Corsica, France

Noae by Emerald Stay

Price per night from$244.76

Price information

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

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (EUR207.90), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Pin-drop peaceful palazzo

Setting

Elevated Corsican commune

Noae by Emerald Stay — the 17th-century Florentine-style residence formerly known as Palazzu Serenu — is indeed super chill, rising above the noise in straight-from-a-fairy-tale hilltop village Oletta in the upper circle of the island’s most rampantly wild quarter, with mountain-crowded views down to the Bay of Florent that would put a screensaver to shame. There’s only nine bright white suites and each has just what it needs – the views and picks from a fantastical art collection do the heavy lifting when it comes to decor. Breakfast on the terrace is this b&b's idyllic day-starter, and when you're in need of further sustenance, there are bars and dining spots, a walk away — Oletta's verdant scenery en route, sustainaing the emerald theme. 

Smith Extra

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Savoury, locally baked canistrelli biscuits

Facilities

Photos Noae by Emerald Stay facilities

Need to know

Rooms

Nine rooms, including five suites.

Check–Out

10am, and check-in is at 5pm. Both are flexible, on request and subject to availability.

More details

Rates exclude breakfast, but it's available for €20 each and is served alfresco on the hotel’s terrace.

Also

With hills, stairs and stepped terraces, historic palazzo hotel Noae by Emerald Stay sadly isn’t suitable if you have mobility issues.

Hotel closed

The property opens for summer from April till October.

At the hotel

Alfresco terraces, lounge, gardens, charged laundry service and free WiFi throughout. In rooms: TV, bathrobes, own-brand bath products.

Our favourite rooms

Suite decor barely differs aside from the choice of wall candy and some have extra space for lounging in, so the deciding vote comes down to the view. The Superior Suites just swing it for their mesmerising combo of mountain and sea. The Penthouses are the largest (sleeping three and four respectively), so they’d easily suit a family.

Poolside

Behind a windbreaker of sentry olive trees is the 20-metre lap pool (open 7am to 9pm), set at a high vantage point for a view that packs in palms, mountains and forested foothills. Pairs of shaded sun-beds are set on each of a set of large terraced steps that climb up a slope (we bagsy the top one) and there’s a bar close by for top-ups.

Spa

There’s no spa at Noae but one treatment room provides the calming setting for a small edit of massages. On request, yoga classes can be arranged on a terrace with highly motivating views, or staff can call in a personal trainer.

Packing tips

Load up on loungewear if you intend to lean into the hotel’s more restful nature; or all sorts of active gear if your aim is wild adventuring.

Pet‐friendly

Dogs are welcome to stay in all room types. Beds and bowls are provided and there’s a nightly fee of €20. See more pet-friendly hotels in Corsica.

Children

Noae by Emerald Stay’s tranquil nature might bore babes, but two suites can sleep families, cots are free of charge and babysitters can be hired for €30 an hour. Children must be accompanied at the pool.

Food and Drink

Photos Noae by Emerald Stay food and drink

Top Table

The terrace where breakfast is served could keep us all day with its comfy club seats and scenes to sigh over.

Dress Code

No sartorial guidance is needed for your first meal of the day.

Hotel restaurant

There's no restaurant at Noae by Emerald Stay, but the option to take Continental breakfast on the terrace each morning is hard to resist. 

Hotel bar

While drinks are of course served with breakfast, Noae by Emerald Stay does not have a bar, nor serve alcohol, so you'll have to make your own aperitif arrangements. 

Last orders

Breakfast runs from 7.30am till 10.30am.

Room service

The set-up at Noae is bed and breakfast only; for daytime sustenance, you'll need to self-serve.

Location

Photos Noae by Emerald Stay location
Address
Noae by Emerald Stay
Lieu Dit Paganacce
Oletta
20232
France

Noae’s 17th-century pewter-hued palazzo stands out amid the coral villas of on-high village Oletta, tucked into a crook of the Haute-Corse.

Planes

The nearest airport is Bastia-Poretta, a 30-minute drive away. The airport mainly receives flights from mainland France with French airlines, but there are direct flights from neighbouring European countries. Staff can help with arranging transfers (about €60 one-way).

Trains

You could take the Eurostar (www.eurostar.com) to Paris or Lille, catch an onward TGV to Nice and then take a ferry to Bastia with Corsica Ferries (www.corsica-ferries.co.uk). It’s a wayward and rather leisurely route that could conservatively take up to 10 hours, but you’ll see a generous swathe of countryside and coast along the way.

Automobiles

The Nice to Bastia ferry carries cars, and driving all the way could save you cash, but you’d need a few days either side to make it pleasant if you're coming from the UK (it’s about a 16-hour drive from London). Or, if you’d rather fly but want to explore Corsica by car, you can hire a car on arrival. Just make sure there are two breathalyser kits in the car at all times (French law) and that you have change for the tolls. Free parking is available a few minutes from your hotel room at the bottom of a steep driveway, but staff will meet you to help with luggage. There's also a charger for electric cars at the hotel.

Other

Corsica Ferries operates the Nice-Bastia route, as well as several others. The sailing takes around five hours. During peak summer months, ferries also make the hop between Italy and the east of Corsica – very handy for multi-centre trips.

