It may not be common knowledge that Santo Domingo — the capital of the Dominican Republic — is the largest city in the Caribbean. But from the pool deck at Santo Domingo Marriott Hotel Piantini, the energy of the urban sprawl is apparent, stretching a few blocks to the palm-lined Caribbean Sea. The Piantini neighborhood is right in the midst of the downtown core, close to historic sites and offices both government and corporate.
The development contains two new hotel towers: One houses the Marriott-branded property (opened March 2024), and one houses Aloft Santo Domingo Piantini (opened December 2023) offering two different-tier Marriott brands for clients with varying lodging needs.
One hotel tower houses the Marriott and the other hosts the Aloft.
Credit: 2025 Marriott International
On the ground level, there are four different restaurants that aren’t integral to the hotels but are nonetheless convenient for visitors. Especially noteworthy were the sushi platters at Makoto, which feature fish flown in from Japan. The drive-through valet entrance has separate elevator towers leading to separate sky lobbies for each property.
Santo Domingo Marriott Hotel Piantini
On the Marriott side, the sky lobby is straight out of Marriott’s playbook, with cool-toned polished stone, design elements drawn from Indigenous Taino art traditions (check out the spiral on the ceiling) and plenty of seating for meet-and-greets.
The lobby at Santo Domingo Marriott Hotel Piantini
Credit: 2025 Marriott InternationalThis is where guests will also find the fitness center, with a standard selection of machines, free weights and yoga/stretch spaces. Next door to that is the M Club lounge, offered to guests booking room categories that include access, or for elite members of the Marriott Bonvoy program. There are snacks, drinks and coffee available throughout the day, with afternoon tea, hors d’oeuvres and an honor bar available in the evenings.
Guestrooms offer sweeping city views with floor-to-ceiling windows, along with bright blond wood interiors with vaguely art deco accents. Polished wood flooring echoes the cooling effect of the lobby. There are standard Marriott amenities, including in-room coffee and minifridges, and in most rooms, the desk doubles as a vanity, with a light-framed mirror. Baths also have large, circular, light-framed mirrors, as well as roomy tiled showers.
The 18th-floor rooftop deck has a large pool long enough for lap swimming, plush loungers, daybeds and city views.
One of the hotel’s guestrooms
Credit: 2025 Marriott InternationalThe hotel’s three-meal restaurant, Moorea, offers indoor and outdoor seating. For a more intimate experience, guests can book private dining room La Cavita, modeled after a wine cellar. Breakfasts offer up bountiful buffets with international and Dominican specialties such as mangu con los tres golpes, a traditional breakfast platter of mashed green plantains topped with pickled red onion, eggs, salami and fried cheese.
Midday and in the evenings, Moorea offers an international and Dominican menu with a mix of sandwiches, plated entrees that include fresh Caribbean seafood and selection of pastas and soups.
Aloft Santo Domingo Piantini
For clients seeking a more art-forward, contemporary experience at a lower price, the other hotel tower in the development hosts the Aloft. Rooms here are more open plan, with more open bathroom spaces (bath amenities are from Drybar) and standalone storage, and they feature coffeemakers and minifridges.
A bedroom at Aloft Santo Domingo Piantini
Credit: 2025 Marriott InternationalOn the lobby level, there’s bar W XYZ, which offers whimsical cocktails served in tikis or boom boxes. The hotel also shares an outdoor deck with Moorea at the Marriott next door, and guests can walk across the deck to have breakfast there with chargeback privileges at the Aloft if they prefer a more substantial breakfast than the grab-and-go options for sale in the Aloft lobby.
The Aloft lobby is also the access point for the well-appointed fitness room, and the space is designed to be convivial — an extension of the bar, complete with a pool table. The Aloft additionally has a separate but quite similar pool deck with in-water loungers and city views.
Aloft’s pool deck
Credit: 2025 Marriott InternationalSanto Domingo
While not quite as well-known as the Dominican Republic’s resort areas of Punta Cana and Casa de Campo, Santo Domingo will delight history-interested clients, who will enjoy poking around the city’s colonial zone — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — just a short cab ride away from the hotels.
Santo Domingo is one of the oldest European settlements in the Americas, with paved roads dating back to 1502, and the Museum of the Royal Houses offers clients audio tours to learn about the historic buildings and their significance in Dominican history. Just a short walk away are the National Pantheon, where the country’s heroes are interned, and the Cathedral of Santa Maria la Menor, the oldest existing cathedral in the Americas, completed in 1550.
Also of interest is the Columbus Lighthouse, a mausoleum, memorial and museum to the explorer Christopher Columbus, who in the Dominican Republic is featured as one of the country’s key founding figures. The lighthouse is purported to house the remains of Columbus himself, but the veracity of the claim is disputed by Spain.
Clients preferring natural beauty will enjoy the Los Tres Ojos (Three Eyes) National Park, a set of underwater lakes exposed by an ancient cave collapse. The most scenic lake is Lago de Azufre, which shines a bright blue because of its calcium mineral content.
Whether clients choose to explore the city on their own or see the sites via an organized tour (which can be arranged by the concierge at the Marriott or front desk at the Aloft), this lovely pair of Marriott hotels in one of the city’s most exciting neighborhoods will ensure a most comfortable stay.