The room can be booked through 6 January 2024, and rates start at US$1,586 per night
Nothing says the holidays like Cartier.
The French jeweller, along with the five-star Conservatorium in Amsterdam, is inviting you to check into a swanky Cartier-themed accommodation to kick off the holiday season—and the room is available to book now through 6 January 2025.
The new Cartier Suite, which can fit three guests (two adults, one child), is decked out with a custom Christmas tree designed by the iconic jewellery and watchmaking brand and includes a complimentary bottle of sparkling Cartier Champagne. There, you can also expect to find the company’s signature pillows sitting atop the bed along with an uber-soft merino wool and silk blanket. Additional decorative accessories include a Cartier coffee table tome and branded candles. Reservations start at US$1,586 per night.
Naturally, you can pair your stay with a curated off-site excursion, like a private personalized shopping trip at the Cartier boutique just down the road on the city’s Pieter Cornelisz Hooftstraat—also referred to as the Fifth Avenue of Amsterdam. Here, you can snap up any of the items featured in the suite that you might fancy. Or you can stay put and hit up the hotel’s signature restaurants or indulge in a treatment at the underground Akasha Spa.
Cartier and the Conservatorium’s partnership kicked off right before Thanksgiving on 22 November 2024 with the reveal of towering 4.6-metre Christmas tree in the hotel’s grand atrium—aka the living room of Amsterdam. Guests will notice the tree as soon as they walk in, draped in classic Cartier red ribbons and dotted with chic crimson and gold ornaments. Instead of a topper, there’s a glowing Cartier logo fastened in the middle. The collaboration marked a first for the Richemont-owned brand. “This partnership not only elevates the festive spirit but also reinforces the hotel’s position as a pinnacle of luxury within the city,” the hotel wrote in a release.
The Conservatorium first opened its doors back in 2011. Designed by Italian architect Piero Lissoni, the historic building dates all the way to 1897 when it started as a bank and later operated as a music school. Today, it joins the Set Collection along with 20 other independent hotel properties around the world.
This story was first published on Robb Report USA. Featured photo by Conservatorium Hotel