Lisbon, Portugal
Santa Clara 1728


Accommodation Type
Boutique hotel housed in an 18th-century palace
Number of Rooms
6 suites
Location
Campo de Santa Clara, Alfama district, Lisbon, Portugal
Setting
Historic urban square overlooking Lisbon and the Tagus River, with a secluded inner garden offering rare calm within the city
Who It Is Best For
Couples, thoughtful city travelers, culture lovers, design-forward guests, solo travelers seeking calm, small families with older children
Travel Mood
Main Activities
Exploring Lisbon on foot, cultural sightseeing, slow mornings, museum visits, neighborhood dining, quiet retreat between city explorations
Signature Feature
A deeply intimate family house where architecture, light, and daily life unfold quietly around a communal table and a hidden garden
Santa Clara 1728
An intimate 18th-century boutique hotel in Lisbon’s Alfama
Santa Clara 1728 is not a hotel designed to impress at first glance. It is a house that reveals itself slowly, through light, silence, and the rituals of daily life. Set within an 18th-century palace in Lisbon’s historic Alfama district, it offers a rare way of inhabiting the city from the inside. The moment you step through its doors, the pace shifts. The city remains present, visible through generous windows and distant rooftops, yet softened by calm interiors and a sense of domestic intimacy that feels increasingly rare in Lisbon. This is a place shaped by memory and continuity rather than spectacle. A family home turned guesthouse, Santa Clara 1728 invites travelers to experience Lisbon as residents once did: through shared meals, quiet mornings, shaded gardens, and rooms where light does most of the talking. It is an address for those who value atmosphere over amenities and who understand that true luxury often lies in restraint.


Overview
Santa Clara 1728 was discovered during a search for a place to welcome friends and guests in Lisbon, rather than to create a conventional hospitality project. Located on one of the city’s most romantic squares, surrounded by monuments, palaces, and a park overlooking the river, the building immediately carried the presence of a lived-in home. Its elegance was understated, rooted in proportion, light, and the natural rhythm of the neighborhood rather than in decorative excess.
The renovation was entrusted to architect Manuel Aires Mateus, whose work is defined by sensitivity to time, material, and context. His intervention respected the building’s history while introducing a contemporary clarity that allows space and light to breathe. Large windows frame Lisbon’s shifting luminosity, drawing the outside in and creating a constant dialogue between the interior and the city beyond. The architecture does not dominate; it supports a way of living that feels calm, deliberate, and grounded.
At the heart of Santa Clara 1728 lies its secluded garden. Typical of Lisbon’s historic houses, it functions as a quiet counterpoint to the surrounding city. This is where guests retreat between explorations, where afternoons stretch gently, and where the house reveals its most intimate character. Inside, the communal dining table plays an equally important role. Meals are shared, conversations unfold organically, and the boundaries between host and guest dissolve into something more human and familiar.
The six suites reflect this philosophy of quiet refinement. Each is generous in scale, minimal in expression, and designed to foreground comfort, light, and silence. Some look toward the Tagus River, others toward the garden, but all offer a sense of shelter that feels intentional rather than enclosed. Santa Clara 1728 is not about retreating from Lisbon, but about engaging with it thoughtfully, returning each day to a place that restores balance and perspective.
Photography courtesy of Silent Living.










"We approach design as a form of quiet hospitality. The spaces are not meant to overwhelm or impress, but to welcome — with warmth, simplicity, and sincerity."
— João Rodrigues, Founder of Silent Living
Tips & Recommendations
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Nearest Airport
Lisbon Humberto Delgado Airport (LIS), approximately 20–25 minutes by car.
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Getting There
A taxi or private transfer is recommended. The surrounding streets are narrow and best navigated by local drivers familiar with the historic center.
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Best Time to Visit
Spring and early autumn offer the most balanced experience, with warm light, comfortable temperatures, and fewer crowds. Summer is vibrant but hot, and the house does not have air conditioning.
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What to Bring
Comfortable walking shoes, light layers, a book you have been meaning to read, and an openness to slowing down.
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Staying at Santa Clara 1728
Let the house guide your rhythm. Begin your day at the communal table, step out into the city without urgency, and return in time to enjoy the garden or watch the light soften over the rooftops. Santa Clara 1728 rewards those who leave space in their schedule and allow Lisbon to unfold gradually.
Nearby Attractions
National Pantheon (Panteão Nacional)
Campo de Santa Clara, 1100-471 Lisboa, Portugal - 0.1km
Culture
Miradouro de Santa Luzia
Largo de Santa Luzia, 1100-487 Lisboa, Portugal - 0.6km
Culture
Alfama District
1100-411 Lisbon, Portugal - 0.6km
Culture
Ribeira das Naus (Riverfront / Stroll)
Cais do Sodré 4, 1200-161 Lisboa, Portugal - 1.9km
Culture


















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