Worth getting out of bed for

At Noae by Emerald Stay, you can turn the dial all the way down and clear your mind of all but that panorama of profuse greenery, casually majestic mountains and the cheeky blue-green glint in the Haute-Corse’s eye, the Bay of Florent. After a few days of languid dipping and afternoon naps, you may feel the call of the wild. Corsica’s north has swerved development, leaving a plant-based playground you can thunder across on horseback or by SUV, soar through on a paraglider or microlight plane, and hike through with abandon. The Via Ferrata trek that traverses rocky outcrops, customs officer trails, old mule tracks and mountain winds is the most famous, or you could walk the Sentier des Douaniers, a two-hour Cap Corse coastal hike past fern forests, nature reserves, diving spots, chapels and towers. It begins at Macinaggio (about an hour and a half away by car). 

The town of Saint Florent is a 10-minute drive away; its main beach is called La Roya, and it’s got everything you need to pep up your holiday, if fun-boarding, jet-skiing, scuba diving and the like are your bag. With 1,000km of calm coastline and lakes prettily pooled in mountain valleys, watersports are something of an obsession here. Or, you could earn your supper on a rod, drag-net, harpoon or berley (where bait is scattered on the water) fishing trip; the chef will cook up your catches for dinner that evening. Or, enjoy nature in kill-free form by cruising to Scandola Nature Reserve, whose surreally luminous waters and volcanic jags of geometric terracotta rock look like the cover of a psychedelic funk album. And, aside from ‘good face’, the landscape gives unique delicacies, famously goat and sheep cheeses (creamy Brocciu is the stand-out) and top wines – a happy pairing. Tour the dairies and vineyards to get a taste for the region. Or for a more intriguing day trip, drive 40 minutes north to Nonza, on the Cap Corse. It’s a tiny village built on a black rocky pinnacle that plunges vertically into the sea. You can descend 600 steps to the black sand beach, or take photos from above.

Local restaurants

Formerly Genoese Corsica only officially became a part of France in the late 18th century; so while dining is swaggeringly Gallic in many of the island’s excellent eateries, menus also skew Italian and to the island’s own peculiarities. In Oletta, a five-minute walk uphill, A Forge has an idyllic window-walled dining room where verdant bucolic views star and the menu celebrates island-sourced artisanal ingredients. At Le Potager du Nebbio close to Saint Florent, tables are set out in an arbour by the kitchen garden, so you can see exactly where your food comes from. Expect fabulously fresh fare such as tomato tatin, zucchini risotto with prawns and cheese samosas with garden herbs. North, along Cap Corse, is La Sassa, an entirely alfresco restaurant for good reason, because the views of the coast and cliffs are the stuff of spontaneous proposals, so be sure to book for sunset. The food upholds its reputation (earning it Michelin acclaim), with dishes such as a huge savoury cannelloni with truffle and brocciu cheese, caviar ravioli with hazelnut cream, red-tuna tataki and lobster salad, and decadent desserts. La Roya, a 10-minute drive away, also dabbles in swish seaside dining, with rustic ingredients given the haute treatment and platings you can’t help but photograph. 

Reviews

Photos Noae by Emerald Stay 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 placid palazzu turned hotel in charmed Corsican village Oletta and unpacked their olive oil, liver sausage, ewe’s cheese and wine from the island’s authentic appellations, a full account of their stop, drop and flop break will be with you. In the meantime, to whet your wanderlust, here's a quick peek inside Noae by Emerald Stay in Corsica…

One almost expects the check-in desk bell at Noae by Emerald Stay to be swapped out for a tingsha meditation chime, because everything from that point onwards unfolds at a soothing pace. Each of the just nine minimalist suites has plenty of breathing space (the smallest is 32sq m), all white walls and spare yet luxurious furnishings; views are a vast deep half-pipe of mountainous greenery – fruit groves, cypress trees, palms – flowing uninterrupted to the Bay of Florent; and there’s really little else to break the scenery’s spell than swimming and sipping Corsican wines – it’s been balming souls since the 17th century when the clue was in its name: Palazzu Serenu. Of course, there’s nothing so brash as a bell to hail your arrival – in fact, the bespoke desk is the work of French artist Paul de Pignol and it’s topped with his signature bronze figures. The hotel’s impressive art collection adds a little visual spice, like sparkly pasties on a stay in a state of undress: Wendy Wischer’s life-size tree drips sparkling strands of beads, Menial Merida’s Yves Klein-blue discs pep up the living room, Daniel Arsham’s puckered wall plays with the fabric of the building, and there are pieces by Anish Kapoor, Yvan Rebyj and Kim Tschang Yeul breaking up the suites’ monochrome. Dynamism is embedded in Corsica’s untamed landscape too: ruffle the placid aquamarine waters on a jet-ski or speedboat, harpoon fish to be cooked up for supper, gallop along mountain paths, hike out into the wilderness or paraglide gracefully from a granite bluff – or y’know, just sample sheep’s cheese and local wines until you can’t move. Because, until your internal spell-breaking tingsha chimes for check-out, it’s all about keeping things slow, easy and serene.

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Price per night from $240.88