge of a well-to-do socialite Venetian art collector. You actively need to search for the reception desk, which turns out to be little more than a stand-up booth in one corner. This is very much in the spirit of a place where the friendly, multi-tasking staff seem to float around. Among the experiences they can make happen, one of the most worthwhile is a private visit to LP, the Murano factory that made many of the glass lamps and fixtures that Urquiola commissioned for the hotel. Eco effort Better than many in Venice: Guests are offered filtered tap water, either still or sparkling, rather than resource-guzzling bottled mineral water; and the in-house boutique has several items created from materials upcycled during renovation, including notebooks bound in wallpaper that (to misquote Oscar Wilde) just had to go. Accessibility As well as wheelchair accessible rooms, Ca’ di Dio has its own porta d’acqua or water entrance, making access direct from a water taxi possible for those with limited mobility. Anything left to mention? They have their own gin here? Of course they do. With its salty lagoon botanicals, Gin al Sale was created exclusively for Ca’ di Dio by Florian Dabanser from Dolomites distillery, Zu Plun. Finally, in 100 words or less, what makes this hotel worthy of Hot List? Few Venetian luxury hotels dare to challenge the antique-chandeliers-and-velvet look that is the city’s safe default option. Urquiola’s stylish vision for Ca’ di Dio rips up that rulebook while keeping things warm and local. And it does so in a part of town—near the Art and Architecture Biennale venues—that until now has never had a kip of this caliber. If the hotel’s VERO restaurant lives up to its initial promise, it will be another great addition to the city’s suddenly vibrant dining scene." - Lee Marshall

Ca’ di Dio
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@cntraveler

"This former Venetian palace dating back to 1272 is tucked away in the artsy Arsenale district overlooking a canal. The sophisticated Ca' di Dio, meaning house of God in the local dialect, has been reimagined by Spanish architect Patricia Urquiola, who also lent her knack for making traditional spaces feel modern to the Il Sereno in Como. Opening on August 1, expect all the pomp of a five-star address combined with the soulful craftsmanship of local artisans like wrought iron, stones, and Murano glass. Some of the 57 suites and 9 rooms look onto the San Giorgio Maggiore island, also the view for gourmand restaurant VERO, which sources its veggies straight from the courtyard garden. Following a neighborhood art crawl or a dip into Pura spa, practice your Italian over a Cobalt Blue cocktail at on-site Alchemia."

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