Hotel review: Islington Hotel, Hobart

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Boasting a world-class art collection and wow-factor mountain views, the Islington Hotel is one of Hobart’s most elegant – and surprising – boutique stays.

Where

The Islington Hotel 321 Davey St, South Hobart, TAS, 7000

What to expect

Hobart’s Islington Hotel , secluded behind high gates, gives the impression that it is an exclusive private home. Beyond the perimeter walls is a peaceful, Andrew Pfeiffer-designed garden, containing flowers, birds, a one-hundred-year-old weeping willow tree and a serene pond, enhancing the tranquility of this delightful boutique property. But it is the sight of the stunning kunanyi/Mt Wellington that the eye and the heart is drawn to. My garden room has an uninterrupted view of the Organ Pipes and the spectacle of this mountain that overlooks the city. Staff member Elise tells me that for locals the mountain is a symbol of stability: it protects them, harbours them, holds their stories, and they love that it’s always been there, a comforting presence in an increasingly uncertain world.

The Islington Hotel in Hobart
Arriving at The Islington Hotel in Hobart.

First built as a private home in 1847, the property has 11 guestrooms, all individually appointed with luxe leather armchairs, candelabras and chandeliers; an extensive array of Whiteleys, Warhols, and even works by Matisse and Picasso pepper the walls. Perhaps in the art world these are easy pieces to come by but for a layperson it is a surprising delight to see these works outside of a museum or gallery. In some parts grand and opulent, in others, understated and elegant, the hotel’s decor occasionally has a touch of African safari; animal print lounges and furry bedspreads are juxtaposed with modern furniture and Regency architecture in a distinctly historical and homely collection. The property is an ode to the travels, experiences and art collections of directors David Meredith and John Goodyear.

The Library, the Morning Room and the Rose Room are all elegant spots to sit and either play chess, read or contemplate the world. Each has a distinct ambience. The poetry carved into the grand bookshelf doors was first penned by David’s ancestor, the writer, artist and botanist, Louisa Anne Meredith. Whilst the Tasmanian state library contains many of her works (paintings and sketches), Louisa’s original books, Over the Straits; a Visit to Victoria and My Home in Tasmania, are on display in the library on site.

The rooms

The accommodation has a king-size bed, loaded with plump pillows. It’s made up with crisp white sheets and a heavy doona, and can be separated into two singles on request. As a room divider, there are huge heavy drapes to draw across to shield guests from the bright morning sun which streams through the floor-to-ceiling glass windows. Despite the wonderful artworks on display around this hotel, kunanyi/Mt Wellington is the most breathtaking natural picture here.

Islington Hotel
The Islington Hotel is a boutique hotel that gives you the sense of seclusion despite being in the heart of Hobart.

The leather armchairs with gold frames are a simple nod to the modern traveller. These pieces were recently delivered from Vietnam where they were made to order. With matching glass tables echoing the gold frame holding books about Tasmania and the history of the hotel, they are lovely to relax in after a day’s travelling or touring.

The Islington Hotel Hobart
Each room at The Islington is covered in unique artworks, but it’s the view that really makes this hotel special.

The bathroom is enormous and the surfaces are smooth marble. The deep oval freestanding bath beckons and I fill it and sprinkle a jar of the provided bath crystals over the surface. Using the Palm+ Anitbacterial Hand Sanitiser and body balm adds extra luxury to an already decadent experience. A fluffy towel and a huge dressing gown wrap up the evening.

The Islington Hotel Hobart
Enjoy a long, hot, soak in the bathtub during your stay.

Entering the room after dinner, staff have completed the turndown service. Calming sleep music wafts out from the room’s iPad and the lights are dimmed. A tray with a teapot, and a square of chocolate Baileys fudge lies in wait on my luxurious king size bed.

A little dish of Islington Dream tea, touted as a ‘tried and tested Tasmanian brew [that] encourages the perfect night’s sleep’ sits next to a china teapot. This special touch really makes me feel welcome.

The hotel has free wi-fi, of course, and the room has a flat screen TV with cable channels for guests.

Restaurants and bars

The Conservatory Restaurant is the centrepiece of the hotel. The double-height windows have views of kunanyi/Mt Wellington, manicured gardens and rambling kitchen garden beds. Tomato plants burst out of the middle of manicured low hedges like unruly children. Lavender, strong and green, stands up like sentinels on the borders. The infinity pool glistens in the sun the morning I am there and reflects the bright blue sky.

The Conservatory Restaurant
Dine at The Conservatory Restaurant within the hotel for an extra special view of Mount Wellington.

