Ancient ruins run beneath you. Renaissance architecture surrounds you. And a 19th-century palazzo becomes your home for the night. Anantara Palazzo Naiadi layers eras in a single glance. At a stone’s throw is the Fountain of the Naiads. Look up and Michelangelo’s basilica frames the horizon. Beneath and behind the piazza sit the Baths of Diocletian, once the largest thermae in the empire, their footprint still dictating the quarter’s geometry. Across the curve, Michelangelo’s Santa Maria degli Angeli e dei Martiri folds a basilica into those very ruins.
The ground beneath your feet, the walls beside your bed, and the story your window overlooks — all partake in this history. The rooms hold on to classical proportions but are styled with a light hand. Modern materials contrast frescoed ceilings. And the interiors are just the right balance of restraint and resplendence, and they don’t compete with the view.
In the present-day era when five-star hotels risk becoming interchangeable, and born out of cookie-cutter moulds, Anantara Rome feels specific. It offers both a lens into the city and a quiet pause from it