Mallorca: Where to Stay: Hideaways: Son Brull
Son Brull
The impressive yellow facade and foundation (which can be traced back to the 12th century) in no way give away the refreshing surprise one finds inside Son Brull. Mallorca’s most stylish designer oasis, this boutique resort showcases a seamless mix of contemporary interiors with carefully preserved historical details. Once a Jesuit monastery, as well as one of the area’s most important farming estates, since its opening in 2003 Son Brull has been home to a cutting-edge twenty-three-room hotel worthy of its savvy and sophisticated international guests. The lobby is an altar to minimalist chic, with polished blond wood tables and walls, geometric floor lights, black designer couches and a floor-to-ceiling modern white fireplace. A historic stone courtyard precedes the entrance to 3/65, the hotel’s polished black-and-white minimalist restaurant, and Son Brull’s cavernous bar-lounge, with its modern chandeliers of tangled spotlights, vaulted ceilings, and wine list offering an impressive variety of the island’s innovative new vintages.
The design of the guest rooms is just as sleek (almost too slick—once I almost slipped and fell on the bathroom’s poured concrete floor after coming out of the shower), with black floors, white uneven walls and a Starck bathtub in the middle. An international crowd of thirty- and- forty-something couples wrapped in soft white robes drift blissfully from the daybeds surrounding the outdoor seamless pool to the intimate two-storied stone-and-wood spa, complete with three treatment rooms, a sauna and a lap pool. My husband, a golfer, appreciated the nearby newly opened Robert Trent Jones–designed golf course, while I loved the tour the hotel arranged for us at the eclectic local studio of renowned Spanish painter and sculptor Joan Bennassar, a Pablo Picasso lookalike with a burning, infectious energy. Rooms from $463.
— Gisela Williams Kramer 07/17/2007