Hotel in Santiago, Chile
The Singular Santiago
925ptsHeritage-Frame Urban Precision

About The Singular Santiago
A Leading Hotels of the World member occupying a converted heritage building in Santiago's Lastarria quarter, The Singular Santiago translates the group's Patagonian design credentials into an urban register. Sixty-two rooms, a rooftop bar with city-wide views, a standout spa, and a restaurant pairing French technique with Chilean ingredients position it against the city's design-led independents rather than its international chain hotels. Rates from $385 per night.
Where Lastarria Sets the Scene
Santiago's hospitality market has divided along a familiar axis: large international brands anchored in El Golf and Las Condes on one side, and a smaller cohort of design-conscious independents clustered in the older, denser neighbourhoods on the other. Lastarria sits firmly in the second camp. The quarter's 19th-century streetscape, bookshops, and gallery-adjacent cafés attract a Santiago crowd that reads design literacy as a baseline expectation rather than a differentiator. Hotels that open here are making a statement about positioning before a guest crosses the threshold. The Singular Santiago, at Merced 294, makes that statement clearly: it is a property with architectural intent, operating in a neighbourhood that will hold it to account.
The Singular group's founding property in Patagonia established the brand's credentials in the high-design adventure-lodge category, a competitive tier that also includes properties like Ecocamp Patagonia in Torres del Paine, Explora Torres del Paine, and Explora Patagonia National Park. Translating a remote-wilderness brand into an urban context is a genuinely difficult manoeuvre. The Santiago property handles it by retaining the group's visual rigour while softening the rough-edged materiality that makes sense in the south but would feel affected in a city centre. The result is a property that is more refined and less rugged than its Patagonian sibling, which is the right calibration for Lastarria.
The Rooftop as Urban Observatory
In a city where altitude and air quality can limit long sightlines, the hotel's rooftop bar earns its reputation on direct terms: from it, practically the whole of Santiago is visible. The Andes frame the eastern edge on clear days, the city grid extends west, and Lastarria's roofline sits below. Rooftop bars are common enough in Latin American urban hotels, but proximity to the Andes and Santiago's particular topography make this one worth noting as a distinct spatial experience rather than a standard amenity check. It functions as an orientation device as much as a drinking venue, especially on an arrival evening when the city's scale is still being absorbed.
Chilean Ingredients, French Framework
The hotel's restaurant operates in a mode that has become more coherent across Santiago's serious dining scene over the past decade: French culinary technique applied to Chilean primary produce. This is not fusion in the imprecise sense the term acquired in the 1990s. It is a structural approach, where classical preparation methods are used as a framework through which locally sourced ingredients are interpreted. Chile's larder is genuinely compelling for this exercise: the Pacific coastline produces seafood of considerable range and quality, the central valley yields stone fruit and vegetables at a different intensity than European equivalents, and altitude differentials create microclimates that complicate and enrich the sourcing map.
Restaurants in Santiago working this register range from the technically demanding to the more accessible, and the Singular's dining room occupies a position that serves both hotel guests and the wider Lastarria neighbourhood. For a broader picture of where the hotel's restaurant sits relative to the city's dining options, our full Santiago restaurants guide maps the scene across neighbourhoods and price points.
Sixty-Two Rooms and What They Signal
At 62 rooms, The Singular Santiago is a property that makes deliberate choices about scale. Santiago's international flagships operate at a different volume: the Mandarin Oriental, Santiago and The Ritz-Carlton, Santiago both carry larger room counts and address a corporate and high-end leisure segment that values brand recognition and amenity breadth. The W Santiago plays in a different register again, oriented toward nightlife and design spectacle. The Singular's 62-room count places it in a narrower band alongside properties like The Aubrey, Hotel Magnolia, and Ismael Hotel, where intimacy of service and architectural specificity matter more than scale. The Casa Bueras Boutique Hotel and Hotel Boutique Le Reve operate in the same Lastarria vicinity, making this quarter the most concentrated node of design-conscious small-to-mid-scale accommodation in the city.
