Hobart, Australia

The Corinda Collection

Price per night from$116.91

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (including tax) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (AUD179.09), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Antique arthouse

Setting

At home in Hobart

Perched on a small hill in well-to-do Glebe, Corinda is a stately Victorian villa set in majestic period gardens. Its storied past is sensitively preserved in restored original features and artifacts from a bygone-era – take tea peering over the topiary from the wrought-iron verandah, stay in the convict-built Servants’ Quarters cottage, or hop in a vintage clawfoot bathtub for a lazy afternoon soak. Yet the owners, Julian and Chaxi, have put their own stamp on their ancestral home, with antiques sourced from flea markets around the world, and a Drawing Room honesty bar loaded with local bounty.

Smith Extra

Get this when you book through us:

A bottle of local wine

Facilities

Photos The Corinda Collection  facilities

Need to know

Rooms

Nine, including one suite.

Check–Out

10am, but flexible, subject to availability. Earliest check-in, 2pm – guests arriving when reception is closed will be given a keycode.

Prices

Double rooms from £101.86 (AU$197), including tax at 10 per cent.

More details

Breakfast is included if you book a room in the main house – expect muesli, Tasmanian yoghurt, eggs cooked to order and free-range local bacon. There are cooking facilities in the three cottages, or you can enjoy a full English fry-up in the restaurant fo

Also

You know you’ve done a good job on preservation when the National Trust takes notice: Corinda won an Award of Merit in 1995.

At the hotel

Honesty bar, free WiFi. In rooms: Smart TV with Netflix, minibar, free bottled water, tea- and coffee-making facilities, Melle Beauty bath products.

Our favourite rooms

The Verandah Room lives up to its name – it’s the only one with a private balcony. Mary Spode is light and bright, with gold-framed mirrors and a vintage clawfoot bathtub. To get the true old-world experience, go for Alfred Crisp’s pretty bay window, cedar chaise longue, and quirky corner-set commode.

Packing tips

A notepad for scribbling down the names of all the antique furniture-makers you never knew you loved.

Also

The hotel is not accessible for wheelchair users.

Pet‐friendly

No pets allowed, sorry – not even Tasmanian devils. See more pet-friendly hotels in Hobart.

Children

All ages welcome, but it’s over-eights only in the main house. Cots can be added to cottages for younger children.

Food and Drink

Photos The Corinda Collection  food and drink

Top Table

There are no bad seats on the garden-facing verandah, so pick a table by your favourite fragrant plant.

Dress Code

Just pretend you’re going round to your friends’ house for Sunday lunch… and that they’ve got a really, really nice pad in Tasmania.

Hotel restaurant

There’s no restaurant as such – continental breakfast is served on the verandah overlooking the cobbled courtyard.

Hotel bar

The Tasmania-fuelled honesty bar is set up on an antique sideboard in the elegant Drawing Room. Mix your own cocktails from 666 Hellyers Road whisky, pop open an island-brewed Boag’s beer, or pour out a pinot noir from the esteemed Josef Chromy winery. There are snacks too, including Ashgrove cheese churned in northern Tasmania, and an accompanying house-made quince paste.

Last orders

Breakfast is served from 8am until 10am, or at 7.30am if you ask nicely.

Room service

Just ask if you fancy breakfast in bed.

Location

Photos The Corinda Collection  location
Address
The Corinda Collection
17 Glebe Street
Hobart
7000
Australia

Corinda is in the leafy residential neighborhood of Glebe, near the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens and a ten-minute drive from Hobart city centre and harbour.

Planes

Corinda is a 20-minute drive from Hobart International Airport, where Qantas, Virgin Australia and Jetstar fly in from most major Australian cities. Private transfers to the hotel cost AU$80. Call the Smith24 team for help with all your travel arrangements.

Automobiles

Renting a car is a great option if you’re intent on exploring Tasmania’s bucolic interior and spectacular coastline. Hire from the airport, and park up at the hotel’s on-site car park.

Worth getting out of bed for

Swat up on the history of Corinda and its glorious period gardens with a tour of the grounds led by an in-house expert – it’s popular, so book ahead. Once you know your marigolds from your magnolias, head to the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens, which are a short walk away through the salubrious Hobart suburb, The Glebe. Feast on street food at Salamanca Market (Saturdays, 8.30am to 3pm), or mooch around the boutiques in downtown Hobart. Take a fresh-air-filled daytrip to Huon Valley, down at the southern tip of the island; explore the stalac-tastic Hastings Caves, brave the tree-top Tahune airwalk, and dip your toes in the turquoise water at Cockle Creek. The Agrarian Kitchen is worth the drive inland for the farm-to-fork cuisine and cooking classes led by chef Rodney Dunn in the 19th-century schoolhouse. If you’d rather a night-in, sign up to a Spanish cookery lesson with Corinda’s own kitchen wizard, Chaxi.

Local restaurants

Fico (51A Macquarie St) is the talk of Hobart – local chef Oskar Rossi travelled the world before settling back home, and now creates Italian-inspired dishes unlike anything else in Tasmania (expect cubes of wasabi kingfish and squid-ink paccheri with crab and tomato on the AUS$75 set menu). Franklin (30 Argyle St) is a concrete and cow-hide-lined spot for locally-sourced burgers and seafood roasted in the ten-tonne wood oven. For seasonal organic fare and and bottles of biodynamic wine, go to Dier Makr (123 Collins St), or keep it casual at Ettie’s bar and bistro, set in one of Hobart’s oldest buildings (100 Elizabeth St).

Local cafés

The best latte in town is at Pilgrim Coffee (48 Argyle St), an exposed-brick-lined space serving French toast and bircher muesli alongside the speciality brews.

Reviews

Photos The Corinda Collection  reviews

Anonymous review

Every hotel featured is visited personally by members of our team, given the Smith seal of approval, and then anonymously reviewed. As soon as our reviewers have returned from this boutique hotel in a leafy suburb of Hobart and unpacked their Tasmanian wines and flea-market finds, a full account of their island break will be with you. In the meantime, to whet your wanderlust, here's a quick peek inside Corinda in Tasmania…

Corinda has a thousand tales to tell. The history of the house started in the 1870s, when the wealthy timber merchant and Mayor of Hobart, Alfred Crisp, bought this prime plot on the crest of a hill and built his magnificent Victorian residence. But the Corinda story goes back even further – the land was previously used as a convict-run vegetable farm, and you can still see (and stay in) the original servants’ quarters today. The estate passed through the Crisp family, most notably to Alfred’s son Basil, a cycling fanatic who won the world’s oldest track event, the Austral Wheel Race, in 1895. Over a hundred years on, Alfred’s great great grandson Julian preserves the spirit of Corinda with his wife Chaxi, who also happens to be an expert in the kitchen – for proof, join one of her Spanish cooking lessons.

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Price per night from $116.91