The Casa de los Azulejos takes its name from the original Sevillian azulejos on its walls and patios — Mensaque faïences from a historic Seville workshop, installed during the 1934 renovation. The building itself is 17th-century, converted into a hotel in 2002. The azulejos give the place a coherent old-Andalusian character without tipping into theme-park territory.
The Rooms
Nine rooms, so service stays personal. The style blends Andalusian and Latin-American influences: dark wood furniture, four-poster beds in select rooms, colourful textiles. All rooms have air conditioning, a minibar, and a private bathroom. Breakfast is worth staying in for — fresh bread from the neighbourhood bakery, house-made preserves, freshly squeezed orange juice. Served in the patio when it's warm enough, inside when it's not.
The Patio and Pool
The flower-filled patio has orange trees, jasmine, and bougainvillea. A seasonal pool opens from April to October, plus a smaller plunge pool. Tables and sun loungers are there for anyone who needs to stop moving for an afternoon. It's a genuinely good place to spend a slow hour between sightseeing.
Getting Around
The hotel is on Calle Fernando Colón, 10 minutes on foot from the Mezquita-Catedral and 50 metres from Plaza de la Corredera. The Centro neighbourhood is residential enough that evenings are quiet, but close enough to everything that matters. Free parking on-site — rare and worth noting in a city where historic-centre parking typically costs around €20/day.
Taberna Salinas is 3 minutes away (traditional cuisine since 1879). Bodegas Campos is 5 minutes.
Rooms run €72–110/night, breakfast included. Couples rate the hotel 9.7/10 on Booking.com. Overall: 9.5/10 from over 1,300 reviews.