Blind Tiger Portland – Danforth Street

A nine-room inn on Danforth Street, Blind Tiger occupies a Federal-style house built in 1823 and takes its name from the Prohibition-era speakeasy that once ran in its basement. Renovated by Lark Hotels in 2020, the property sits in one of Portland's most walkable residential neighborhoods, with wood-burning fireplaces in nearly every room and a morning pantry that sets an unhurried, residential tone.
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- Address
- 163 Danforth St, Portland, ME 04102
- Phone
- +1 207-879-8755
- Website
- blindtigerportland.com

A 19th-Century House With a Disreputable Past
Danforth Street runs through one of Portland's older residential corridors, where Federal-style houses from the early 1800s sit close to the street and the sidewalks stay manageable even in shoulder season. Number 163 is a house built in 1823 that spent most of the 20th century accumulating history quietly, converted into an inn in 1993 and, more recently, overhauled in 2020 by Lark Hotels, a Northeast-focused boutique operator whose portfolio favors residential scale and considered interiors over lobby spectacle. The name comes from the basement: during Prohibition, the space functioned as a blind tiger, a term for an unlicensed drinking den that charged admission to see a fictitious attraction and then provided alcohol as a courtesy. That history no longer operates underground. The basement is now a billiards room, and the house's social life happens in the open.
What Boutique at Nine Rooms Actually Means
The boutique hotel category has fragmented considerably over the past decade. At the larger end sit properties like The Hoxton, Portland and The Ritz-Carlton, Portland, which offer full-service amenities and the logistical confidence of a large operation. At the smaller end, nine-room inns like Blind Tiger operate on a different logic entirely: the house rhythm sets the pace, communal spaces function as they would in a well-run private residence, and the experience depends heavily on the physical character of the building itself. For a property of this size, that building character matters enormously. The 1823 construction provides original architectural detail that a newer building cannot replicate, and the 2020 Lark renovation worked with those elements rather than against them, pairing period architectural features with contemporary color choices and locally sourced artwork. Woodlark occupies a different position in Portland's accommodation market, with more keys and a full restaurant program; Blind Tiger's appeal is precisely its refusal to scale in that direction.
The Rhythm of a Stay Here
Breakfast is served in the pantry each morning. This is worth considering carefully before booking: the format is light by design. Coffee, tea, and snacks are available throughout the day, but Blind Tiger is not a property where breakfast is a managed event with staff attention and a menu card. It is closer to a well-stocked house kitchen, which suits some travelers precisely and frustrates others entirely. Portland's restaurant density in the surrounding neighborhood means this is not a practical problem for most guests. The concierge keeps recommendations current, and Danforth Street's location puts walkers within reasonable distance of the Old Port's food and drink concentration.
Morning pace at a nine-room inn like this tends toward unhurried. There is no lobby queue, no elevator wait, no breakfast room with strangers at adjacent tables at precise intervals. The billiards room in the basement is available for guests, and the house's communal atmosphere reflects the Lark Hotels approach, which consistently prioritizes a sense of arrival over transactional efficiency. For travelers accustomed to properties like Troutbeck in Amenia or SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg, where the property itself sets a slow, residential cadence, Blind Tiger operates in recognizable territory.
The Rooms and Their Details
Nine rooms in a Federal-style house means limited square footage by the standards of full-service hotels. What the rooms offer instead is character: wood-burning fireplaces in nearly all of them, kimono-style robes, and bath products by Lather, a California-based personal care brand with distribution across the boutique hotel sector. The interiors reflect the Lark signature, which runs toward photogenic compositions of pattern, texture, and color rather than the neutral minimalism common in newer urban hotels. Room rates start at $471, which places the property in a premium tier relative to its nine-key capacity. That price reflects the renovation investment, the Lark brand positioning, and the relative scarcity of rooms at this scale in a Portland neighborhood that sees consistent demand from leisure travelers.
For comparison, AC Hotel Portland Downtown/Waterfront, ME offers a different value proposition at a larger scale, with a more central location and the operational reliability of a branded hotel program. Caravan - The Tiny House Hotel occupies yet another position, with outdoor-focused formats at even smaller scale. Blind Tiger sits between these extremes: intimate enough to feel residential, finished to a standard that justifies its price tier.
Planning the Stay
Danforth Street is in Portland's West End, a neighborhood of preserved Victorian and Federal architecture that sits uphill from the Old Port waterfront. The area is walkable to central Portland's restaurants and bars, though guests arriving by car will find street parking manageable by Maine city standards. Booking directly through the property is recommended; the nine-room capacity means availability can tighten quickly, particularly in summer and during fall foliage season. Travelers planning visits to nearby coastal properties or comparing options further afield may also want to consider Raffles Boston in Boston as a regional alternative for a longer itinerary.
Guests who prioritize room-specific character over standardized comfort should note that wood-burning fireplaces and period architectural detail vary across the nine rooms. Requesting room details at booking is advisable given the small inventory.
Where the Accolades Land
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blind Tiger Portland – Danforth StreetThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Revamped 19th-century mansion blending historic charm with modern boutique comforts. | $$$ | Michelin 1 Key | |
| Blind Tiger Portland – Carleton Street | Intimate guesthouse in a historic Victorian home. | $$$ | Michelin 1 Key | West End |
| Portland Harbor Hotel | Historic boutique hotel with nautical coastal charm | $$$ | 4-Star | Old Port |
| The Francis Hotel | Independently owned luxury boutique hotel in a meticulously restored historic mansion with modern amenities and local character. | $$$ | 4-Star | Parkside |
| The Press Hotel, Autograph Collection | Historic newspaper building transformed into a boutique luxury lifestyle hotel | $$$$ | 4-Star | Old Port |
| Longfellow Hotel | Boutique luxury hotel emphasizing wellness and Portland's independent spirit with residential-style rooms and curated local partnerships. | $$$$ | 4-Star | West End |
At a Glance
- Cozy
- Trendy
- Intimate
- Historic
- Romantic Getaway
- Weekend Escape
- Historic Building
- Wifi
- Fireplace
- Continental Breakfast
Cozy and inviting with warm fireplaces, tasteful decor, ambient music, and well-lit common areas fostering a homey, relaxing atmosphere.














