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Modern Rooms with Spa Inspired Bathrooms
Element Amsterdam offers 160 modern rooms with spa inspired bathrooms, providing a luxurious and relaxing experience for guests. The self-serviced accommodations feature Heavenly bedding, air conditioning, flat-screen TVs, and fully-equipped kitchens.
Dining at Papa's Loft House
Indulge in a cozy dining experience at Papa's Loft House, located within the hotel. Enjoy a cup of LAVAZZA coffee, a delightful lunch, or dinner in a warm living room-style atmosphere. With an extensive menu of top-quality and nutritious dishes, it's the perfect spot to unwind and savor delicious meals.
Convenient Location and Amenities
Situated at Gelderlandplein in Amsterdam South, Element Amsterdam is integrated into a shopping mall and offers easy access to a large supermarket. Guests can explore Amsterdam like a local with bike rentals and stay active at the 24/7 motion gym. Free WiFi and proximity to Schiphol Airport add to the convenience of this exceptional hotel.
Book your stay at Element Amsterdam for a truly memorable experience!
Pets weighing upto 18.5 kg and upto knee height are allowed at the property.Guests under the age of 18 can only check in with a parent or official guardian.
A deposit may be required at the property.
WiFi is available in all areas and is free of charge.
Children of any age are allowed.
Children up to and including 2 years old stay for free when using an available cot.
Children up to and including 17 years old stay for free when using an existing bed.
You haven't added any extra beds.
Any type of extra bed or child's cot/crib is upon request and needs to be confirmed by management.
Public parking is possible on site (reservation is not possible) and costs EUR 20 per day.
Pets are allowed. Charges may be applicable.
When booking more than 10 rooms, different policies and additional supplements may apply.
Otimo local para passar ferias
I stayed at Element by Marriott Amsterdam for around three months, and my overall experience was really good. The check-in process was smooth, and the hotel team was welcoming and helpful throughout my stay.
The hotel location is great, with convenient access to nearby facilities and transport. The rooms were comfortable and well maintained, which made my long stay very pleasant.
I would also like to give a special thanks to the breakfast staff, Pansy, Alberto, and Gaby. They were always polite, friendly, and took very good care of me every morning. Their warm hospitality made a big difference during my stay.
Overall, I had a very comfortable and positive experience, and I would be happy to recommend this hotel to anyone visiting Amsterdam, especially for a long stay.
The experience in this hotel is wonderful,it’s like home,and the receptionists are all kind and easy to get along with.The bed is really soft and comfortable.Breakfast is very healthy and various.Pancy with her team members are all friendly and gentle!!!It is literally a unforgettable experience in this hotel!
Close to mall
Nothing
La gentilezza e la disponibilità dello staff
Great hotel and very confortable and clean.
super Frühstück
Pokój bardzo przestronny.dobrze wyposażony.śniadanie przepyszne.obsługa kelnerska perfekcyjna.W hotelu panuje klimat.
Nie podobało mi się,że pomimo zapewnienia w recepcji( dwukrotnie) nie otrzymałyśmy lanch boxów w ramach nie zjedzonego śniadania.( wczesny wyjazd)
I cannot say enough about this hotel. We and our grown kids enjoyed our stay immensely. The rooms were spacious (especially for Europe, and offered availability for three to share), the location ideal (a few short blocks from the tram to almost everywhere), and the service spectacular. Our food-allergic daughter couldn’t eat at the buffet, but every morning the breakfast team, led by Gaby, had a room-labeled bag full of food awaiting her arrival. And the breakfast area was so lovely, we had to will ourselves to leave. Just the best of Dutch hospitality.
Great service- friendly staff. Would recommend for anyone traveling for business / family trip to Amsterdam. 10-12 min walk to Zuid station.
회사 일로 3개월정도 지냈는데 조식도 먹을만 하고 직원이 매우 친절합니다! 같은 사이즈 방이라도 구조가 다르니 거실에 창문 있는방을 요청하시면 좋을 것 같습니다.
Hotel znajdował się chwilę od stacji pociągowej i metra, z których łatwo można było się przedostać do innych części miasta. Pokoje były duże i miło się w nich przebywało, Śniadania były bardzo dobre.
Klimatyzacja nie zawsze działała bardzo dobrze.
My team succeeds
My chief aim is to taste life in every bite.
It’s less than 24 hours in Amsterdam, and I am once again in love.
There is a beautiful, natural harmony here between people and nature completely unforced, unpolished, and zero effort.
Thanks to what may be the best loyalty program on earth, Marriott Bonvoy, I opt to stay in a hotel rather than with friends. A fantastic pullout couch aside, the root of the matter is, no one at my age should be staying on a friend’s pullout couch. At least, ideally not.
Amsterdam is still a relatively closed hotel market, which has allowed local, creative hybrid brands to flourish at the economy end: Zoku, The Social Hub, even CitizenM, which was originally conceived here. Not surprisingly, there isn’t a flood of five-star luxury that aligns closely with the social standards.
Of course, there are exceptions: the beautiful Conservatorium, which is now under the mandarin oriental flag, the newly opened Rosewood, Waldorf, though I’m still not quite sure about that brand whatsoever.
