Puglia, Italy

Palazzo Daniele

Price per night from$295.62

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 (EUR272.00), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Gilt frame, contemporary canvas

Setting

Sun-kissed comune

Modernism meets old-world majesty at Palazzo Daniele, a Pugliese mansion celebrating 150 years of Italian art and hospitality. The 19th-century palazzo had served owner Francesco Petrucci's family for four generations until he threw open its doors, enlisting Milanese architects to strip out the clutter and restore its historic splendour. A year later, he lent his ear to fellow art collector and hotelier Gabriele Salini – the man behind Smith stay G Rough – who convinced him to transform it into a nine-suite guesthouse fit for their covetable art collection. Now, its period details have been married with minimalist furniture and striking art installations, and the once-formal atmosphere has been replaced by something far more familial. Set your body clock to southern-Italian time as you lounge in the orange grove, tan by the inky pool or swap stories with the chef as she prepares a traditional Apulian feast.

Smith Extra

Get this when you book through us:

An Apulian aperitif (includes homemade pizza, local cheese and other delicacies as well as a glass of wine, Aperol spritz or soft drink)

Facilities

Photos Palazzo Daniele facilities

Need to know

Rooms

Nine suites.

Check–Out

12pm, but flexible, subject to availability. Earliest check-in, 2pm.

Prices

Double rooms from £255.86 (€299), including tax at 10 per cent.

More details

Rates include a Continental breakfast.

Also

Co-owner Francesco Petrucci is one of the founders of Capo d’Arte, a not-for-profit organisation promoting the work of contemporary artists from around the world. Recently, residencies have been hosted in the local village and at the imposing Villa Medici in Rome.

Hotel closed

The hotel closes for part of the winter each year, usually over January and February.

At the hotel

Grand living rooms, gardens, free WiFi throughout, laundry. In rooms: Marshall Bluetooth speaker, free bottled water, Grown Alchemist bath products.

Our favourite rooms

All nine suites have splendid period features, including mosaic floors, fresco-swirled ceilings and artwork worthy of a national gallery. Each one makes a sonnet-worthy setting, but perhaps our favourite feature is the bathroom in the Royal Junior Suite, which has a six-metre-high ceiling with steep arches, giving it an almost monastic look. As if that wasn’t dramatic enough, the rainfall shower is suspended from the centre of the ceiling, cascading into a circular stone basin set on decorative tiles. If you can't decide between the nine suites, the palazzo is available for exclusive use.

Poolside

The 12m pool is in the garden, clad in dark tiles that make the water seem a deep, inky blue. It’s unheated and surrounded by a flagstone terrace with daybeds and lounge chairs. In summer, a tapas bar springs up at the side, serving cooling cocktails and snacks throughout the day.

Spa

There’s a steam room and sauna at the far side of the pool.

Packing tips

Something romantic to read in the orange grove or by the inky pool.

Also

The palazzo’s historic layout means it isn’t suited to wheelchair users.

Pet‐friendly

Small dogs can stay for €50 a night, which gets them a bowl and a kennel. See more pet-friendly hotels in Puglia.

Children

All ages are welcome, and cots or extra beds can be added to certain suites.

Food and Drink

Photos Palazzo Daniele food and drink

Top Table

Ask for a table to be set in the courtyard, where you’ll be able to see the stars on clear nights.

Dress Code

Dining at the palazzo is an informal affair, but the surroundings may inspire a desire to dress up.

Hotel restaurant

True to its roots as a private home, the hotel doesn't have a restaurant. Instead, local chef Donata Rizzo works from a sleek but informal kitchen – informal in the sense that you can pull up a chair and chat over a glass of wine as she prepares an Apulian feast from scratch. All meals except breakfast are on request, and you’ll need to give at least 24 hours’ notice – Donata works with the best organic ingredients she can get her hands on, so she needs time to visit her favourite markets and suppliers in the local area. The cuisine is regional but there’s no menu to speak of and the dishes change constantly – Donata's inspiration takes the lead. Where you eat is equally flexible: the kitchen, terrace and lobby area are all possibilities. The staff can also arrange candlelit private dinners in the domed Kaffeehaus, a sort of open-sided salon where house guests once gathered for coffee and conversation.

Hotel bar

The honesty bar is in a living room known as the salotto, and is stocked with classic spirits, local wines and champagne. During the summer, a tapas bar is set up on the pool terrace, serving cocktails and light bites.

Last orders

Breakfast is served from 8am to noon. Lunch and dinner are on request, so are flexible (within reason).

