Hotel Andra occupies a 1926 building at 4th Avenue and Virginia Street in Belltown, redesigned in 2004 with a Scandinavian aesthetic that Seattle — a city with deep Nordic cultural roots — responds to instinctively. The 119 rooms use natural materials, warm neutrals, and the kind of clean-lined furniture that prioritises how things feel over how they photograph. It is a hotel that resists the impulse to announce itself, which in Belltown's occasionally self-conscious hotel market is a genuine virtue.
Lola, the hotel's restaurant, is part of Tom Douglas's Seattle empire — a Greek-influenced Pacific Northwest kitchen that operates with the confidence of a chef who has been feeding this city for forty years. The breakfast service is one of the better hotel breakfasts in Seattle: the Lola doughnuts alone justify the meal, and the broader menu handles Pacific Northwest ingredients with the knowledge that Douglas's restaurants consistently demonstrate.
The rooms are quiet by Belltown standards — the building's 1926 construction provides a solidity that newer hotels can't manufacture, and the soundproofing is effective. The fitness centre is well-equipped. There is no pool or spa, which is correct for a hotel of this scale and intention — the trade-off is a lower room rate and a sense of proportion that a wellness wing would compromise.
The location on 4th Avenue puts the hotel equidistant between Pike Place Market (eight-minute walk south) and the Seattle Center with the Space Needle (twelve minutes north). The Westlake Center transit hub is a six-minute walk. The neighbourhood's restaurant density means you can eat very well without leaving a four-block radius — Tom Douglas has multiple operations nearby, and the Belltown dining scene surrounding the hotel is among the deepest in Seattle.
The Hotel Andra formula for the solo traveller is nearly perfect: a quiet room in a well-designed building, a breakfast restaurant that doesn't require ordering at a counter, and Belltown's restaurant scene at the door. The Scandinavian aesthetic produces rooms that feel genuinely restful rather than aggressively designed. Service attends without hovering. The hotel knows how to leave you alone, which is the specific gift a solo retreat requires.
For the tech and creative industries that are Seattle's commercial backbone, the Andra's design sensibility communicates taste without requiring explanation. Lola is a serious venue for a working dinner. The 4th Avenue location is a short Uber from Amazon's South Lake Union campus and within the Downtown core for traditional corporate meetings. It runs at a price point that doesn't require approval from above.
Rates from $259/night. Check availability directly.
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