Ochsner Medical Center is Louisiana's largest non-profit academic medical centre and the Gulf South's leading hospital, nationally ranked for cardiology, cancer, and gastroenterology. Ochsner is affiliated with the University of Queensland-Ochsner Clinical School and draws patients from across Louisiana, Mississippi, and internationally from Latin America. Hotels throughout New Orleans — from the French Quarter to the Garden District — ensure families can enjoy the city's legendary culture while remaining close to this world-class medical facility.
A 1300-room Beaux-Arts tower that has anchored the Quarter since 1886, famous for its rotating Carousel Bar — a 25-seat merry-go-round cocktail lounge that turns slowly enough to maintain the illusion of sobriety. The hotel has hosted Hemingway, Faulkner, and Tennessee Williams, all of whom have rooms named after them.
Occupying a pair of landmark Beaux-Arts buildings on Canal Street, the Ritz offers the French Quarter's most polished luxury experience — the M Bistro breakfast is excellent, the spa is the best in the city, and the hotel's jazz concierge can get you into the right clubs before they fill up.
A 33-room hidden masterpiece tucked into two adjoining 1830s Creole townhouses, with antique-filled rooms around a magnolia courtyard and a service philosophy modelled on a private house party. There's no restaurant (intentionally), no pool, and no pool bar — and yet guests return year after year because the romance and quiet are irreplaceable.
A beloved 1927 Garden District landmark recently restored to its full Jazz Age splendour, with hand-painted murals, the exceptional Caribbean Room restaurant, and a rooftop with views across the city's oak-canopied residential landscape. The Magazine Street streetcar stops outside the door.
The team behind the legendary Brennan's Restaurant has created an intimate 15-room hotel where New Orleans excess is celebrated with theatrical conviction — a 24-hour kitchen, a stunning courtyard pool flanked by cocktail-dispensing antique carts, and suites themed around the city's great culinary personalities.
Seven private cottages (and one 7,000 sq ft villa) in a walled garden where John James Audubon once painted — the most exclusive accommodation in the French Quarter, with private pools, a dedicated butler for each cottage, and absolute privacy amid the neighbourhood's perpetual carnival.