Malta’s move away from its fuddy-duddy package-holiday image is gaining momentum. Lonely Planet decreed the capital, Valletta, a “must-visit” 2015 destination, thanks to an architectural overhaul focused around star architect Renzo Piano’s project
that will see a new parliament building, City Gate and open-air opera
house opening later this year. In the meantime, DJ Annie Mac is putting
the island on the party map by hosting the first Lost and Found festival
there, featuring three days of beach-and-boat parties and open-air
raves taking place from 3-5 April. You couldn’t get much further from
the blue-rinse coach parties of old.
Palazzo Prince d’Orange, Valletta
This 17th-century diplomat’s mansion has had the full-dream makeover,
with large apartments featuring modern kitchens and airy balconies
looking over the Valletta roofscape. The key is flexibility. You can
either rent the full penthouse or one of the double bedrooms, which are
all a good-size. Interconnecting doors mean the lift either has keyed
access to your own private apartment floor, or a more conventional
hallway where you access your room. There are several apartments and the
owners are aiming towards hotel-style service with a reception desk,
part-time concierge and basement gymnasium with treatment room. The
baroque splendour of the house hasn’t been lost, a double-height drawing
room with enormous windows is gracefully decorated, furnished with
Chippendale chairs, and the entrance off the narrow street is suitably
grand. There’s even a terrace on the roof to catch the rays.
• 316 St Paul Street,
+356 2123 1099, palazzoprincemalta.com. Doubles from €95 a night. The penthouse sleeps four and varies from €280 to €320 a night
• 316 St Paul Street,

Palazzo San Pawl, Valletta
Large parts of Valletta’s Renaissance splendour survive intact despite the ravages of tourism. To best explore this Unesco world heritage site,
do it from the inside. Palazzo San Pawl is one of a handful of
17th-century townhouses now split into modest apartments for short
stays. You enter it through large heavy doors from the narrow street,
leading to a cool, leafy courtyard – complete with gurgling fountain and
koi carp under an atrium four storeys high. The suntrap roof terrace
overlooks the city’s fortified Grand Harbour and is reached either by
well worn marble stairs or lift. The owner, a doctor, lives in the
building and happily explains where the butcher, the greengrocer and
market are to supplement the kitchen essentials of local bread and jam,
Cisk beer and Maltese wine that are supplied. Rentals are for a minimum
of three days for two-room apartments. St Paul Street runs through the
city’s ancient heart, all tiny shops and dark alleyways which are quiet
at night, spookily so: there are no nightclubs near here but even late
at weekends Valletta is safe to stroll around.
• 318 St Paul Street,
+356 9942 3110, livinginvalletta.com. Prices start at €95 a night
• 318 St Paul Street,

Trabuxu Boutique Living, Valletta
• 84 Hospital Street,

The British Hotel, Valletta
If you prefer uncomplicated and cheap and cheerful, the faded
grandeur of the British Hotel is currently being buffed up and should
suit. Due to reopen in April 2015, this two-star hotel has one real
trick up its sleeve: the most spectacular view over Valletta’s Grand
Harbour – ask for a front facing room. The large rooms all have private
bathrooms. It sits in a quaint backstreet area of tiny bars and shops,
stepped alleyways free from traffic, and several of Malta’s 365
churches. It’s also a five-minute walk from the new Renzo Piano project:
the parliament building, City Gate and open-air opera house, all of
which have been the subject of local controversy but are now complete
and due to open during 2015.
• 40 Battery Street
+356 2122 4730, britishhotel.com. Doubles from £55 a night
• 40 Battery Street

Indulgence Divine, Vittoriosa
The picturesque way to leave Valletta on foot is by the modern Barrakka lift
(€1) down a cliff face to the commuter ferry (€1.50) across the harbour
to what are known collectively as the Three Cities. One of them, Birgu,
is also known as Vittoriosa: the history of Malta has left most places
with at least two names from different periods. It’s an urban enclave of
narrow lanes, fronted nowadays by a marina, but remains effectively
tourist-free. It has a colourful political history which includes the HQ
of the Spanish Inquisition, and exemplary public housing, many still
the homes of former dockworkers. You can only explore the warren of
alleyways on foot, there are no cars and precious little parking nearby,
nor are there any hotels either – yet. As with Valletta homes are now
being converted. Indulgence Divine is one. It sleeps two, very
comfortably, the huge double bed is set inside the former private chapel
of the house, but there’s also an equally enormous sofa upstairs. The
owner has refurbished with care, retaining a secret room as a library,
spiral stairways, and roof terrace. He’s splashed bright colour here and
there among more traditional tapestries and artworks and there’s Wi-Fi,
a state-of-the-art kitchen and a rather glam walk-in double shower. The
rate includes pickup from the airport and basic essentials on arrival.
In addition to a couple of wine bars, Del Borgo and Il Forn, there’s a
tiny osteria just across the alleyway and a handful of shops and bars.
• 6 Triq Alessandru VII, UK contact:
07813 988827, indulgencedivine.com. Rooms from £84 a night, minimum booking five nights
• 6 Triq Alessandru VII, UK contact:

Xara Palace Relais and Chateaux, Mdina
Mdina is Malta’s crown jewel and the island’s ancient capital. Set
high on a hill it’s a walled city free of traffic, only a few residents’
cars are allowed in, and it is atmospheric to wander around off season
before the tourists start to overwhelm it. The only hotel is the Xara
Palace, generally regarded as Malta’s best, and although it appears to
have been there forever, it’s less than 20 years old. There are 17 rooms
of restrained palatial swaggery with velvet and plush haberdashery to
be had for reasonable rates outside the summer peak. It has high
ceilings, creaky floors and proper mortice locks. Room 8 looks over the
urban sprawl reaching out from Valletta on the horizon and is as
comfortable as you might imagine regal splendour to be. The restaurant
has the same view from a terrace. At sundown dinner is romantic,
offering a menu of refined, elaborate dishes with fish sourced locally
and game, such as tender venison.
• Misrah il-Kunsill
+356 2145 0560, xarapalace.com.mt. Doubles from £95 a night
• Misrah il-Kunsill

The Juliani Hotel, St Julians
• 25 St.George’s Road,

Port View Guest House, Marsaxlokk
Marsaxlokk is Malta’s picture-postcard fishing village, its harbour full of the brightly coloured dgħajsa
inshore boats, their owners usually busy fixing and drying their nets.
It’s the focus of a thousand holiday snapshots and as a consequence the
weekly fish market for the island has expanded into a fully fledged
street market for tourists, creating traffic jams and a bit of jostling
around the quaysides. In a little side street, just a few yards from the
water’s edge, is the Port View Guest House. It opened a year ago and is
run by a local family, mostly father Carmel Azzopardi and his son,
Andrew. The place is a clean, plain, modern B&B; the rooms are large
enough to accommodate families and some have sea views, there’s even a
couple of balconies but the rooftop breakfast terrace has the best view
of all over the harbour.
• 18 Triq il- Luzzu,
+356 9949 2961, portview.com. Doubles from €50 a night
• 18 Triq il- Luzzu,

Hotel Ta’ Cenc and Spa, Sannat, Gozo
• Triq Ta’ Cenc, Sannat, Gozo,
