Reef
&
Ruin.
The Mexican Caribbean done with discrimination — and three nights inland in the colonial capital the resort guest never reaches.

The Yucatán the resort never shows you.
Most travelers know one Yucatán — the Cancun Hotel Zone, the all-inclusive on a strip-mall stretch of Caribbean. We design a different one entirely.
Four nights along the Riviera Maya, at a property the Hotel Zone tourist could not find — the reef at the door, the cenotes a short drive inland, the Maya world at dawn before the day-trippers arrive. Then ninety minutes west to Mérida, the Yucatán’s colonial capital — a city whose food, plazas, and 250-year-old haciendas the beach traveler never reaches.
The Caribbean and the country. The doing and the nothing. Both designed.
Six chapters of a single week.
Arrival and departure are designed too — private transfers from CUN, the right suite for the right night, a last coffee on the hacienda terrace before the road home.

The Captain
A full-day private sportfishing charter out of Isla Mujeres or Cancun — the strait between them is the sailfish capital of the western hemisphere, with the largest population on the planet running through these waters each winter. Marlin, sailfish, dorado, wahoo, tuna in season.
Your captain has worked these grounds for decades. His boat, his crew, the patterns only he knows. Coolers stocked, tackle dialed, no resort boat or tour-rod queue.

The Ruins
Tulum at first light, before the day-trippers arrive, with a private archaeologist who has spent decades on this coast. The cliffside ceremonial center, the carved stelae, the relationship between the Maya and the sea.
A second day at Cobá in the jungle interior — the unrestored stones, the soaring Nohoch Mul, the world the Maya built without metal or wheel.

The Reef
A private day on the Mesoamerican Reef — the world’s second-largest barrier reef, running the length of the Riviera Maya — with a marine biologist who reads the coral the way an archaeologist reads stone.
Snorkel or dive depending on your preference and certification. Turtles in season, eagle rays in season, the parrotfish and the sergeants always.

The Cenotes
The Yucatán is a limestone plate over a freshwater cathedral. Cenotes are its openings — sinkholes leading into a subterranean river system that runs hundreds of miles.
A guided day on the cenotes worth visiting — the dramatic, the cathedral-lit, the swim-only — chosen and reached with a guide who knows which ones have never been on Tripadvisor.

The Other Yucatán
Transfer ninety minutes west to Mérida — Yucatán’s colonial capital, the henequen-and-haciendas city the Caribbean traveler never reaches.
Three nights at a restored 250-year-old hacienda. The Mérida plaza, the regional museum, the Sunday paseo. A day inland to a working hacienda or a Maya village — the country the beach can’t show you.

The Table
Yucatán cuisine is a separate grammar from the rest of Mexico — Maya at the foundation, Lebanese and Caribbean grafted on, every dish carrying a story. Cochinita pibil from a true pit, sopa de lima, papadzules, marquesitas at dusk.
A pinnacle dinner at the open-fire kitchen on the Tulum coast. A second at Mérida’s defining table. A private cochinita preparation at the hacienda kitchen, dug and cooked the way it has been for centuries. A market morning with a chef.
Two stays, two pacings.

Chablé Maroma
Wellness pinnacle and design hotel in one. Hacienda DNA pulled onto the Riviera Maya beach. Private cenote on property. The defining boutique of the region for travelers who choose hotels the way they choose architects.

Rosewood Mayakoba
Rosewood’s signature discipline applied to Mayakoba’s mangrove-and-lagoon setting. Suites with private docks, boats as the way you get to breakfast. Quiet at the highest tier.

Maroma, A Belmond Hotel
Restored grande dame on Maroma Beach (regularly ranked among the best in the world). The Belmond restoration brought the design back to first principles — pale stone, palapa roofs, ceremonial gardens.

Chablé Yucatán (Mérida)
Sister property to Chablé Maroma, set in a 250-year-old restored hacienda outside Mérida. Limestone, mahogany, henequen-era architecture brought to full life. The anchor for the inland leg.
The week’s defining meals.

Hartwood (Tulum)
The open-fire kitchen on the Tulum coast — the chef-and-wife operation that redefined what Riviera Maya dining could be. A defining Tulum dinner.
Kuuk (Mérida)
Modern Yucatán haute cuisine. The Yucatecan grammar — Maya, Lebanese, Caribbean — rendered at the highest level. Mérida’s pinnacle table.
A private cochinita preparation at the hacienda
The pit dug, the recoado spread, the wrapped pork lowered onto stones and embers — overnight cooking the Maya way, served the next afternoon as the centerpiece of a hacienda lunch.
A Mérida market morning with a chef
The Lucas de Gálvez market with a chef who knows the stalls — the chile aisles, the cochinita guy, the marquesitas at dusk, the cooks behind the cooks.
The cenote-side picnic
Lunch laid at the edge of a cenote private to the day. Yucatecan favorites prepared simply, the cenote’s cathedral acoustic, no other guests.
The Tulum coast’s quieter rooms
Two more tables on the coast we recommend for long lunches and late dinners — chosen and reserved as part of the design.
A week designed in conversation.
Tell us what you want from the Yucatán — the reef, the ruins, the haciendas, the table. The doing, and the nothing. We’ll design the rest.
A romantic dinner. A sunset experience. A private celebration on the right night. A milestone moment marked the way you’ll want to remember it.
Each signature trip can be designed for two. We shape the moments to the occasion — and discuss the specifics by phone.