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Clift Hotel

495 Geary Street, San Francisco, CA, USA

USA | California | San Francisco Bay Area Hotels

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Lowest price over the last 30 days: US$ 175.00 (approx. GB£ 108)

 

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  1. At a Glance
  2. Reviews
  3. Amenities
  4. Map & Guide
  • 18.0 Feedback Score
    out of 20

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    • Rooms

      17.5

    • Service

      18.0

    • Public Spaces

      18.5

    • Overall

      17.5

  • 82 Verified
    Guest Reviews

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What recent guests liked:

  • susan

    “location, service,”

  • natalie

    “The incredibly comfortable rooms and the beautiful … ”

  • Ashley

    “Upon entering the Clift you are overwhelmed with … ”

  • Eric

    “Rooms are very large and have great high ceilings. … ”

Clift Hotel

495 Geary Street

San Francisco, CA, USA

Style: Cutting-Edge

Atmosphere: Happening

373 Rooms

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Once San Francisco’s grandest old-fashioned luxury hotel, the century-old Clift underwent a thorough re-imagining at the hands of Philippe Starck, who has transformed its faded Victorian elegance into its nearest modern equivalent — all black, ivory and steely grey, with rich textures in hardwood, velvet and leather, it’s the last word in hyper-modern boutique decadence.

Hints of the hotel’s Art Deco heritage remain, from the choice of furnishings in the surrealist-inspired lobby to the noir-ish lighting effects throughout. The famous Redwood Room was the focus of the original Clift, and it’s still here in all its wood-paneled splendor, decked out in some of Starck’s most serious lounge furniture. Like Morgans and St Martins Lane, the Clift is home to an outpost of Jeffrey Chodorow’s Asia de Cuba, serving its signature fusion cuisine at a massive cross-shaped communal table made from hand-etched Venetian mirrored glass.

Guest rooms are stylish, but not precious — they’re sedate, almost monochrome, with accents in soft lavenders and greys, amplifying the effects of the natural light. Bathrooms are smallish, but clever, and the living spaces are spacious, many with astonishing views; the Clift is a high enough building to make for some spectacular sightlines.

It’s a bit of a scene, as any Morgans Hotel Group production is intended to be — that’s a large part of the appeal for the people who make up the Clift’s clientele. This is Starck at his most elegant, and his eye for a well-placed surprise only deepens this place’s mystique. It would seem there’s some mileage yet left to be wrung from this partnership.

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