Ultimate U.S. Hotel Stays

Luxury hotels that draw bath, have ski valets and your own fireplace.

ByABC News
November 23, 2007, 7:48 AM

Nov. 30, 2007 Special to ABCNEWS.com — -- At the White Barn Inn in Kennebunkport, Maine, you can have a butler draw your bath while you linger on dessert in the Inn's gourmet restaurant.

For $50, the butler will fill your soaking tub with spa bath salts and scatter rose petals and lightly scented candles throughout. All this will be choreographed, of course, so that when you walk through the door and kick off your shoes, your bath will be at the perfect soaking temperature.

Stuart Barwise, the Inn's general manager, says that typically, one guest orders the service as a surprise for his or her traveling companion. It's not the only attractive amenity on the menu; the Inn recently acquired a 44-foot Hinckley Talliari yacht for the exclusive use of its guests.

Click here to see some ultimate hotel stays at our partner site, Forbes.com.

Clearly, "business is booming," says Barwise. Even with the weakening dollar, "in the high-end leisure-travel world, we seem to be recession-proof."

Indeed, the luxury end of the U.S. hotel market is thriving. Construction of swank new hotels is seemingly relentless. And forecasts show that occupancy rates in the luxury market are projected to stay steady at 70% next year in the U.S., with the average luxury-room rate climbing a whopping 6.6% to $309, according to PKF Consulting, which analyzes the worldwide hotel industry.

What's more, luxury hotels are pouring their profits into "in-room" technology features like flat-screen TVs and iPod docking stations. The popular Peninsula Hotel in Chicago has implemented all sorts of cool electronics in its stunning, sound-proof rooms. This luxury chain is known for its impeccable taste, so naturally, electronics, such as fax machines, are hidden from view.

We selected 10 of the best 'luxury" lodgings in the country that stood out for a particular feature, such as a butler-drawn bath, or, in the case of the Stein Eriksen Lodge in Park City, Utah, ski valets who greet chilly skiers with hot cider after their last run of the day.