I’ve recently been working with aspirational brands, and out of curiosity and proximity I chose to say at Element.
Frankly, I have no brand recognition on Westin or Element. So much that I missed the fact that it is under the Marriott umbrella.
If the name were to be taken literally, I expected a basic room and not much else. Perhaps a water feature, the warmth of wood, a beautiful fireplace as a gathering place, and a solid ventilation system.
I was genuinely surprised to find that a hotel called Element was, in fact, not so elemental neither in thinking, nor in service, nor in experience.
Let’s start with design. The Dutch, of course, cannot be beaten here.
As you walk through the hotel, when people speak of creating a “living room” environment, they actually mean it here. One detail I found particularly clever was what happens when the elevator doors open. Instead of being greeted by a blank wall, you step into a small, foyer-like moment: a circular carpet, a floor lamp, if you ottomans and a curtain, a quiet gesture that immediately makes the experience feel residential.
Gone are the days, at least one hopes, of endlessly oppressive corridors born of the built environments of the 60s, 70s, and 80s. Element does a beautiful job of breaking long corridors into smaller, more intimate segments through carpeting and the subtle structuring of rooms that move back and forth. At certain points, it genuinely feels as though you’re approaching your own front door.
The room itself is true to its name: elemental, but with everything you need.
I was told by the F&B manager, Gaby, that Element is Westin’s long-stay brand. In many ways, it succeeds where Marriott’s Residence Inn does not.
Residence Inn may be practical and spacious, but it has zero ambience and is, frankly, more “elemental” in the most stripped-down sense than Element itself.
There are unexpected details too. A Bible and a Quran placed next to the bed, for instance. That gave me pause. For a relatively new brand, created in the last decade or so, those choices felt slightly out of sync with the otherwise contemporary mise-en-scène.
Then there was the shoe polish machine something you now mostly find only at places like the JW Marriott. Always welcome. Timeless. As long as we are not apes and still wearing shoes.
One small addition I found myself wishing for was a scale, purely out of necessity, as I seem to spend my life weighing suitcases while moving between continents.
And then came the highlight of the experience: breakfast and meeting Gaby.
I went downstairs expecting, at best, a decent coffee. The Dutch, after all, do design and coffee better than almost anyone, and I am fully convinced of that.
Instead, I walked into a breakfast room that felt genuinely warm and homelike. Soft colors, thoughtful details, unmistakably Elemental.
The offering was both comprehensive and balanced: healthy options alongside more indulgent ones, without feeling excessive.
As I was busy making a mess with honey, Gaby approached me kindly with a napkin, and we ended up chatting.
Her passion for her work is immediate and unmistakable. Attentive, warm, nurturing everything you want from someone setting the tone for the most important meal of the day.
She asked, graciously, if there was anything they could do to improve. At first, I genuinely couldn’t think of a thing. My expectations had been low, and I was already well beyond them.
There is something deeply satisfying about that kind of surprise when you expect very little and are completely floored by what you receive. That, quite simply, is hospitality.
The last breakfast experience that impressed me this much was in Copenhagen, where I ended up writing handwritten notes to the manager, the F&B director, and the staff because of how well they cared for their guests.
Of course, no article would be complete without a few thoughts on how something already good might become even better.
When Gaby said, “I think my team succeeds here,” my immediate thought was: yes!
Her love for her profession shines through instantly, and it already shows in the breakfast experience, which feels generous, and confidently four-star. That said, I couldn’t help but think about how the Elemental identity might be expressed a little more clearly through food and beverage very intentionally without adding cost or operational complexity.
I fully appreciate that this is not an owner-created brand, and that there are natural boundaries within a global system. Everything that follows rests on one assumption only: that Elemental is rooted in the idea of the four elements, rather than simply “basic” or minimal.
The breakfast offering is already strong. A simple conceptual shift organizing and framing it through Fire, Earth, Water, and Aircould add narrative and memorability through grouping, naming, and light storytelling.
Fire: warm, energizing foods eggs, roasted vegetables, halloumi, warm spices.
Earth: grounding, nourishing choices whole grains, yogurt, seeds, nuts, mushrooms, avocado.
Water: fresh, hydrating option fruit, citrus, chia puddings, infused waters.
Air: light, clean selections egg whites, skyr, light cheeses, herbs, crispbreads.
Very little would be required beyond re-grouping and labeling, yet guests would leave with a story.
There could also be room for Elemental set breakfast plates curated Fire, Earth, Water, or Air selections served at a small premium. An effortless upsell for guests who prefer intention over assembly.
Small touches could go a long way: one distinctive plate used only for these sets, a simple card inviting guests to “choose your element this morning,” or even an Element of the Day for longer stays.
And if ever appropriate, a modest retail moment a few Elemental spice blends, granola, honey, or infused olive oil could extend the experience beyond the stay.
All of this comes from a place of admiration for what is already working. Not to add cost, but to add meaning.
Because when hospitality is done well, you don’t just remember the room you remember how you were taken care of.
Thank you Gaby and Element Amsterdam.
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Ligging en mogelijkheid tot parkeren
Waren met 3 personen en er waren maar vhanddoeken voor 2 personen. Ook het extra bed was niet opgemaakt en het zetelbed was niet comfortabel.
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