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    Hotel in Bariloche, Argentina

    Llao Llao Resort, Golf & Spa

    150pts

    Andean Lakefront Architecture

    Llao Llao Resort, Golf & Spa, Hotel in Bariloche

    About Llao Llao Resort, Golf & Spa

    Built in 1938 by architect Alejandro Bustillo, Llao Llao sits between Lakes Nahuel Huapi and Moreno inside Argentine Patagonia's national park, with 168 rooms, 32 suites, five dining venues, an 18-hole golf course, and a lakeside spa. It occupies a specific tier in South American resort hospitality: grand-scale architecture with a national-park address that few properties on the continent can match.

    Where the Architecture Does the Talking

    The approach to Llao Llao along Avenida Bustillo tells you exactly what kind of property you are dealing with before you reach the entrance. Kilometre 25 places the resort well beyond Bariloche's commercial centre, deep into the Nahuel Huapi National Park corridor, where the road narrows, the forest closes in, and the lake surfaces appear on both sides. The building that materialises on a small hill between Lakes Nahuel Huapi and Moreno is not trying to compete with the scenery — it is arranged around it, with the Andean peaks and the water serving as walls that the architecture genuinely acknowledges rather than merely frames through a window.

    Architect Alejandro Bustillo completed the structure in 1938, and the property's reputation rests substantially on that original act of placement and design. Bustillo, whose work defined much of Bariloche's civic and institutional character in the mid-twentieth century, chose a Norman-influenced alpine vocabulary rendered in local stone and wood — a palette that has aged into the surrounding native coihue forest rather than against it. The argument that Llao Llao constitutes an architectural achievement is not retrospective flattery; it reflects the degree to which the building's proportions, its pitched roofs, its stone chimneys, and its relationship to the hill have become the reference point against which later Patagonian resort construction is measured. Properties like Charming Luxury Lodge & Private Spa in San Carlos de Bariloche and Correntoso Lake & River Hotel in Villa La Angostura each pursue their own design logic, but the 1938 Bustillo building retains a specific historical weight those properties do not carry.

    The Room Configuration and What It Signals

    Argentine Patagonia's premium resort market has consolidated around a familiar tension: large-footprint properties that justify infrastructure investment versus smaller lodges that trade on intimacy. Llao Llao resolves this by operating at genuine scale , 168 double rooms, 32 suites, and one cabin , while distributing that inventory across configurations that vary meaningfully by view and specification. The Moreno Lake Wing contains 43 deluxe rooms with air conditioning, compartmentalised bathrooms, Jacuzzis, and wide terraces with panoramic views toward Mount Tronador. Within the suite inventory, 43 studios and suites are positioned for views over Moreno Lake and Tronador, and several carry fireplaces and private balconies. Mountain, garden, and lake orientations are all available across the broader room mix, which means the booking decision rewards specificity: the guest who requests a lake-facing suite in the Moreno Wing is making a different stay than someone who accepts a garden-view room without interrogating the options.

    This configuration puts Llao Llao in a different competitive bracket than the small-key design lodges that have proliferated across Argentine wine country and northern Patagonia, such as Cavas Wine Lodge in Alto Agrelo or Awasi Mendoza in Lujan de Cuyo. Those properties compete on exclusivity of scale. Llao Llao competes on the authority of its address, the weight of its architectural history, and the breadth of its programme , a different value proposition that suits guests who want a full-service resort rather than a curated small-group experience.

    Dining: Five Venues, One Dominant Logic

    The dining programme is structured around a logic familiar to large Patagonian properties: multiple venues serving different moods and times of day, with the regional larder as the common thread. The Asador Criollo anchors the food offer in Patagonian lamb, the region's most legible culinary signature, alongside grilled meat cuts, fish, grilled vegetables, and homemade pasta. Restaurant Patagonia is the main formal dining room, wood-decorated and positioned for lake views. The Lobby Bar operates around two large fireplaces with cocktails, sandwiches, and simple plates. The Moreno Lake Lounge carries the property's own craft beer alongside snacks and light bites, while the Winter Garden offers regional cakes, salads, and views over Lake Nahuel Huapi and Puerto Pañuelo. The Club House at the golf course extends to the traditional Llao Llao Tea, served while looking out over the fairways.

