For the upcoming Jubilee, Rome awaits millions of tourists, and on the luxury hotel front, renovations that have just been completed (such as the historic and centrally located Hotel d'Inghilterra) are being completed and investments by major brands and major players in the sector are being concentrated: the estimate for 2025 is for a 30% increase in extra-luxury rooms and a doubling in the next five years, with acronyms such as Mandarin, Four Seasons, Orient Express and so on listing themselves in the field. Meanwhile, another reality is taking hold, more intimate and no less valuable: that of restoring with commitment from the point of view of conservation (often supervised by the superintendence) and pushing contemporary-design historic palaces and mansions, sometimes public and sometimes private. The latest addition is Palazzo Talìa (the first luxury hotel among the Federici family's properties), built in the spaces of the, well known to Romans, Collegio del Nazareno. There was also the official opening of Casa Monti (a former barracks), an Italian structure by the French group Leitmotiv (in Paris it has the interesting La Fantaisie) with expert design, edited to the millimeter, by Laura Gonzalez. Other openings of old buildings are announced in the coming weeks.
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