As well as using food grown on site, the chef, Zac Shearer, creates sensational food from local fare, composting food waste and recycling as much as possible to ensure the sustainability of the property. A continental breakfast showcasing seasonal, organic, Tasmanian food – delicious homemade fig yoghurt, muesli, stewed fruit, cakes, croissants, all in miniature – is available as well as a cooked-to-order breakfast. Homemade cakes and biscuits are laid out for guests all day on a table near the kitchen.

The conservatory is an airy space, but has cosy corners in which to enjoy a meal, especially when the open fireplace is roaring. Dinner is served from Wednesday to Sunday during summer. Meats and seafood from King Island and Cape Grim form the basis of this menu and everything from sourdough to preserves are created in the kitchen.

The verdict

The Islington is an elegant, picturesque hotel with great food, little luxuries and welcoming staff to enhance your stay.

We rated

When I arrive, there is a private function underway but the hotel manager on duty comes to meet me in the car park. There is no reception desk, just a large welcoming hallway and parlour rooms off either side. The staff have an excellent ability to make guests feel special and comfortable. I really do feel like I’m visiting people I know, being welcomed warmly into their home and their lives. Excellent service is de rigueur at five-star boutique hotels, but the personal connections with Zac, Elise, Jess and the rest of the team well exceeded my expectations.

Things to note

This is a property focused on tranquility and rest. As such, children over 15 are welcomed but younger children are not able to be catered for.

Advice for other travellers

If possible, try to spend more than one day here to make good use of all the leisure spaces. If you book three nights, The Islington provides an airport transfer service.

Go soon to enjoy the view of kunanyi/Mt Wellington. Plans are underway to build a cable car across the Organ Pipes and the face of the mountain so it may never be the same again.

Mount Wellington
Enjoy a bushwalk to the top of Mount Wellington during your stay.

The location

Follow the Rivulet Walk for 30 minutes to Salamanca Place, home to the famous Saturday markets and great Hobart cafes, best restaurants to eat and shops. The Mona ferry leaves from the wharf in town. The Islington is on the road up to kunanyi/Mt Wellington, and from here you can branch off on various bushwalks; the Rivulet Walk can also be taken up to the Cascades Female Factory Historic Site (25 minutes).

Salamanca Markets Hobart
Spend a morning wandering around the nearby Salamanca Markets.

Price

From $240 per night for an attic room and from $345 per night for a garden room with mountain views. Luxe packages are available for guests staying longer than three nights which include chauffeured transport to and from the airport and a personally tailored itinerary for the duration of your stay.

Want to know more? Read our guide to everything you need to know about a trip to Hobart.
Danielle Norton
Danielle Norton is a freelance writer who has travelled since she was an infant. She loves to meet people and immerse herself in the destinations she visits. Her stories bring her readers along for the journey so they can experience the sights, sounds, smells and tastes of the world too.
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5 of the best day trips from Hobart

Hobart has quietly become our coolest capital, but the real wonder lies just beyond the city limits.

In the cool shade of Kunyani/ Mt Wellington, Hobart has earned a reputation. Home to culture-defining Dark MOFO, the city blends rugged, raw wilderness and rule-breaking galleries. But, step beyond the thrumming capital’s border and you’ll find a new perspective: historic towns, Jurassic-era cliffs and a UNESCO City of Gastronomy. With ALL Accor as your home away from home, fill your days with epicurean odysseys and wild scenery on the best day trips from Hobart.

Where to stay

Behind every good road trip is the perfect home base. Somewhere central to review your camera roll, make the most of Hobart’s dining scene and relax before setting off again.

For modern, Tasmanian-inspired design, book a stay at the Movenpick Hotel Hobart . Standing at the Salamanca Markets, look to the Hobart skyline and the award-winning hotel will catch your eye. As the third-tallest building in the CBD, the views across the harbour toward Antarctica are totally unique to your room. Here, end each day at the daily free chocolate hour (plus a free Movenpick ice cream for the little ones).

For a more budget-conscious option, head to the picture book, sandstone buildings of Macquarie Street. Nestled along the buzzing, historic streetscape, you’ll find Tasmania’s biggest hotel: the Ibis Styles . Return home each day to defrost in one of the hotel’s two saunas. Make use of the proximity to MONA, or take an easy stroll to the candy-coloured cottages of Battery Point between your adventures.

A stylish, Tasmanian-inspired bedroom at Mövenpick Hotel Hobart, your perfect base for relaxing after the best day trips from Hobart.
Elevate your Hobart stay with sleek style at Mövenpick.

