The Villa Bentota.
A hotel with history, a stellar beachfront location and the theatre of an old railway line running along the shore.
Picture this. You’re walking barefoot across a lawn dotted with tall and slender palm trees, the Indian Ocean poking through coastal flora as British-era railway carriages rattle past, passenger elbows out windows, heading north to Colombo or south to Galle. Facing west, sunsets are legendary. The train fades into the distance and you open a wooden gate at the edge of the lawn and cross the track onto Bentota Beach, one of the loveliest in all of Sri Lanka. As the sky turns pink and your feet sink into the sand, you watch locals enjoying their coastline and think to yourself, life is good. Welcome to The Villa Bentota.



In 1880, a two-storey villa was built on the southern shores of Bentota as a grand family home. Little is known about the property before the late 1970’s, when, dilapidated but elegant, it caught the eye of Sri Lankan architect Geoffrey Bawa. Already in possession of his own country estate, the nearby Lunuganga, he tried to persuade various friends to buy it, wanting both the pleasure of remodelling it and later, enjoying it as a guest. When all attempts failed, he bought the property himself.
Adding a wing of bedrooms around an enclosed courtyard with dining loggia and swimming pool, Bawa rechristened the villa Mohoti Walauwe and ran it as a hotel—a larger, more luxurious take on the colonial-era rest houses that served as overnight stops between Colombo and Galle. Soon realising he was better at designing hotels than running them, he handed the reins over to his friend, S.M.A. Hameed, manager of the nearby Serendib Hotel, selling the property to Hameed in 1990.

Stand with your back to the beach and the lines of the original villa, together with Bawa’s thoughtful additions, appear like an architectural rendering come to life.
Later that decade, British interior designer George Cooper was exploring the south coast, his maternal great-grandfather and grandfather having had rubber plantations in Sri Lanka back in the day. Up for adventure, having enjoyed success as a designer in London, he bought 10-acres near Galle and set about creating the dreamy retreat, Kahanda Kanda.
Originally centred around an old Javanese house that Cooper would escape to once or twice a year, a series of pool villas were added after he moved permanently to Sri Lanka in 2005, forming one of the area’s first boutique hotels. Unlike Bawa, Cooper proved adroit at hospitality, launching KK Beach in 2016 as well as two retail emporiums in Galle Fort. Club Villa—Bawa’s beloved Mohoti Walauwe—joined the ranks as The Villa Bentota in 2021.





The Villa Bentota blends Dutch colonial and vernacular influences, set amidst two acres of tropical garden, frangipani trees and towering palms punctuating carpet-like lawns. One Geoffrey Bawa scholar describes it as “a charming labyrinth of courts, verandas and tiny corridors, domestic in scale and ordered with impeccable taste.” Stand with your back to the beach and the lines of the original villa, together with Bawa’s thoughtful additions, appear like an architectural rendering come to life. From leaf-printed table tops on shady verandas and square-incised, white-painted floors, to stunning perspectives through narrow doorways, Bawa leitmotifs abound. Floating over this are Cooper’s more whimsical layeyers—think cane armchairs, Anglo-Indian furniture, pretty block-print fabrics and contemporary Sri Lankan art—the whole scene incredibly romantic.


With only fourteen guest rooms, it feels like you’re staying at the beautiful home of an eccentric friend as much as a hotel. Standard rooms are a generous 45m2 and pretty as a picture, with king four-poster beds and Egyptian-cotton bed linen, bath tubs and gorgeous balconies or terraces looking across the lawn toward the ocean. Suites are 50-70m2—one comes with a private pool—while the 109m2 Mohotti Suite features two bedrooms, occupying the upper floor of the historic villa.
Sri Lankan hotels hit the ball out of the park when it comes to sustainability and The Villa Bentota is no exception. Filtered water comes in refillable glass bottles. There’s a French press in the room to make coffee in the morning, with ground coffee in a glass jar. Bathroom amenities brimming in bergamot are locally made, topped up in ceramic dispensers.



Bawa’s Bar is perfect for sundowners and trainspotting, a lime-soaked arrack sour in hand. Inguru serves elevated Sri Lankan cuisine—don’t miss the lagoon crab and deliciously aromatic Jaffna prawn curry—alongside cosmopolitan comfort food, from lobster pasta and nasi goreng to a classic caesar salad. The Villa’s friendly staff seem to outnumber guests four to one. Service across the board is superb.
Alongside the courtyard swimming pool, there’s a 22-metre lap pool at the southern edge of the lawn, KK Boutique and a small spa, where a 60-minute ayurveda massage goes for a very reasonable USD40. Most special, though, is the play of loggias and indoor-outdoor rooms throughout the property, shady and atmospheric spots to pause and reflect or curl up with a book. Not to mention the sands in front. Head south for a quiet, wilder walk or north across a palm and pandanas-filled headland to the main stretch of Bentota Beach, where you’re sure to catch the perfect sunset and Sri Lankans enjoying their coastline.
Rooms from USD168 including taxes and breakfast (USD40 half board USD60 full board).
To book a room at The Villa Bentota, go to kkcollection.
Photography: Jason Mowen.


 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		