Hotel in Cartagena, Colombia
Hotel Quadrifolio
500ptsColonial Manor Intimacy

About Hotel Quadrifolio
An eight-suite colonial manor on Calle del Cuartel, Hotel Quadrifolio occupies a converted Spanish Colonial house in Cartagena's historic walled city. At $572 per night, it sits in the intimate end of the Centro Histórico's boutique tier, where small room counts and private pools substitute for the scale of larger luxury properties. Airport transfers run $25 each way, and meeting facilities make it a credible option for small corporate retreats.
Where Colonial Cartagena Still Lives
The walled city of Cartagena de Indias is one of the few places in the Americas where Spanish Colonial urban fabric has survived largely intact, and the Centro Histórico — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — concentrates that heritage into a walkable grid of ochre and white townhouses, bougainvillea-draped balconies, and churches that predate most North American cities by two centuries. Calle del Cuartel sits inside this grid, and Hotel Quadrifolio occupies a converted colonial manor on that street. The approach matters here: arriving on foot through the Centro's narrow lanes, past ironwork balconies and shuttered windows, frames the property in a way that arriving by taxi from the airport cannot. This is architecture as orientation, the neighbourhood doing the contextual work before you cross the threshold.
The hotel's name derives from the quadrifolio, a four-leaf-clover motif that recurs throughout Spanish Colonial Colombian architecture as a decorative element in stonework, ironwork, and tiled floors. In naming the property after a pattern embedded in the city's built heritage, the hotel signals its relationship to place: not a building that happens to be historic, but one that treats that history as structural to what it is. Cartagena served at various points as the principal port of the Spanish New World, the gateway through which South American gold and silver moved toward Europe, and through which European settlers, enslaved Africans, and colonial administrators arrived. The city's architecture absorbed all of those pressures, and what survives today is a compound layering of Spanish, African, and indigenous Caribbean influences that makes the walled city unlike any comparable colonial-era urban centre in the region.
Eight Suites, One Pool, and the Logic of Small Scale
Boutique hotel tier in Cartagena has grown considerably over the past decade, with properties across a range of sizes and price points converting colonial manors into accommodation. That conversion tends to work leading at small scale, where the internal courtyard, the original room proportions, and the relationship between indoor and outdoor space can be maintained without the structural compromises that come with adding inventory. At eight suites, Hotel Quadrifolio sits at the smaller end of that range, alongside properties like Casa Pestagua and Casa San Agustin, which also work within the converted-manor format in the Centro Histórico.
What distinguishes this tier from larger properties , the Charleston Santa Teresa, or the Four Seasons Cartagena further along the coast , is not amenity density but atmosphere-to-room ratio. At eight rooms, the courtyard, the pool, and the common areas function more like private spaces than hotel facilities. Few colonial conversions at this room count come with both a swimming pool and a hot tub; that Quadrifolio has both is a practical detail that matters in Cartagena's coastal heat. Suites are equipped with king beds, 42-inch plasma screens, and iPod docking stereos, positioning the property in a comfortable mid-luxury band rather than a stripped-back heritage experience. The rate of $572 per night reflects that positioning: this is not budget heritage tourism, and it is not the upper ceiling of Cartagena luxury either, but it sits in a coherent band where the intimacy of small scale is itself part of what you are paying for.
Comparable boutique options in the Centro include the Hotel Boutique Casona del Colegio, the Hotel Boutique Santo Domingo, and the Hotel Casa del Coliseo, each working within the same converted-manor logic. The Hotel Casa Don Sancho by Mustique offers a similarly curated approach at the higher end of that spectrum. For those who want to contrast Centro intimacy with the scale of a larger international property, the Hotel InterContinental Cartagena de Indias provides an instructive counterpoint.
Cartagena as a Base: The Centro's Practical Value
Staying inside the walled city changes the rhythm of a visit to Cartagena. The Centro Histórico is compact enough to cover on foot, and proximity to the plaza, the market streets, and the restaurant strip along Calle de la Iglesia means that the city's character is available without a vehicle. The neighbourhood around Calle del Cuartel is residential as much as it is touristic, which keeps the experience grounded in something other than pure hospitality infrastructure. Mornings in the Centro move at a different pace than evenings, and that variation is part of what the neighbourhood offers. For a wider sense of how the city's accommodation and restaurant scene sits together, our full Cartagena restaurants guide maps the dining options across the walled city and beyond.
