One Night in Faro, a Modernist Haven in Southern Europe

For an annual architecture celebration, I explored what some call "the Palm Springs of Portugal" and stayed at a converted hotel originally designed by the one of the architects who shaped the city’s look.

One Night in Faro, a Modernist Haven in Southern Europe

For an annual architecture celebration, I explored what some call "the Palm Springs of Portugal" and stayed at a converted hotel originally designed by the one of the architects who shaped the city’s look.

Welcome to One Night In, a series about staying in the most unparalleled places available to rest your head.

In 2021, locked down in Los Angeles, I fantasized about traveling to Faro, Portugal. Through my job as an editor, I met hoteliers Christophe and Angelique de Oliveira, who emailed photos of Faro, their adopted city, and introduced me to tropical modernism, an architectural style that blends European modernist principles with an approach that responds to hot, humid climates. I swooned over the Wes Anderson-like color palettes, cobogós (breeze blocks), and columns á la Le Corbusier’s Villa Savoye. They told me the city had over 500 largely untouched modernist buildings, most designed by 20th-century Portuguese architect Manuel Gomes da Costa, known for his work in the Algarve region. They also said they were founding a Modernist Weekend in Faro inspired by the annual event in Palm Springs. I said I’d come when it happened. 

In November 2022, I went to Faro’s first Modernist Weekend with 150 other attendees. When I was invited back to the event last year, and the recently revamped Gomes da Costa–designed Alto House hotel offered to host me, I returned with glee. This time, the weekend had evolved, and 450 design lovers jumped at the chance to take walking tours of the city, the 5th Avenue of modernist architecture in Faro, Avenida 5 de Outubro, and an array of Gomes da Costa-designed coastal homes. I packed my best period-appropriate garb and set off for Faro. 

Thursday

3 p.m.: I land at the Faro International Airport and order an Uber to Rua de Berlim, a sunny, pastel-hued street of stately villas constructed between 1959 and 1969, about half of them by Gomes da Costa. Initially, the design for these villas and buildings had flat roofs per modernist principles, but when Faro City Hall refused to allow it, the architect caved and made them sloped. The villas were commissioned by Algarvian emigrants who left the region in the 1920s for Latin America, accumulated wealth, and returned to Faro in the ’50s. In 2023, one of them was converted into the 21-room Alto House hotel by local architect João Coutinho. 

Before I traveled, I spoke to Coutinho on Zoom, and he told me he almost named the hotel "Taxi," after Portuguese cabs from the ’60s and ’70s. His reasoning? These cars represented the modernist period before Portugal’s revolution, and their colors—bottle green and black—were the colors he wanted to design with. Coutinho ended up using "Alto," the word Portuguese people use to flag taxis, for the name. It also means "high," which is fitting, as the hotel sits on a tall elevation for the Algarve capital. From my room’s private balcony, my gaze reaches the city, sea, and mountains. 

Alto Hotel,  which is the word Portuguese people use to flag taxis and al

Portuguese architect Manuel Gomes da Costa originally designed the modernist building that would become the 21-room Alto House.

Photo by Vasco Célio, agency: STILLS

6 p.m.: I take a 15-minute Uber to Fábrica da Cerveja, a former castle-turned-beer factory with plans to be an art center in Old Town for Faro Modernist Weekend’s art exhibition, Modernist Explorations, spotlighting bodies of work directly inspired by Faro. I wobble down the cobblestone streets surrounded by walls built in the Roman period and later fortified by the Moors. It’s dark, and the Fábrica’s peeling ochre facade, built between 1930 and 1940, is spookily gorgeous. Inside, architecture and art lovers sip cocktails and a deejay spins. I admire the colorful, Faro-inspired art of British artist Richard Walker, Dutch artist Sander Patelski, and French photographer Michel Figuet

8:30 p.m.: I’m exhausted from traveling and return to Alto House to shower and sleep. An Uber drops me off on the lamplit, tree-lined street that faces a park, and I unlatch the gate on Alto’s little white fence. It feels like I’m coming home, like I should be carrying my mail in with me. An unmanned, velvet-skirted, and Lynchian front desk shakes the feeling for a moment, and three flights up, my weary eyes appreciate the dark terrazzo walls and smoked-glass bedside bubble lamps. Crisp, cool sheets cradle me to sleep.

The accommodations at Alto House hotel.

The accommodations at Alto House hotel.

Photo by Vasco Célio, agency: STILLS

Friday 

9 a.m.: Having slept off my jet lag, I wake up ravenously hungry. I descend to the hotel’s first floor, where I am pleased to find a prepared breakfast of avocado slices, rye crisps, and vegan yogurt, as I alerted the staff of my veganism ahead of the trip (the breakfast buffet is included in all bookings). A few other scattered guests, also here for Modernist Weekend, eat cheeses, meat, bread, and melon while discussing the tours they’re set to go on today. I try to wake my brain up by sipping a cappuccino and translating Portuguese from the TV streaming the local news. (I’m fluent in Spanish and surprised by the similarities.) The open back door carries in a breeze from the adjoining patio, which is anchored by a rose quartz-hued stone floor, bistro tables, and a low white wall lined with vintage mirrors.

Where Altho House guests enjoy their breakfast.

Where Alto House guests enjoy their breakfast.

Photo by Vasco Célio, agency: STILLS

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