Never mind what's in a name, when you have to consider what's in a number as a name? The Luxury Travel Bible doesn't pay much attention to numerology but it can't help but have its fancy tickled by just how many luxe nests announce themselves with a digit.
Next year will mark a decade since 60 Thompson Street opened its doors in downtown SoHo. All the more remarkable that it still registers with New York's fashion set.
There's been a sad, slow funeral procession for English eccentricity in the face of minimalism and mid-century modern - Cotswolds88 rebels against this trend.
Named after the 'Chain Bridge' that crosses the Danube in Budapest, Lanchid 19 is about clean-cut design of the type you might find in the edgiest corporate offices.
Originally built by Lord Chelsea on a cricket ground between Buckingham Palace and Knightsbridge in the 19th century Number 11 is part of a line-up of townhouses on Cadogans Lane that was once known as the 'village of palaces'.
Packaged inside the sober mid-Victorian white stucco walls of a terrace, all the rules on mixing pretty patterns with sophisticated stripes are happily thrown out the window.
Straddling the thin line between boutique hotel and guesthouse, Dar One delivers up a delicious sort of intimacy whether you're flying solo or filling up its six suites with friends.