The Leading Hotels of the World membership, active as of 2025, functions as an external trust signal for guests who use that affiliation as a proxy for service standards when booking in unfamiliar cities. It also positions the property in a global peer set that includes design-led independents rather than chain affiliates, which is consistent with the Singular group's brand positioning across its Chilean portfolio.
The Spa as a Genuine Draw
Hotel spas in this price bracket ($385 per night as a baseline rate) are common enough that they rarely warrant separate editorial attention. The Singular Santiago's spa appears to be an exception to that general rule, noted consistently as a property highlight rather than a standard amenity. In the context of a city-centre hotel, a spa that operates at a level above the functional represents a meaningful differentiator, particularly for guests using Santiago as a base for the broader Chilean itinerary. Properties like Puyuhuapi Lodge & Spa in Aisen or Futangue Hotel & Spa deliver spa experiences embedded in remote landscape, which is a different proposition. The Singular Santiago's spa offers a comparable emphasis within an urban hotel format.
Planning a Stay
Rates from $385 per night put The Singular Santiago at the upper end of Santiago's design-independent tier, below the pricing of the major international flagships but above the entry-level boutiques in the same neighbourhood. Booking is leading handled directly through the hotel's own channels to confirm room category and availability, given the relatively compact 62-room inventory. The Lastarria address places guests within walking distance of the neighbourhood's restaurants, galleries, and the Parque Forestal, with the city's Metro system providing access to the broader metropolitan area. For guests planning to extend into Chile's wider geography after Santiago, the Singular group's Patagonian property offers a natural continuation of the same design sensibility in a dramatically different landscape; properties like Awasi Atacama, andBeyond Vira Vira in Pucon, Noi Puma Lodge, Clos Apalta Residence, and CasaMolle each address a different region and travel tempo within Chile's varied geography. For those extending the trip beyond Latin America, the design-led urban hotel model recurs in very different forms at properties like The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City, Aman New York, or Aman Venice, though the cultural register and price ceiling differ considerably. The Palacio Astoreca Hotel in Valparaiso and Debaines Hotel Santiago round out the regional picture for guests considering multi-city Chilean itineraries. For Easter Island and far-south extensions, Explora Rapa Nui occupies its own category entirely.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which room offers the leading experience at The Singular Santiago?
The hotel operates 62 rooms within a heritage building in Lastarria. Without current room-category data, the most reliable approach is to request a higher-floor room directly when booking to maximise access to Andes views, which the property's rooftop bar demonstrates are available at altitude. Leading Hotels of the World membership suggests a service standard that should extend to accommodation recommendations at the point of reservation.
What is The Singular Santiago leading at?
Within Santiago's design-independent hotel tier, the property's combination of a well-regarded spa, a restaurant working with Chilean ingredients through a French technical framework, and a rooftop bar with city-wide views makes it one of the more coherent all-round offers in the Lastarria quarter. The Leading Hotels of the World affiliation (2025) provides external validation of service standards. At $385 per night, it prices above the neighbourhood's boutique options but below the major international flagships.
What is the leading way to book The Singular Santiago?
With 62 rooms and a Leading Hotels of the World membership, the most direct booking route is through the hotel's official website or via a travel advisor affiliated with the Leading Hotels programme, which may offer rate parity or additional inclusions. Given the relatively small room count, advance booking is advisable during Santiago's peak season, which runs from December through February.
Who is The Singular Santiago leading for?
The property addresses travellers who want design-led accommodation with genuine neighbourhood character rather than the amenity breadth of a large international flagship. At $385 per night in Lastarria, it suits those for whom the spa, the restaurant's approach to Chilean produce, and proximity to the quarter's cultural life matter more than a large room count or brand-loyalty points. It also works well as a Santiago anchor for broader Chilean itineraries that extend into Patagonia or the Atacama.
How does The Singular Santiago relate to the group's Patagonian properties?
The Singular group established its reputation in the high-design adventure-lodge segment in Patagonia before opening this Santiago property. The urban hotel shares the group's design rigour but operates in a noticeably more refined register, replacing rugged materiality with a finish appropriate to a heritage building in a dense city neighbourhood. Guests using Santiago as a gateway to Patagonia or the wider Chilean south can treat the two properties as complementary stages of the same itinerary rather than competing options.
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