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Buenos Aires, Argentina

Av. Cnel. Díaz 1736

LocationBuenos Aires, Argentina

Av. Cnel. Díaz 1736 sits in one of Buenos Aires's most residential pockets of Palermo, where the city's appetite for considered hospitality runs alongside its café culture and design-led boutique hotel scene. With limited public data available, EP Club recommends verifying current details directly before booking, while the address itself signals a quieter, neighbourhood-embedded character distinct from the grand boulevard properties closer to Recoleta.

Av. Cnel. Díaz 1736 hotel in Buenos Aires, Argentina
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A Buenos Aires Address, and What It Signals

Avenida Coronel Díaz runs through Palermo, one of Buenos Aires's most layered residential and hospitality corridors, connecting the leafy calm of Palermo Chico to the denser commercial energy further north. Properties along this stretch tend to sit outside the grand-hotel circuit anchored by Alvear Palace Hotel and the Four Seasons Hotel Buenos Aires in Recoleta, occupying instead a quieter, more neighbourhood-embedded register. That positioning is not incidental: Buenos Aires has developed a recognisable tier of design-conscious, lower-profile addresses that draw guests precisely because they are not on the main tourist axis.

The broader Buenos Aires hospitality scene has split over the past decade between large-footprint legacy hotels and a smaller cohort of properties that trade on intimacy and local character. The Fierro Hotel and Be Jardín Escondido by Coppola are representative of that second category, and Av. Cnel. Díaz 1736 sits within the same general geography, suggesting a similar orientation toward residential texture over grand-hotel spectacle. Verifying the current format, capacity, and offering directly is advisable before any booking decision, as the venue's public data profile is limited at the time of writing.

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What the Neighbourhood Tells You

Palermo is not a monolith. The blocks around Coronel Díaz at the 1736 mark sit in a zone that transitions between the park-facing quietness of Palermo Chico and the commercial density of Palermo Soho and Hollywood further west. Walking distance to the Botanical Garden and the Rosedal puts this address in a part of Buenos Aires where the pace is notably slower than in San Telmo or the microcentro. For guests arriving from long-haul flights, that calibration matters: the ability to walk to coffee, a park, or a neighbourhood restaurant without crossing a major commercial artery is a structural advantage that the Recoleta grand hotels rarely offer.

Buenos Aires's better-positioned neighbourhood properties tend to reflect the city's strong culture of considered service, where attentiveness is expressed through familiarity rather than formality. That tradition draws from the city's deep European immigration heritage, particularly Italian and Spanish, which shaped both the architecture of areas like Palermo and the hospitality instincts that persist in smaller, owner-adjacent properties. Properties in this tier typically prioritise staff continuity over high turnover, which produces the kind of anticipatory service that larger hotels approximate through training programmes but rarely achieve organically.

The Buenos Aires Context for Guests Making Comparisons

Guests weighing this address against the city's more documented options should understand how Buenos Aires's premium tier is structured. At the leading end, properties like the Algodon Mansion and Anselmo Buenos Aires, Curio Collection by Hilton compete on brand recognition, amenity depth, and points programmes. The Faena Buenos Aires in Puerto Madero occupies its own niche defined by design spectacle and cultural programming. The Casa Lucia model, by contrast, points toward the boutique end of the spectrum, where the number of rooms is low enough that staff genuinely track guest preferences across a stay.

Where Av. Cnel. Díaz 1736 fits within that structure is something a direct conversation with the property will clarify more reliably than any third-party listing. What the address itself establishes is a geographic preference for the residential north, away from the river-facing spectacle of Puerto Madero and the heritage-heavy formality of central Recoleta. For a particular kind of Buenos Aires visitor, that preference is already a strong signal of intent.

Planning a Stay: What to Verify Directly

Because the venue's current hours, pricing, booking method, and room configuration are not confirmed in EP Club's database at the time of publication, the guidance here is necessarily structural rather than specific. Buenos Aires operates on a broadly peso-denominated hotel economy, where rates for boutique properties in Palermo typically sit below the dollar-rate pricing of the Recoleta grand hotels, though that differential has shifted significantly with exchange rate movements since 2023. Travellers booking from outside Argentina should confirm the accepted currency and payment method directly, as the distinction between official and blue-rate pricing contexts has practical implications for total cost.

For guests extending beyond Buenos Aires, the EP Club Argentina network spans the country's major hospitality registers: wine-country stays at Cavas Wine Lodge in Alto Agrelo, Casa de Uco in Tunuyán, and Awasi Mendoza in Lujan De Cuyo for Mendoza's Malbec belt; the remote high-altitude character of Colomé Winery in Molinos in Salta province; southern Patagonia options at Arakur Ushuaia Resort & Spa in Ushuaia and Charming Luxury Lodge & Private Spa in San Carlos de Bariloche; and the estancia tradition at Estancia El Ombú de Areco in San Antonio De Areco, roughly two hours from the capital. The full Buenos Aires context, including restaurant and bar recommendations, is available in our full Buenos Aires restaurants guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Av. Cnel. Díaz 1736 more low-key or high-energy?
The address sits in a residential stretch of Palermo, a neighbourhood that runs quieter than Buenos Aires's commercial and nightlife-heavy districts. Properties in this corridor tend toward the lower-key end of the city's hospitality spectrum, a contrast to the grand-boulevard energy of the Alvear Palace or the design-spectacle positioning of Faena Buenos Aires in Puerto Madero. Confirming the current format with the property directly is advisable, as the venue's public data profile is limited at this time.
What room should I choose at Av. Cnel. Díaz 1736?
Room configuration, pricing, and style details are not confirmed in EP Club's database at the time of publication. For a Palermo address at this street number, park-facing or courtyard-oriented rooms tend to offer the quietest aspect, given the avenue's traffic volume. Contacting the property directly to ask about aspect and floor level is the most reliable approach before booking.
What's the defining thing about Av. Cnel. Díaz 1736?
Its geographic placement in residential Palermo, away from the Recoleta grand-hotel circuit and the Puerto Madero waterfront, is the clearest signal available from public data. Buenos Aires's neighbourhood-embedded properties in this part of the city consistently offer a more locally calibrated experience than the city's internationally branded addresses. That positioning, if confirmed by the current offering, aligns it with a small cohort of properties that trade on proximity to the city's everyday life rather than its landmark attractions.
What's the leading way to book Av. Cnel. Díaz 1736?
A website and phone number for this property are not listed in EP Club's current database, so the most reliable route is a direct search using the full address, Av. Cnel. Díaz 1736, C1425, Buenos Aires, to locate current booking channels. Given the currency complexity in Argentina since 2023, confirming the payment method and rate type directly with the property before committing is strongly advisable for international travellers.
Is Av. Cnel. Díaz 1736 a good base for exploring Palermo's dining scene?
Palermo concentrates a significant share of Buenos Aires's serious restaurant activity, from the wood-fired parrillas of Las Cañitas to the more experimental kitchens around Armenia and Thames streets. An address at Coronel Díaz 1736 places a guest within walking or short taxi distance of that full range, which is a structural advantage for visitors whose primary reason for being in Buenos Aires is the food and wine scene. For a broader map of where Buenos Aires's dining energy sits, EP Club's Buenos Aires guide covers the city by neighbourhood and format.

Cuisine and Recognition

A quick comparison pulled from similar venues we track in the same category.

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