Airport transfers from Rafael Núñez International Airport run at $25 each way for up to two guests, and the journey takes approximately 15 minutes. That transfer arrangement is not unusual in Cartagena's boutique tier, but it is worth confirming directly at booking. The hotel also maintains equipped meeting space with catering, which makes it a credible option for small corporate retreats , a use case that the Centro Histórico supports rather than complicates, given the concentration of restaurants and walkable infrastructure that makes hosting easier than in more dispersed parts of the city.
Placing Quadrifolio in the Broader Colombian Hotel Picture
The Colombian boutique hotel category has expanded significantly beyond Cartagena. Bogotá's design-led properties, including the B.O.G. Hotel and the Hotel Boutique y Restaurante Vegetal Casa Lėlytė, work within a different urban register. The coffee-region properties , Bio Habitat Hotel AKEN Soul in Quindío, Bio Habitat Hotel in Armenia, and Cannúa Lodge in Marinilla , operate in landscape-driven formats where the exterior setting does much of the contextual work. The Elcielo Hotel and Restaurant in Medellín pairs accommodation with one of the country's highest-profile dining programs. The BOSKO Hotel in Guatapé functions within the lake-and-rock-formation tourism context of Antioquia. Each of these reflects a different strand of Colombian hospitality, and Quadrifolio's value is specifically tied to the Cartagena walled-city context , a heritage format that those other properties cannot replicate by definition. For Colombia's Caribbean coast more broadly, the Hilton Santa Marta and the Hotel el Prado in Barranquilla represent the regional alternatives in adjacent cities.
For travellers accustomed to small-format luxury properties globally, the frame of reference might reach to the intimacy of Aman Venice or the curated scale of Amangiri in Canyon Point, though the price point and context differ substantially. The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City, Aman New York, and Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz occupy entirely different tiers by room count and rate, but the underlying logic of choosing intimacy over inventory translates across those categories. Hotel Quadrifolio applies that logic to one of the Americas' most historically legible addresses.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What room category do guests prefer at Hotel Quadrifolio?
- With only eight suites across the property, Quadrifolio does not operate a tiered room category system in the way larger hotels do. All accommodation is at suite level, with king beds and consistent in-room specification. The distinction guests tend to care about in properties of this format is courtyard access and proximity to the pool rather than room grade, though specific suite configurations are leading confirmed at the time of booking.
- Why do people go to Hotel Quadrifolio?
- The primary draw is the combination of location and scale: eight suites inside a restored colonial manor on Calle del Cuartel puts guests in the heart of Cartagena's UNESCO-listed Centro Histórico at a room count that keeps the atmosphere close to private. At $572 per night, the property sits in a mid-luxury band where the intimacy of the format and the walkable access to the walled city's streets, plazas, and restaurants are the central value proposition rather than branded amenities or programmed experiences.
- Do they take walk-ins at Hotel Quadrifolio?
- With only eight rooms, Quadrifolio operates with a capacity that makes walk-in availability unlikely at any meaningful volume, particularly during Cartagena's high season between December and March, and during Semana Santa. Advance reservations are advisable; the hotel's website and direct contact details are the appropriate channels, and transfer arrangements from Rafael Núñez International Airport can be confirmed at booking for $25 each way.
- What is Hotel Quadrifolio a strong choice for?
- Two distinct travel profiles fit the property well: leisure travellers seeking a quiet, historically rooted stay inside Cartagena's walled city, and small corporate groups looking for a meeting-capable boutique property with catering. The combination of equipped meeting space and Centro Histórico location is less common in the eight-room tier, and it gives the hotel a functional range that purely atmospheric boutique properties in the neighbourhood do not always offer.
- What does the hotel's name actually refer to, and does it connect to the property itself?
- The quadrifolio is a four-leaf-clover geometric motif that appears frequently in Spanish Colonial Colombian architecture, used as a decorative element in stonework, ironwork, and tiled surfaces throughout Cartagena's historic buildings. The hotel takes its name from this pattern as an explicit reference to the architectural tradition it sits within: the property is a restored colonial manor in the Centro Histórico, and the name functions as a statement of that heritage relationship rather than a marketing abstraction. Guests interested in seeing the motif in context will find it throughout the walled city's older building stock.
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