1. Bruny Island

Craggy cliffs and tropical-hued, white sand beaches signal your arrival to Bruny Island/ Lunawanna-Alonnah.

Start your day trip at the island’s most iconic spot, the Neck Game Reserve. Scale the Trunganini steps to gaze out over the teensy stretch of land that juts through the sea connecting the two ends of the island.

Catch a rare glimpse of the white furred wallabies that call Bruny Island home at Adventure Bay. Then, for ocean-fresh oysters, pull into the drive-thru window at Get Shucked . Sample Bruny Island cheese at the cellar door before catching the ferry home with an esky full of local produce.

Bruny Island Neck is an isthmus of land connecting north and south Bruny Island.
Begin your adventure with a climb and a view. (Image: Elise Weaver)

2. Mount Wellington

At 1271 metres, Mount Wellington watches protectively over Hobart. Follow the winding road to climb through alpine forest and tufts of snow to reach the summit. Gaze down over Hobart and out to sea, or over your shoulder to the southwestern wilderness.

Reset your adrenaline with a mountain bike ride back down. Or, make like the locals and head into the mountain on foot. Try the hike to the Jurassic-period Organ Pipes which slips under the mountain’s magnificent dolerite cliffs (perfect for families thanks to the trail’s minimal incline).

For a view of Mount Wellington itself, hike nearby Cathedral Rock.

No matter where you are in Hobart you are never far away from the City's beloved mountain, Kunanyi / Mount Wellington
Climb through alpine forest to the summit. (Image: Paul Flemming)

2. Port Arthur

Constructed entirely by convicts, the manicured gardens and penal buildings of Port Arthur offer a day trip that practically hums with history.

The rugged, seagirt location was chosen for its difficult escape conditions. Now, you can cruise the coast below the towering, jagged cliffs of the Tasman National Park or wander the sloping fields of fragrant lavender.

Tickets to Port Arthur include a walking tour and harbour cruise. See the Isle of the Dead where 1000 men are buried in marked and unmarked graves. And Point Puer, Britain’s first prison for children.

The Port Arthur Historic Site is one of Australia's most important heritage sites and tourist destinations. Located on the scenic Turrakana / Tasman Peninsula in the south east of Tasmania, it offers a unique and essential experience for all visitors to the area.
Wander convict-built grounds and gardens. (Image: Dearna Bond)

3. Launceston

You’ll find Launceston at the confluence of three rivers after an easy 2.5-hour drive from Hobart. Launceston is a patchwork of old and new. Here, heritage streetscapes meet modern architecture.

Visit Cataract Gorge, the green, sun-dappled heart of the town and sacred meeting point for Tasmania’s indigenous communities. Pull up at roadside produce stalls that dot the Tamar Valley, or dine out. Launceston is, after all, a UNESCO City of Gastronomy.

Should the local wine scene persuade you, simply extend your time in Launceston at Peppers Silo (but definitely at least stop by the onsite restaurant, Grain of the Silo , for a farm fresh menu) or Mercure Launceston before heading back to Hobart.

Walk the sunlit paths of Cataract Gorge. (Image: Nick H Visuals)

4. Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary

Take a 35-minute drive from your hotel and you’ll find Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary . This social enterprise is run by a team of extremely passionate Tasmanians with a mission to look after critically endangered species who have found sanctuary here after facing extinction on the mainland.

Choose to wander the sanctuary at your own pace or join a guided tour (free with your ticket) to come face to face with Tassie’s most iconic species. Tasmanian Devils, wombats and echidnas are part of the free tour. You can book up close encounters with your favourite animals, too.

Bonorong is a Sanctuary for wildlife run by a passionate team of like-minded people. We're a social enterprise: a little business with a big heart.
Snap a cuddle-worthy encounter. (Image: Tourism Australia)

5. Richmond Village & Coal River Valley

Richmond is a town that belongs in a snow globe. Fifty colonial-era, Georgian buildings have been painstakingly restored and turned into cafes, cosy restaurants and galleries. Visit Richmond Gaol , said to be the home of a prisoner so vile he inspired Charles Dickens to pen Oliver Twist’s Fagin.

Then, follow the Coal River as it flows past grassy, duckling-dotted knolls and under the iconic Richmond Bridge, the oldest bridge in Australia. From the crest of the bridge, see the oldest Catholic Church in Australia. The river crawls past many cellar doors, perfect for a day of wine tasting.

Richmond is a picture-perfect town in the Coal River Valley wine region, offering a glimpse into early colonial life, one of the best day trips from Hobart.
Trace the river through history and wine country. (Image: Fin Matson)

Plan your trip to Hobart and beyond with ALL Accor at All.com .