Need to know
Rooms
Six, including two suites.
Check–Out
Noon, but flexible, subject to availability. Earliest check-in, 3pm.
More details
Rates don’t include breakfast, but a Continental spread (brought in from a local bakery) of fresh bread, pastries, homemade jams, charcuterie, and fruit juices can be purchased for US$20.
Also
There’s no elevator on property (rooms can only be accessed via the central staircase), sadly making Octavia Casa unsuitable for wheelchair users.
At the hotel
Rooftop terrace, courtyard, 24-hour security and free WiFi. In rooms: smart TV, air-conditioning, minibar, Nespresso coffee machine, tea-making kit, and Le Labo bath products.
Our favourite rooms
Each stylishly stripped-back room is as elemental in palette as the natural material it’s named after – including Lino (linen), Bronce (bronze), Roca (stone), Yute (jute), Tierra (earth), and Nogal (walnut). Muted neutrals set a soothing scene throughout the sleeping quarters, with cloud-like linens to sink into. For slightly more space to stretch out in, we’d plump for one of the two studios (Lino and Bronce).
Spa
There’s no spa onsite, but the hotel has local wellness brands Scape and Hauspa on speed-dial if you’d like an in-room massage.
Packing tips
In need of something extra stylish to slip into for the evening? You’ll want to save some space in your suitcase to raid Condesa’s trendy boutiques, which are brimming with vintage finds and artisan-made treasures.
Also
The teak lattices that cleverly shade the front of the casa were designed by Mexican architectural studio Pablo Pérez Palacios to act as a screen for guest privacy (while giving peeping passers-by a shuttered glimpse).
Children
Over-12s are welcome at this casa, but there are no extra beds, so another room must be booked.
Sustainability efforts
Water is recycled to irrigate the hotel’s plants and rooftop garden (which is where solar panels have been installed to maximize Mexico City’s sunny disposition).