Room service

When she’s in the kitchen and not otherwise occupied, chef Donata can rustle up snacks like French toast, bruschetta and tomato-topped friselle.

Location

Photos Palazzo Daniele location
Address
Palazzo Daniele
Corso Umberto I 60
Gagliano del Capo
73034
Italy

Palazzo Daniele is in the heart of Gagliano del Capo, a coastal comune in southern Puglia.

Planes

Brindisi is the best place to touch down, and is a 90-minute drive from the hotel. One-way private transfers can be arranged for €180.

Automobiles

Hiring a car makes a lot of sense: you’ll have easy access to the coast, and day trips (to the beautiful baroque city of Lecce, for example) will be much simpler. (You’ll need to find a parking space in the surrounding streets as there isn’t any parking on site.)

Worth getting out of bed for

The care and craftsmanship that went into the palazzo’s restoration makes it an inherently atmospheric place to relax. It isn’t enormous as manors go, but it’s unlikely you’ll tire of its intricate mosaic floors, soaring ceilings and arresting art collection, made up of everything from 19th-century family portraits to cutting-edge installations by some of Italy’s brightest stars. The staff – or one of the owners, if you’re lucky – are always happy to share their knowledge about the house, its art and gardens. Chef Donata's stylish kitchen is open to all, so you can chat to her about Puglian cooking as she prepares the evening meal. If you want to get hands on, she also runs traditional cooking classes in which you’ll learn how to make regional classics like orecchiette.

When it comes to activities beyond the hotel, your first point of call should be the staff – they’re positively brimming with tips on the best towns, wineries and secluded stretches of coastline. On the other hand, you could opt for the hotel’s Vintage Tour, and have an expert guide all to yourselves. You'll cut right to the heart of Salento's sun-kissed soul on this four-hour journey, cruising through the countryside in vintage cars from the Sixties and Seventies. You'll stop at several unspoiled towns, sampling regional delicacies in local bars. For more culture hits, don’t miss the island town of Gallipoli, reachable only by sea or a 16th-century bridge. If you’re after a sandy beach (most of the local ones are rocky), try Spiaggia di Pescoluse, a wide stretch of sand that’s popular with holidaying Italians. For wild swimming with a dramatic backdrop, make the short trip to the Grotta Aspro, where the aquamarine water is overlooked by rugged white cliffs.

Local restaurants

If you’re wandering around Gagliano del Capo, stop in at 24-hour gelato joint Central Bar (on Via Margherita di Savoia), where scoops are best enjoyed on the terrace outside. Soulful Italian fare can be found at Locanda del Levante, a rustic restaurant in the nearby town of Tricase (find it on Piazza Antonio dell'Abate). Choose from the vaulted dining room or one of the alfresco tables, and let the waiters guide you towards their recommendations (the menu isn’t particularly extensive, but there are several classics). For a waterfront dinner, book a table on the terrace at Profumo di Mare, a more formal option in seaside town Torre Vado.

Local bars

Farmacia Balboa was a pharmacy in its former life, but these days it provides prescriptions of another sort. The cocktails here are made with organic ingredients sourced from local farms and markets, and are refreshingly wallet friendly to boot.

Reviews

Photos Palazzo Daniele 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 art-filled palazzo in Puglia and unpacked their books on Italian modernism, a full account of their southern Italy break will be with you. In the meantime, to whet your wanderlust, here's a quick peek inside Palazzo Daniele in Puglia…

Questa casa non è un albergo – this house is not a hotel. So reads the slogan for Palazzo Daniele, and it doesn’t take much digging to discover its meaning. Since it opened its doors as a guesthouse, the 150-year-old palazzo has echoed the tastes of its two owners: Francesco Petrucci – a direct descendant of the family that have lived there since it was built – and Gabriele Salini, who also owns 10-suite Roman hotel G Rough. Enthusiastic art collectors with ties to artists in Italy and abroad, the pair have a clear idea of what the house is all about: art, design and the best kind of Italian hospitality. They invited some of their favourite contemporary artists to design furnishings and fittings for the house, using a minimalistic approach to bring out its splendour rather than muddle the design with the usual hotel trappings. Then there’s the family-style kitchen, an open room staffed by a local chef, Donata Rizzo, who prepares traditional Pugliese meals whenever you want them. There are no menus and no dress codes – you even get to choose where you want to eat.

Like his forefathers, Francesco is still very much a resident, too. If you’re lucky enough to catch him, he might just treat you to a tour of the art and architecture with some of the family history thrown in – a family that you’ll come away feeling a part of too.

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Price per night from $295.62