Guest User
January 31, 2023
UNESCO has designated Valparaíso’s steep hillside residential fabric a World Heritage site, and Hotel Fauna exquisitely embodies that heritage. Occupying a two-century-old building constructed against the mountainside, Fauna offers three floors of guest rooms facing the ravine that goes down to the port and business district. It is only accessed at the upper level, which has a door facing a narrow pedestrian walkway. A taxi can drop you off where the walkway meets a (very steep) street, maybe 100 meters from the hotel. In the other direction, in some 25 meters, there is the upper terminal of a funicular that connects to the downtown for 100 pesos (11¢). Take it! My room had the basic necessities: a small table on which one could write or open one’s laptop; a hat-rack rather than a closet, on which I could hang the shirts and pants I had on hangers; hot running water and shower; a comfortable bed; excellent Wi-Fi; and a spectacular view across the cleft hillside to the downtown and the sparkling blue sea. Gratifyingly, it had no television screen. The rooftop restaurant is excellent, drawing a happening crowd both nights I was there. It’s also where hotel guests take their breakfast, drinking in the view of dawn’s early light over the ocean and city. (It was late winter when I was there, but the change had already kicked in to summer “daylight saving” time, so sunrise was close to 8 a.m.) The staff at the front desk was briskly efficient. And the price -- US$105 per night -- was reasonable, given the investment the hotel has made in daringly original interior design and quality materials. When I arrived in Valparaíso’s bus terminal and asked the woman in the information booth how to get to the Hotel Fauna (the answer, BTW, was: taxi), she exclaimed: “In my view, it’s the best hotel in all Valparaíso!” When she did her training in tourism and hospitality, she explained, her class was taken to visit several of the city’s hotels — and none seized her imagination like Fauna. “Auténtico,” she said — it’s the most authentic. The visitor here actually gets to LIVE Valparaíso. After two days there, I think she was right.