    This is a resort dining structure rather than a destination dining one. The quality argument rests on ingredient provenance and setting rather than on any specific culinary ambition that would draw guests from Bariloche to eat here. Guests planning their food experiences around the broader town should consult our full Bariloche restaurants guide.

    The Activities Infrastructure

    The property's programme extends well beyond the spa and pool circuit typical of large South American resorts. The 18-hole golf course, framed by lakes and centennial trees, is a specific draw: courses operating at this altitude and inside a national park setting are unusual by any regional standard, and Llao Llao's course is the primary reason golf-focused travellers specifically choose this address over alternatives. An indoor-outdoor heated infinity pool and whirlpool sit alongside a full sauna suite and fitness centre. The spa occupies eight glazed treatment cabinets with panoramic views, a format that positions the sensory experience of the natural setting as an integral part of the programme rather than a backdrop. Organised excursions, tango and salsa classes, and the Nahuelitos Kid's Club for children aged four to twelve give the property a genuinely multi-generational range , relevant for family groups who need structured programming across age brackets.

    Guests drawn to Argentina specifically for wilderness experiences should note that Llao Llao's national park position means several trekking, kayaking, and lake excursion departure points are accessible without returning to Bariloche. Those planning itineraries that extend into other corners of Argentine wilderness might consider how Llao Llao connects to properties like Estancia Cristina in El Calafate or Arakur Ushuaia Resort & Spa in Ushuaia , both addressing the southern end of Patagonia's premium hotel circuit.

    Planning the Stay

    Llao Llao sits at kilometre 25 of Avenida Ezequiel Bustillo, placing it approximately 25 kilometres from Bariloche's centre and the Teniente Luis Candelaria Airport. The national park location rewards staying multiple nights; one-night stops lose the rhythm of a property designed around morning light on the lake, afternoon activity, and fireside evenings. Peak season runs December through February for summer visitors and July for the ski market, with the Catedral ski resort accessible from Bariloche. The shoulder months of March-April and October-November carry significantly fewer guests and the same geographical attributes. The broader Argentine wine-country and Andean circuit connects Bariloche to Casa de Uco in Tunuyán, Lodge Atamisque in Tupungato, and further afield to Colomé Winery in Molinos for travellers building a more complete picture of Argentina's premium landscape offerings. Those wanting a Bariloche alternative at smaller scale should look at Villa Beluno Hotel & Spa in the same city.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Llao Llao more low-key or high-energy?
    The answer depends on what you activate within it. The physical setting, the national park address, and the fireside evening rhythm are inherently unhurried. But the golf course, the organised excursions, the family activity programme, and the multiple dining venues give the property enough infrastructure to run at a fuller pace. Guests wanting quiet lake mornings and a long dinner get that. Families needing a structured daily schedule across different ages get that too. The architecture tilts the atmosphere toward contemplative, but the programming does not enforce it.
    What is the standout suite configuration at Llao Llao?
    The strongest configurations are in the Moreno Lake Wing, where 43 deluxe rooms and suites combine wide terraces, panoramic views toward Mount Tronador, Jacuzzis, and fireplaces. Within the broader suite inventory, units offering both a balcony and lake orientation carry the most direct connection to what the property's 1938 architectural brief was actually trying to achieve: a building that looks out at the water and the Andean peaks as its primary purpose. Specifying view orientation and fireplace at the time of booking matters significantly here.
    What makes Llao Llao worth the distance from Bariloche's centre?
    The kilometre 25 address is the point rather than the inconvenience. No property inside Bariloche proper has a national park site, a hilltop position between two lakes, or a building with the 1938 Bustillo heritage. The distance from town is what preserves the setting. The trade-off is that guests who want immediate access to Bariloche's restaurant scene or shopping will make that drive repeatedly. For guests whose primary interest is the Patagonian landscape, that trade-off resolves in the resort's favour without much debate.

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