Park Hyatt Toronto — Writers' Room on the 17th Floor, CN Tower Views in Yorkville's Finest Address
There is a certain kind of hotel that feels like the city at its best — and Park Hyatt Toronto is that hotel. The 1936 Heritage building at Bloor and Avenue Road was closed for five years of renovation and reopened in 2021 as something genuinely rare: Art Deco meets Modern Luxury in a way that honours history without feeling museum-like. The Writers' Room Rooftop Bar on the 17th floor faces CN Tower directly. Stillwater Spa runs a full ESPA treatment menu with an indoor pool. Score 8.8/10 from ~900 reviews on Booking.com. Guests who have stayed at both Four Seasons Toronto and here tend to say Park Hyatt has a 'cooler' energy — less formal, more considered. For the World Cup or any trip where the hotel itself is part of the experience, this is the Yorkville address that delivers.
The five-year renovation that closed Park Hyatt Toronto and reopened it in 2021 produced something the city genuinely needed: a luxury hotel where every surface shows intention. The 1936 Heritage building on Bloor Street was gutted and rebuilt from the inside — dark walnut joinery, honed stone floors, brass hardware in every room, public spaces scaled to feel grand without being cold. The result sits somewhere between a private members club and a modern art hotel. Guests who have stayed at multiple Toronto five-stars consistently describe the atmosphere here as 'Cool-Luxury' rather than the formal luxury of its nearest competitors. The 8.8/10 score from approximately 900 Booking.com reviews suggests that first impression carries through the full stay.
"Arrived and immediately felt like this was the Toronto I wanted to remember — a beautiful old building that had been redesigned with real care. The Writers' Room at sunset, a glass of wine, CN Tower right there. Didn't expect to love a Canadian hotel this much."
The rooms are fully renovated — nothing from before the 2021 reopening remains. A Park Room starts at CAD 450–650 per night (≈฿12,150–17,550), finished in warm walnut tones, cream and charcoal fabrics, stone bathroom floors, a large rain shower, and Byredo amenities throughout. Premier Suites run CAD 900–1,500 for guests needing more space, and Penthouse Suites start at CAD 2,500 for the highest-end experience in the building. Practical note: if you hold World of Hyatt status at Explorist or Globalist tier, it is worth asking about a complimentary upgrade at check-in when availability allows — a number of guests report receiving one. The rooms face either Bloor Street or the quieter side towards Davenport; either orientation is reasonably quiet for a central city hotel.
The Writers' Room on the 17th floor is the hotel's signature space — named in honour of the writers and artists who stayed here across the building's long history. The atmosphere is a rooftop living room: upholstered armchairs, polished bar, glass ceiling panels that open in warm months, and an unobstructed line of sight directly to CN Tower and the Toronto skyline. In the warm season (May through September) this is the finest rooftop experience in the Yorkville neighbourhood, full stop. That said, the outdoor experience disappears completely in the colder months (October through April) — worth considering when you are choosing dates. Below the main floors, Stillwater Spa runs ESPA treatments, an indoor pool, hot tub and steam room. Multiple guests describe it as the best spa in Toronto for destination treatments. The fitness area is standard for a five-star city hotel.
On location: Park Hyatt sits at 4 Avenue Rd, right on the corner of Bloor Street and Avenue Road in Yorkville — Toronto's highest-concentration neighbourhood for luxury retail, fine-dining restaurants, galleries, and the Royal Ontario Museum. Everything within the neighbourhood is walkable. Museum Station on the Yonge–University Subway Line (Line 1) is attached to the hotel building — from there, Union Station (rail hub and UP Express to the airport) is four stops south, and CF Toronto Eaton Centre is three stops. BMO Field, the 2026 World Cup venue in Toronto, is roughly 5 km away — about 15–20 minutes by Uber on a normal day. There is no direct subway to the stadium, but an Uber from Yorkville works well. On match days build in at least 60–90 minutes of extra time.
A few honest points before you book: the review base is smaller than Four Seasons Toronto or Ritz-Carlton Toronto — around 900 reviews versus several thousand at those properties, which means less data on long-term consistency. That is not a problem in itself but worth noting if you rely heavily on volume as a quality signal. The Writers' Room Rooftop experience is seasonal — if you visit between October and April the outdoor element that drives so many recommendations will not be available, and the indoor spaces while excellent are not the same experience. Finally, the pricing at CAD 450+ per night positions this solidly in premium territory; it is not the best-value five-star in the city, but the design quality of the 2021 renovation largely justifies the rate for guests who prioritise atmosphere.
To be direct: Park Hyatt Toronto is the best choice in the city if you want a Heritage building with genuinely cool design, the finest spa in Toronto, and a rooftop bar that faces CN Tower. The renovation is fresh, the neighbourhood is the best Toronto has for walking, eating, and exploring, and the Museum Subway station at the door means you are never more than four stops from the rest of the city. It suits couples, honeymoon trips, celebrations, and World Cup visitors who want their base in Toronto to feel like a proper destination. If you need to be closer to BMO Field by transit, or your budget is below CAD 450, there are other strong options in our Toronto list.
Summary from Booking & Agoda
- ✓ Writers' Room Rooftop Bar (17th floor) with CN Tower view — best rooftop in Yorkville
- ✓ Stillwater Spa ESPA with indoor pool — widely cited as Toronto's top hotel spa for treatments
- ✓ Heritage 1936 building fully renovated 2021 — distinctive design, everything fresh
- ✓ Yorkville neighbourhood: luxury retail, fine dining, ROM all walkable; Museum Subway at the door
- ! Smaller review base than Four Seasons or Ritz-Carlton Toronto — less long-term consistency data
- ! Writers' Room Rooftop is warm-season only (May–Sep) — outdoor experience absent October–April
- ✓ Museum Subway Station (Line 1) directly attached — four stops to Union Station
- ✓ Rooms fully renovated 2021 — walnut furnishings, stone bathrooms, Byredo amenities
- ✓ Byredo amenities throughout + marble bathrooms — genuine luxury detail at every level
- ! Rates rise significantly during Peak Season and World Cup period
- ! Penthouse Suites and high-floor rooms carry a large premium over base Park Rooms
- 💡If you need to be close to BMO Field by transit · Park Hyatt is ~5 km away (Uber 15–20 min, no direct subway to stadium) · For transit-connected options look at properties nearer the Exhibition area
- 💡If you are visiting October through April · The Writers' Room outdoor Rooftop experience closes in cold weather · The indoor spaces are excellent but not the same as the warm-season setting most guests rave about
- 💡If your budget is below CAD 450/night · This hotel starts at CAD 450+ · See Delta Hotels Toronto or Radisson Blu Toronto Downtown in our list for strong alternatives
Heading to Toronto for the World Cup?
Toronto is a 2026 host city — see our full World Cup guide (matches, where to stay, tickets, visa) plus how to reach BMO Field on match day.