Travel 4 minutes 08 June 2022

Treehouse Hotels That Won’t Kill You

If you had a treehouse as a kid, you know how special it was to have a place of your own, perched high up and away from the colorless concerns of real life. It was your little world to build and customize and manipulate and modify. It’s a wonder you survived.

We’ll be honest with you. Most of these hotels aren’t treehouses in the traditional sense. They weren’t designed by a nine-year-old, and all their support doesn’t come from tree branches and two-by-fours. They also don’t have a janky trapdoor. No, at these treehouses you can pretty much stand wherever you want without fear of falling through. The balconies were built by contractors, not the neighbour’s kids and, at night, when the wind blows the treetops, you can sleep like a baby with nary a bough break or cradle drop to awaken you.

These treehouse hotels combine the adventurousness of your childhood with all the detail and professionalism you expect from luxury boutique accommodation. They get you up amongst the leaves and into the gentle embrace of nature – a pleasure greater than knowing the secret knock. They’re romantic, whimsical, wonderful, improbable and, best of all: unlikely to lead to serious injury.

Conversas de Alpendre
Vila Nova de Cacela, Portugal
The combination of design-hotel good looks and family-inn friendliness is a tough pairing to deliver, but that’s a nutshell description of Conversas de Alpendre. Set in the countryside of the Eastern Algarve, it’s not just family-owned but family-run and family-made – with locally crafted artisanal elements that include the unique Tree House suite, which stands 20 feet above the ground, resulting in a panoramic view.

Conversas de Alpendre
Conversas de Alpendre

Origins Luxury Lodge
Bijagua, Costa Rica
Fantastically secluded in the mountainous interior of northern Costa Rica, Origins Luxury Lodge isn’t one for subtlety. Its elevated perspective gives it a panoramic view that takes in the rainforest’s treetops, the vast Lake Nicaragua, and the distant volcanoes. Its unique construction is eye-catching, even though its natural materials blend harmoniously with its surroundings. And the experience aims to create big, bold memories, by offering everything from horseback jungle tours to night-time wildlife tours.

Origins Luxury Lodge
Origins Luxury Lodge

Treehotel
Harads, Sweden
We’re happy to report that this is exactly what you would hope a hotel called Treehotel would be. Just south of the Arctic Circle, in Swedish Lapland, a young couple took over a thirties guesthouse, which travellers more or less ignored in favour of the single treehouse suite. So, with the help of seven different Swedish architecture firms, they built seven more, from the vertiginous ‘Cabin’ to the dizzying ‘Mirrorcube’ and the whimsical ‘UFO’.

Treehotel
Treehotel

Rancho Pacifico
Uvita de Osa, Costa Rica
There’s just one stressful thing about Rancho Pacifico – and that’s the two-mile drive, 2,000 vertical feet up a mountainside, from the little town of Uvita on Costa Rica’s southern coast. The payoff? 250 private mountainside acres of virgin rainforest with ocean views, flora, fauna and pristine waterfalls. The Treehaus villas, complete with outdoor Jacuzzis and hammocks on their private decks, are built into the jungle canopy, twenty feet above their own three-acre gardens.

Rancho Pacifico
Rancho Pacifico

Huilo Huilo Montaña Mágica
Neltume, Chile
If Montaña Mágica, or “Magic Mountain”, conjures up childhood holidays and the artificial wonders of theme parks, you’re in the right frame of mind: this is a luxury hotel shaped like a small mountain, covered in jungle foliage, with hobbit-hole windows peeking through and a manmade waterfall cascading down the side. Guestrooms are treehouse-like, with native wood panelling and warm light, and answer the question: what’s it like to actually live inside of a tree? Hiilo Huilo is actually a collection of hotels, each with it’s own spin on the treehouse vibe, including Huilo Huilo Nawelpi Lodge and Hulio Huilo Reino Fungi Lodge.

Huilo Huilo Montaña Mágica
Huilo Huilo Montaña Mágica

Xinalani
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico
You’ll be in heaven at Xinalani, so long as you’re into the great outdoors and the resort’s low-impact approach to the environment. The natural landscape surrounding the place is Xinalani’s main attraction: even the 23 guestrooms, situated within a series of palm-thatched cabins, are open-air. Each has just three walls and a curtain that you’ll probably leave open most of the time, the better to catch a sea breeze or gaze at the thousands of stars twinkling in the night sky.

