Independent
Royal Mansour Marrakech
Royal Mansour is arguably the most architecturally extraordinary hotel in Africa — a commission by King Mohammed VI that essentially built a private medina from scratch, 53 three-story riads connected by a subterranean tunnel network that keeps staff and housekeeping carts completely invisible to guests. The handcrafted tilework, carved plaster, and cedar ceilings represent a level of artisanal ambition that no other Marrakech property — not La Mamounia, not Amanjena — comes close to matching. The private-riad concept is its killer differentiator: you get a multi-floor Moroccan townhouse with a rooftop plunge pool, a courtyard fountain, and a butler who delivers everything through hidden back passages, creating a sense of genuine domestic privacy within a five-star operation. Where Royal Mansour falls short of perfection is consistency: service is exceptional on average but has documented lapses — uncleaned rooms at 3pm, erratic spa booking infrastructure, and an occasional stiffness that reads as pretentious rather than polished. The Forbes Five-Star spa and a dining program spanning a grand Moroccan restaurant, a refined French table, and a garden pool restaurant are all strong, making the property one you can spend three or four days inside without feeling cabin fever — which is exactly the point.