Opening in May 2026, La Tiara di Cervo brings a more private, landscape-led kind of hospitality to Sardinia’s Costa Smeralda, with 26 Grand Suites, panoramic pools and sea-facing terraces.
Porto Cervo has never been short on glamour. The Costa Smeralda’s storied enclave has long carried the mythology of yachts, summer rituals and polished Mediterranean excess. But the most interesting hotel arrivals now are not necessarily the loudest ones. They are the places rethinking luxury as privacy, space and a more intelligent relationship with the landscape.
This is where La Tiara di Cervo enters the conversation. Opening in May 2026 above Porto Cervo’s marina, the new coastal retreat unfolds across three and a half hectares of Mediterranean parkland, set into a granite hillside with views towards the sea. It introduces just 26 Grand Suites, each designed as a private residence rather than a conventional hotel room. The project is the vision of Alfonso Dolce, developed together with Aldo Melpignano, the hotelier behind Borgo Egnazia, whose work in Puglia helped shape a new language for contemporary Italian hospitality: rooted, place-specific, polished without feeling generic. At La Tiara di Cervo, that sensibility is directed towards Sardinia, and more specifically towards a Porto Cervo that seems ready for a quieter chapter.
A New Chapter for Porto Cervo
Once the symbolic heart of 1970s Mediterranean jet-set life, Porto Cervo has always known how to perform glamour. La Tiara di Cervo seems less interested in performance and more interested in atmosphere. Its proposition is not about spectacle, but about retreat: a private coastal address where the rhythm is slower, the service more discreet and the landscape very much part of the experience.

The architecture, by GianMaria Torno’s TornoTeam, is guided by material restraint and integration with the land. Local stone, reclaimed wood and antique tiles help root the project in Sardinia, while terraces, gardens and wide openings blur the boundary between inside and outside.
The hotel is organised into four clusters, named Emerald, Citrine, Aquamarine and Paraiba, each drawing from the colours of the island’s natural world. At the centre of the estate, two panoramic infinity pools appear to emerge from the mountainside, suspended between rock, sky and sea. It is the kind of setting that understands the essential Costa Smeralda fantasy, but edits it down: less theatre, more texture.
The Grand Suites: Private Coastal Living
La Tiara di Cervo has only 26 Grand Suites, ranging from one to three bedrooms. Each comes with generous living areas and sea-facing terraces, creating the feeling of a private Sardinian residence with the infrastructure of a five-star hotel running quietly in the background.

That infrastructure includes twice-daily housekeeping, in-suite breakfast, a dedicated Local Adviser and the option of a private chef on request. Suites are stocked with produce from local Sardinian makers, adding a sense of place without turning the experience into a checklist of regional references.

The most expansive expression of the concept is the Penthouse, with 715 square metres of indoor and outdoor living space. It includes a panoramic rooftop, outdoor kitchen, solarium and hot tub, with wide views over Porto Cervo. The point here is not maximalism. It is a more domestic and personal form of luxury: space to live, privacy to disappear a little, and service that stays close without becoming visible at every turn.
Design That Belongs to the Landscape
The most convincing hotels in Sardinia do not compete with the island. They understand that the raw material is already there: granite, juniper, wind, water, heat, light. La Tiara di Cervo appears to work from that premise. Rather than impose a decorative identity onto the site, the design continues the language of the hillside.

Stone, wood, tiles and gardens create a layered Mediterranean texture, while the suites and terraces are positioned to keep the horizon present. It is a project built around looking out, slowing down and letting the natural setting do most of the talking.
This is also where the partnership between Alfonso Dolce and Aldo Melpignano becomes interesting. Dolce brings a personal reading of Sardinia and an instinct for refined living; Melpignano brings experience in turning place into hospitality without flattening it into a brand template. The result is positioned as a retreat that feels private, coherent and deeply connected to its surroundings.
Life at La Tiara di Cervo
Days at La Tiara di Cervo are designed around privacy without isolation. Guests can begin with yoga in the natural park, spend time by the pools, use the fitness area, arrange in-residence wellness treatments, or simply move between terrace, suite and sea view.

A poolside bar serves light meals and refreshments from breakfast through to evening, while a courtesy transfer connects guests to Lu Pisantinu, a Porto Cervo restaurant with more than four decades of history, where Sardinian culinary heritage is interpreted through a contemporary lens. The sea is also built into the stay. Guests have reserved positions at Cala Granu, a short transfer from the estate, offering direct access to the clear waters of the Costa Smeralda. From there, the experience can expand into private sailing, snorkelling and curated excursions along the coastline.
For Porto Cervo itself, a courtesy car keeps the marina, restaurants and boutiques within easy reach, while preserving the estate’s sense of remove.
Getting There
La Tiara di Cervo is located on Sardinia’s north-east coast, around 35 minutes from Olbia Costa Smeralda Airport. For summer 2026, Olbia is connected to key Italian and European destinations, with the press announcement also noting a new seasonal Delta Air Lines nonstop route from New York JFK to Olbia, marking the first direct connection between Sardinia and the United States.
Private aviation is also part of the picture, with a helipad within one kilometre of the property, while yacht arrivals have Porto Cervo Marina directly below the hotel.
La Tiara di Cervo arrives at a moment when luxury travel is becoming more selective about what it wants from iconic destinations. The Costa Smeralda will always have its high-summer glamour, but the sharper question now is whether it can offer something quieter, more private and more emotionally connected to the landscape.
With its limited number of suites, residential approach, Sardinian materiality and hillside position above Porto Cervo, La Tiara di Cervo seems designed for travellers who want the address without the obviousness. It is not trying to replace the Costa Smeralda myth. It is refining it.

TheHotelTrotter.com is curated by greek journalist and fanatic hotel lover Eleni Stasinopoulou. With the eye of a fashion and lifestyle editor, Eleni hopes to inspire all connoisseurs of traveling, focusing on stylish hotel moments around the globe.

