Two hundred and thirty acres on Universal Boulevard. Family-owned, golf-anchored, gloriously unbranded, Orlando's most generous suites at a price the chains cannot match.
Rosen Shingle Creek is Orlando's best-value big resort: 450 square foot standard rooms, four pools and a lazy river, a David Harman golf course, and rates from about $295 that undercut the Disney deluxes by two-thirds. Book it for convention weeks and budget-smart family trips; skip it if you need on-demand park access.
"Family-owned, golf-anchored, refreshingly unbranded. The least theme-park hotel in town, and the most generous on suites for the price. The convention crowd has been keeping a secret here since 2006."
Rosen Shingle Creek opened in 2006 as the personal project of Harris Rosen, the largest independent hotelier in Florida and a man who never sold to a chain. The property is the flagship of the Rosen Hotels & Resorts portfolio and remains, two decades later, the most ambitious independently-owned resort in Orlando. The architecture is Florida-vernacular grand: terracotta roofs, deep verandas, palm-shaded courtyards, and the kind of arrival drive that announces itself without resorting to gates or theme. The whole property sits on 230 acres along the headwaters of Shingle Creek, the historical source of the Everglades, and that creek runs through the golf course, the lazy river, and the conservation areas that border the resort.
There are 1,501 rooms and suites, which makes Shingle Creek one of the largest hotels in Florida and a serious convention venue. The room mix is unusual for Orlando: standard rooms are a generous 450 square feet, substantially larger than the Disney deluxe equivalents, and one-bedroom suites start near 700 square feet without the price premium that tag would carry at a chain hotel down the road. The decor is restrained Spanish-revival rather than themed: warm woods, neutral fabrics, marble baths. Higher floors of the main tower deliver golf-course or pool views; ask for a room above the eighth floor on the south side for the cleanest sightlines.
Dining at Shingle Creek is the strongest argument for the property. A Land Remembered, the steakhouse named after Patrick Smith's Florida-pioneer novel, is one of the better steakhouses in Orlando, properly aged beef, a serious wine list, and a dining room that takes itself slightly more seriously than guests usually expect from a convention hotel. Cala Bella handles upscale Italian on the lobby level; Cafe Osceola is the all-day venue for breakfast buffets and casual lunches between meetings. There are eight other dining outlets across the property, including a sushi room and a 24-hour cafe, useful when a conference runs late.
The Shingle Creek Golf Club is an 18-hole David Harman design that runs along the creek itself, with native cypress and old-growth Florida pine framing most of the back nine. It is consistently rated among the better resort courses in the region, and the on-property location means a 7am tee time without a transfer. Beyond golf, the resort fields four outdoor pools, a 360-foot lazy river, four lighted tennis courts, and a serious fitness facility. The Spa at Shingle Creek occupies a quiet wing with treatment rooms set around courtyards, the right venue for the trailing-spouse afternoon during a long conference week.
The location is the trade-off. Shingle Creek sits two miles from the Orange County Convention Center and is the de facto convention hotel of Orlando, which means it is six miles from Universal, ten from Disney, and a transfer of more than fifteen minutes to anything family-oriented. The shuttle service to both park complexes is reliable but scheduled, not on-demand. For business travellers and conference attendees, this is the right hotel in the right place, full stop. For families splitting time across multiple parks, it is the budget answer that keeps room rates two-thirds below the on-property options without sacrificing pool, food, or service quality.
For families running a multi-park Orlando trip on a budget that still expects a resort experience, Shingle Creek is the most rational answer. The lazy river and four pools handle pool days; the kids' programmes are competent without being precious; and the room sizes mean a family of four does not need to book two adjoining doubles. Disney and Universal shuttles are scheduled, so plan around them, but the savings versus Disney deluxe rates often pay for two extra days at the parks.
Shingle Creek is purpose-built for the conference traveller. The 524,000 square feet of meeting space, the dedicated convention services team, and the two-mile proximity to the Orange County Convention Center make this Orlando's most operationally serious meeting venue outside the OCCC itself. Add the steakhouse, the spa, and the golf course on the same property, and the post-session calendar fills itself. Ask for the executive floor and the suite-level amenity for stays over three nights.
Less obvious, but the Spa at Shingle Creek and the Harman golf course form a credible wellness pairing for the partner not in a conference room. Treatment rooms open onto courtyards, the steam suite is properly sized, and the 230-acre grounds support genuine outdoor walks rather than the laps-around-a-parking-lot many resort properties offer. Combine spa mornings with afternoon tee times and dinner at A Land Remembered, three days here detoxes a full week of Orlando theme-park noise.
Across recent verified reviews on Tripadvisor and Booking.com, the praise clusters where you would expect: the oversized rooms, the grounds, the pools, and dinner at A Land Remembered come up again and again, and reviewers regularly note the value relative to the branded resorts closer to the parks.
The recurring complaints are just as consistent. The daily self-parking charge is the most flagged item by far; the fee has climbed over the years and recent guests report figures approaching $38 a day, which lands badly on a value-positioned property. Second is sheer distance: with 1,501 rooms across long wings, guests describe lengthy walks from the parking lot and from the elevators to rooms at wing ends. Third, during the biggest convention and competition weekends, elevator waits stretch and the lobby crowds; several reviewers note this is a different hotel during a citywide event than on a quiet week.
None of these complaints contradicts the core case for the property; they sharpen it. Budget the parking fee into your rate comparison, request a room near your wing's elevator core, and check the convention calendar before booking a leisure stay.
Rates checked May 2026. Price may vary by date.
About two miles. Shingle Creek is the de facto headquarters hotel for OCCC citywides, with 524,000 square feet of its own meeting space on property. During major shows the hotel runs shuttle loops to the convention center; outside them, it is a five-minute drive or a short rideshare.
Roughly six miles to Universal Orlando and ten to Walt Disney World. The resort runs scheduled, not on-demand, shuttles to both park complexes, so families need to plan park days around the timetable or budget for rideshares. The location suits multi-park trips rather than a single-park focus.
Yes. Self-parking carries a daily fee that guests in recent reviews report at close to $38, and it is the single most common complaint about the property. Factor it into any rate comparison with park-adjacent hotels, because the headline room rate alone understates the gap less than it appears.
Standard rooms run a generous 450 square feet, larger than the Disney deluxe equivalents, and one-bedroom suites start near 700 square feet. For the cleanest golf-course or pool sightlines, ask for a south-side room above the eighth floor of the main tower.
Yes, with one caveat. Four pools, a 360-foot lazy river, big rooms, and rates well below the on-property Disney resorts make it the rational budget-resort base for a multi-park trip. The caveat is transport: shuttles are scheduled, and nothing family-oriented is within walking distance.
Yes, the Shingle Creek Golf Club, an 18-hole David Harman design that runs along the creek itself, framed by native cypress and old-growth Florida pine. It is consistently rated among the better resort courses in the region, and staying on property means a 7am tee time without a transfer.
Rosen Shingle Creek is one of the few resorts in the city that does both well. Steakhouse, spa, and an 18-hole David Harman course all on the same 230 acres.
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