
A nine-room boutique hotel in Miraflores occupying a 1940s Tudor-style mansion, Atemporal operates on near-total exclusivity: only guests access the property. At $336 per night, it positions itself at the intimate end of Lima's premium accommodation tier, offering a house car with private chauffeur, included breakfast, and 24/7 locally sourced room service within walking distance of the city's most serious dining addresses.

A Mansion Format That Miraflores Does Differently
Lima's premium accommodation tier has split into two distinct models. On one side sit the established international names, the Belmond-flagged properties like Miraflores Park and Belmond Las Casitas, and the grand legacy addresses like the Country Club Lima Hotel, which trade on scale and brand certainty. On the other sit a smaller number of design-led, low-key properties where restricted access and a residential atmosphere replace amenity breadth. Atemporal belongs firmly to the second category. With nine rooms and a strict guest-only access policy, it operates closer to a private residence than a conventional hotel, and that distinction shapes everything about how the property functions.
The building itself is a 1940s Tudor-style mansion on Santa María 190 in Miraflores, one of Lima's most composed residential and commercial districts. Tudor architecture in Latin America is not incidental: the mid-twentieth century saw a wave of European stylistic influence along Lima's Pacific-facing cliffs and garden streets, and the neighbourhood still carries that layered, colonial-to-modern character in its architecture. The mansion's exterior situates Atemporal within that lineage before a guest has crossed the threshold. At the price point of $336 per night, it occupies the same band as smaller design properties in the city's premium tier, where the rate reflects privacy and residential quality rather than floor count or conference facilities.
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Get Exclusive Access →Design Logic: The Globetrotting Photographer Conceit
The hotel's interior concept is built around a specific fictional frame: a globetrotting photographer has left guests full access to his home, his car, and his staff. The conceit works not because of its narrative elaboration but because of what it permits spatially. The rooms are furnished in a modern register that nonetheless respects the European colonial character of the building, which means the property avoids the jarring tension that often occurs when contemporary minimalism is dropped into pre-war architecture. Rooms are described as small but comfortable, a calibration that reflects the mansion's original residential proportions rather than a cost decision. The design priority here is coherence with the structure, not the maximisation of square footage.
For travellers accustomed to properties like Hotel B in Barranco, where a Beaux-Arts mansion has been converted with similar residential instincts, or the more design-assertive Nhow Lima, the Atemporal approach will read as the quieter, more heritage-deferential choice. It is not trying to make an architectural statement so much as to preserve one that already exists. The result is a property that photographs as an interior but functions as a building: the architectural history is legible in the proportions, the ceiling heights, the window placement.
Lima as the Point, Not the Backdrop
Lima is the second-largest city in the Americas by area, larger than Mexico City by footprint, and its scale registers immediately on arrival. Miraflores offers one of the city's more navigable entry points: organised, cliff-edged, dense with serious restaurants and relatively walkable compared to other Lima districts. Atemporal's location on Santa María places it within walking distance of Astrid y Gastón, one of the restaurants most associated with Lima's gastronomic ascent over the past two decades, and Osaka, a Nikkei address that reflects the Japanese-Peruvian culinary fusion that has become one of Lima's more globally recognised contributions to contemporary cooking.
The hotel's approach to the city is deliberate rather than passive. Bicycles are available for independent exploration. A house car with a private chauffeur provides access to destinations across the city, both known addresses and less-visited ones, which matters in a metropolis where traffic patterns and neighbourhood geography can make self-navigation time-consuming. For a city of Lima's size and density, having a trusted point of contact for movement logistics is a practical asset, not a luxury flourish. Breakfast is included in the room rate, and locally sourced food is available for room service around the clock, which gives guests the option to calibrate between the property's quiet and the city's considerable gastronomic offering without friction. For broader context on where to eat and drink while staying in the city, see our full Lima restaurants guide, our full Lima bars guide, and our full Lima experiences guide.
Placing Atemporal in Its Peer Set
The nine-room format with exclusive guest access puts Atemporal in a very specific competitive position. Properties at this scale internationally, from the converted-palazzo model in European cities to the hacienda-style boutiques across Latin America, succeed when the physical envelope of the building justifies the restricted scale. At Atemporal, the 1940s Tudor mansion does that work. Guests are not paying for fewer amenities; they are paying for a different category of access, one in which the property is not shared with event attendees, day-spa visitors, or non-resident diners.
Travellers building a wider Peru itinerary will find natural comparisons in other small-format, place-specific properties across the country: Palacio Nazarenas in Cusco operates within a converted convent with similar residential gravity; CIRQA in Arequipa applies a comparable intimacy to sillar-stone architecture in the white city. Further afield in Peru, Titilaka in Puno, Inkaterra Machu Picchu Pueblo Hotel, and Sumaq Machu Picchu Hotel each apply a version of the intimate, locally grounded format to different geographic contexts. For the Lima leg of any Peru trip, Atemporal represents the low-volume, high-access end of the city's accommodation spectrum. See our full Lima hotels guide for a complete picture of the options across price tiers and neighbourhoods, and explore our full Lima wineries guide for what to drink while you are there.
Planning Your Stay
Rooms are priced from $336 per night, with breakfast included. The property is located at Santa María 190, Miraflores, placing it within the district's walkable core. There are nine rooms in total, and given the property's size and guest-only access model, advance booking is advisable rather than optional, particularly during Lima's shoulder and high seasons when the city draws both business and leisure travel in significant volume. The house car with private chauffeur is available to guests, which is the most practical way to cover Lima's wider geography efficiently. Bicycles are an option for local movement within Miraflores and to adjacent districts. For travellers comparing options at this price point, the Royal Park Hotel Lima offers a larger-format alternative in the same city tier.
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Side-by-Side Snapshot
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atemporal | Price: $336 Rooms: 9 Rooms Though it flies a bit under the radar, anyone who’s… | This venue | ||
| Miraflores Park, A Belmond Hotel, Lima | ||||
| Belmond Las Casitas | ||||
| Country Club Lima Hotel | ||||
| Hotel B | ||||
| Nhow Lima |
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