Upscale beachfront hotel featuring 2 outdoor pools & a spa, plus a restaurant, a bar & a terrace. On Anse des Cayes Beach along the Atlantic Ocean, this upmarket hotel is 2 km from Gustaf III Airport. Featuring decks offering ocean or garden views, the understated rooms with a beach-shack vibe provide Wi-Fi, HDTVs, minibars, and tea and coffeemakers. Upgraded rooms and suites add living areas, sofabeds and/or whirlpool tubs; some suites are set on the beach. A 2-bedroom villa has a kitchen. Room service is 24/7. Airport transfers are free, as are yoga and pilates classes (1 per stay). There's an airy restaurant, a bar, and a terrace with views of the ocean, plus 2 outdoor pools, a spa and a gym. Breakfast and parking are available.
97133, St. Barthélemy Get directions
"This serene oceanfront retreat offers luxury rooms and suites plus a private beach, only adding to the exclusive ambiance. Wedding packages are completely customizable, and the property can accommodate parties of all sizes. While the beach itself serves as an ideal setting for ceremonies and receptions (which can hold anywhere from 20 to 200 people), couples can utilize one of the other sea-facing venues such as the spa deck (max: 80), pool deck (max: 50), the sun-drenched Rockies Restaurant (max: 100), or the aptly named On The Beach Restaurant (max: 50)." - Travel + Leisure Editors
"Set the scene. Tucked away in the heart of one of St Barth’s few true neighborhoods, Anse de Cayes—once a Portuguese stronghold—this hotel feels homespun and personable. There are wooden decks for wave-watching, a sky-reflecting oval pool and pretty rooms hidden like garden dens amid tumbles of greenery and peacock-bright flowers, palms and avocado trees. What’s the story? Owner Anne Jousse—proprietor of several hotels in France, including the groundbreaking Bel Ami and Domaine de La Bretesche in the Loire-Atlantique region—has brought to the Caribbean a perfect one-off: an ecologically responsible hotel with good bones. Manapany was one of the island's first to welcome guests and a hot spot in the 1970s—and closed its doors well before the hurricanes hit the island in 2017. Now there’s a clear commitment to the environment, with solar panels providing much of the power, an effort to avoid use of chemicals, and only electric cars allowed through its gates. What can we expect from our room? Many of the breezy, easy white-washed rooms open directly to the sand; others are worth the climb for sweeping ocean views from enormous terraces. Ours even had an extra room with a twin bed, perfect for a small family. And you'll see startling pops of color—walls in peppery red, turmeric yellow, mint green, or ultramarine blue, and Mexican rugs and cushions. Buy and bring home one (or several) of the bamboo-fiber beach towels. How about the food and drink? Kick off your shoes. This is barefoot dining at its best—and locally sourced to boot, much of it from the vegetable garden or orchard, some of it reeled in by the island’s fishing boats. The over-water restaurant has a menu wrapping up flavors from both Brittany and the Caribbean. Anything to say about the service? Genuinely amiable. Who comes here? Those in the know, who know that Manapany is hidden only five minutes’ drive from the airport and Baie Saint-Jean. How does it fit into the region? The resort is set on a semi-rocky, walkable beach with surf sounds to lull you to sleep. The island’s other hotels have been brought back from the brink, with names such as Villa Marie Saint-Barth and Cheval Blanc St-Barth reopening following past hurricanes. Manapany has been conceived from a similar DNA, though feels sharper and more focused on its eco-credentials. Anything we missed? Those electric cars we mentioned: You can rent them. Just plug it in in the parking space, or adjacent to your room, and you won’t have to worry about a fill-up en route to departure. Worth it—and why? Yes, to see the island returning to normal with a recalibrated sense of direction." - David Jefferys
"Hotel Manapany is known for the trek to Piscines Naturelles, which takes about 25 minutes from Grand Fond Beach and offers a scenic spot to cool off." - Travel + Leisure Editors
"Unique on an island well known for profligate excess, Parisian Anne Jousse, owner of a portfolio of small hotels in France, sought to introduce more than a modicum of eco-responsibility to St. Bart’s. The glamorous hotelier had fallen for Manapany, a once-upon-a-time chic spot on the sleepy north shore, on family trips. She bought the place in 2016 and initiated a top-to-bottom reconstruction of its 4.2-acre beachfront on Anse des Cayes. Several years and one major hurricane later, it’s been reborn. Water is heated by solar panels, no chemicals are used in cleaning or maintenance, towels are made of woven bamboo, and only electric cars are permitted beyond reception. Yet Jousse’s endeavor isn’t lacking a lick of luxe. All 43 sea-view rooms and villas—eight directly on the sand, others a mighty but rewarding 80 steps above and with enormous terraces—are gracefully decorated by Parisian designer François Champsaur, with walls painted peppery red, turmeric orange, mint green, or ultramarine blue. Impossibly attractive staff serve artfully crafted rhum agricoles at barefoot dinners, and a Dr. Hauschka–supplied beachside spa has raised St. Bart’s wellness game. With its design ethos and ecological focus, Manapany represents the next wave of Caribbean hotels." - CNT Editors
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