Xinalani
Xinalani

Loire Valley Lodges
Esvres-sur-Indre, France
Not every Loire Valley hotel has to follow the wine-château model. Loire Valley Lodges turns to nature for inspiration; its 18 treehouse-like lodges standing on stilts among the oaks, chestnuts, and Douglas firs of this 750-acre forest. There’s no wi-fi and no TV, just a Nordic, modernist vibe, a front-row view of the woods, and a full complement of rather high-end comforts, including a jacuzzi on the terrace.

Loire Valley Lodges
Loire Valley Lodges

Bio Habitat Hotel
Armenia, Colombia
Bio Habitat sits on a mountaintop just outside the coffee-producing city of Armenia, surrounded by unspoiled native forest and affording an immersion in nature that’s entirely appropriate for an eco-hotel. Here there are no mere accommodations, but ‘Habitats’ – most of them suites, designed in an unapologetically modernist style, with vast picture windows that provide expansive views. For total immersion there are the ‘Aviaries’, elevated structures tucked into the forest, with glass on all four sides.

Bio Habitat Hotel
Bio Habitat Hotel

Secret Bay
Portsmouth, Dominica
If you want to hike through the rainforest and meditate at dawn on a treetop platform, and sleep in a clifftop villa sustainably built with native tropical wood, you go to Dominica – nicknamed “Nature Island” – and check into Secret Bay. The hotel has just six villas, each more lavish than the next. The original ‘Zabuco Honeymoon’ villa is situated on a rocky outcrop over the sea, while the ‘Ti-Fèy’ villas and the ‘Ylang Ylang’ villas feel like luxury treehouses.

Secret Bay
Secret Bay

Cyprès Si Haut
Saint-Mexant, France
It’s safe to say we’ll never feature a hotel smaller than Cyprès Si Haut. Whether it’s a one-room hotel or a one-bedroom guesthouse is purely academic – what matters is the privacy afforded by this treehouse, perched four meters high in a stand of pines and larches in Corrèze. There’s a Jacuzzi on the balcony, as well as a sauna with a picture window indoors, and room service arrives via a pulley contraption, so you never have to touch the forest floor.

Cyprès Si Haut
Cyprès Si Haut

JapaMala Resort
Ile Tioman, Malaysia
With its open-plan chalets designed for equal levels of privacy and exposure to the unspoiled surroundings, JapaMala Resort makes an art form out of leaving the busy world behind. Built to coexist with the landscape rather than subjugate it, the rooms vary based on their location within the resort’s eleven-acre slice of the island. Treetop chalets are very much ‘of the jungle’, skimming the top of the canopy, while Seacliff rooms provide unobstructed views of the South China Sea.

JapaMala Resort
JapaMala Resort

Hotel Las Islas
Barú, Colombia
Off the Colombian coast is the island of Barú, a lush, unspoiled idyll that’s home to the Corales de Rosario y de San Bernardo National Park — as well as to the Hotel Las Islas, whose bungalows spread from the private beach up into the dense tropical forest. Here you’ll sleep under a distinctive conical thatched roof, in a bungalow that spans at least 70 square meters. Some have decks that open directly onto the sea, while others are built in trees with vertiginous views of the canopy.

Hotel Las Islas
Hotel Las Islas

Orion Treehouses
Saint-Paul de Vence, France
It’s not easy to choose between the ethereal cabins at Orion Treehouses. The boutique hotel, located in a peaceful wooded setting just outside the medieval village of Saint-Paul de Vence, consists of four treehouses suspended high over a lush garden with flowering rose bushes and an ecological swimming pool. All are light-filled and lined with natural wood, featuring private baths and large terraces framed by oak branches.

Orion Treehouses
Orion Treehouses

Nihi Sumba
Sumba, Indonesia
Nihi Sumba has been called the best hotel in the world – and while we would hesitate to go quite that far, it’s fair to say there’s a strong case to be made. It’s set on hundreds of acres of waterfront land, between a glorious private beach and the edge of a truly untamed jungle. The rooms are fantastically luxurious – its villas are the very picture of contemporary luxury elegance, including the two-floor treehouse villas, each built around the trunk of a tree, with views over the ocean.

Nihi Sumba
Nihi Sumba

Keemala
Kamala, Thailand
Keemala’s villas are loosely modelled after the design of tribal dwellings. The ‘Tent Pool Villas’, for example, take inspiration from the rainforest’s nomadic tribes, featuring tent-like domed roofs and striking oval soaking tubs perched high over the greenery below. The cocoon-like ‘Tree Pool Houses’, in contrast, channel the aesthetic of the We-ha (Sky) clan, with two levels and suspended furniture. The fantastical ‘Bird’s Nest Villas’ are like elegant, futuristic birdcages built of woven wood and glass, looking out over the sea and the forest.

Keemala
Keemala

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