The Pontchartrain Hotel opened in 1927 on St. Charles Avenue, the Garden District's main artery and the route of New Orleans' oldest surviving streetcar line. It operated as one of the city's distinguished addresses through the mid-20th century before declining through neglect; the 2018 restoration, undertaken by the same group behind the Henry Howard Hotel and other careful New Orleans projects, returned it to something better than its original standard — the structural bones of a 1920s residential hotel strengthened by contemporary craft and an eye for what the building actually wanted to be.
The 106 rooms are among the most considered in New Orleans' boutique category. Each has been designed with an understanding of the building's domestic scale — these are rooms that feel like they belong to a house, not a hotel, and that quality is precisely what makes them memorable. Exposed brick in some configurations, original plasterwork cornices preserved throughout, and a colour palette drawn from the Garden District's existing palette of ochres, teals, and deep whites. The larger suites include separate sitting rooms and, in the upper configurations, private balconies overlooking St. Charles Avenue and the live oak canopy below.
The rooftop pool and bar are the hotel's most discussed amenity, and they deserve the attention. The pool deck sits at a height that provides genuine Mississippi River views — the river bends here in a way that makes the waterway surprisingly legible from the Garden District — and the pool bar operates with the relaxed competence of a room that doesn't need to compete with anything. Sunsets from the rooftop are specific to this angle of the city; the Pontchartrain has positioned itself to capture them.
Caribbean Room, the hotel's restaurant, serves Creole cuisine in a room that has been part of the Garden District dining scene since the original hotel. The St. Charles streetcar stops directly outside — 20 minutes to the French Quarter, 10 to the CBD, and a journey that is in itself one of the better free experiences in New Orleans. The Garden District location means Magazine Street's boutiques and restaurants are a short walk north; the neighbourhood rewards walking in a way that the Quarter, with its tourist concentration, often does not.
The Pontchartrain offers the New Orleans honeymoon that doesn't involve Bourbon Street. The Garden District is how the city actually lives — live oak streets, antebellum houses, restaurants where the locals eat. A rooftop evening watching the Mississippi bend, a Caribbean Room dinner, a morning streetcar ride to Café Du Monde: this is the honeymoon itinerary that produces the memories, not the spectacle. Service that attends to newlyweds without making the attention theatrical.
The Garden District is one of the most walkable and genuinely calm neighbourhoods in New Orleans — a city that makes wellness-focused travel harder than it should be. The Pontchartrain's scale (106 rooms) and residential character provide the quiet that larger French Quarter properties cannot. The rooftop pool, morning streetcar access, and proximity to Audubon Park's running path make this the right hotel for the traveller who wants to restore as well as experience.
Rates from $215/night. Check availability directly.
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