
THE PINK NOTEBOOK VERDICT
Concepció by Nobis
Most people who go to Mallorca head straight for the coast, and most people who stay in Palma treat it as a transit point rather than a destination. Both are mistakes. Palma is one of the genuinely good cities of the Mediterranean, a place with a Gothic cathedral that rivals anything in mainland Spain, an Old Town of Arab baths, Renaissance palaces, and cobbled streets that rewards several days on foot, and a food and nightlife scene that has evolved significantly in the last decade without losing its Mallorcan identity. La Seu, the cathedral, sits over the harbour in a way that announces the city before you even land. The Passeig del Born, the tree-lined main boulevard, connects it all. The neighbourhood to know is Santa Catalina, immediately west of the Old Town, a former fishermen's quarter that has become the city's creative and gastronomic heartbeat. The Mercat de Santa Catalina is the anchor, a working food market where local produce, fresh seafood, and Mallorcan specialities fill the stalls, and the surrounding streets are packed with independent restaurants, natural wine bars, and the kind of coffee shops that attract the designers, creatives, and international residents who have quietly made Palma their base over the past ten years. It is bohemian in the functional rather than performative sense, the sort of neighbourhood where a Saturday morning at the market leads naturally into a long lunch and then somehow into the evening. Concepció by Nobis sits exactly on the line where the Old Town meets Santa Catalina, which is the most interesting address in the city. Nobis is a Swedish hospitality group whose properties in Stockholm and Copenhagen are reference points for how Scandinavian design hotels should work, and this was their first venture outside Scandinavia. They brought in Gert Wingårdhs, one of Sweden's most respected architects, to transform a building originally constructed in 1576 and used for centuries as a soap factory. What emerged is a 31-room hotel that manages the thing most boutique hotels in historic buildings fail to do: it does not feel like a renovation. The original cross vaults, stone arches, and thick walls are fully intact and central to the experience, and the Wingårdhs intervention, dark beams, warm brass, black metal, custom Huguet tiles in the green and white pattern that runs throughout, feels like it always belonged there. The large lounge is a genuine anomaly for Palma, a city where hotel common areas tend to be cramped, and it functions as a hub for guests and locals equally, which gives the property a life that most boutiques this size cannot manufacture. Rooms are small in number and high in quality, each mixing bespoke Mallorcan craft with Scandinavian restraint, Artek and B&B Italia furniture alongside locally made textiles and antique pieces. The restaurant Xalest serves locally inspired food built around the produce of the island, pintxos and sharing plates designed for the Spanish rhythm of eating. The rooftop pool and terrace are tucked away and genuinely private. The crowd is design-literate, well-travelled, and the kind of European who has been coming to Mallorca for years and recently decided to base themselves in the city rather than the countryside. The short version: A 31-room hotel in a 16th-century soap factory at the junction of Palma's Old Town and Santa Catalina, designed by Swedish architect Gert Wingårdhs for the Nobis group. Restored stone arches and vaulted ceilings meet Scandinavian precision and custom Mallorcan tilework. A large lounge that draws locals as much as guests, a rooftop pool, and a restaurant built around island produce. The right address for Palma done properly.
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What to Know Before You Go
A few notes on your visit.
Arrival & Departure: Check-in is set for 3:00 PM and check-out is a relaxed 12:00 PM, allowing for a calm Palma morning.
The Pool Area: There is a beautifully designed, year-round outdoor pool tucked away in a quiet courtyard; it’s an urban oasis.
Dining: Restaurant Xalest serves refined Mallorcan cuisine designed for sharing, popular with both guests and local food enthusiasts.
The Lounge: The spacious ground-floor lounge, rare in Palma, acts as the social heart for working, relaxing, or enjoying an aperitif.
Location: The hotel is centrally located, but sits on the quieter Carrer de la Concepció, ensuring easy access to the city without the main-street noise.
Pet Policy: Well-behaved pets up to 10kg are welcome for an additional, non-refundable nightly fee.
Design Pedigree: The entire space is a masterclass in Swedish-Mallorcan design, featuring beautiful stone, raw wood, and custom Huguet tiles.

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