48 Hours at The Hotel Landing: A Wayzata Photo Essay
A Wayzata weekend has a pace all its own, and it is easy to sink into. Step off Lake Street, let the neighborhood come into focus, and go from there. The Hotel Landing sits at the center of it. Rooms that support rest and routine, Läka Spa a floor away, Belle & Grey downstairs, and enough of Wayzata outside to fill a Friday night through Sunday morning without forcing any of it. Here is what that looks like, told in sequence.
Plan the Stay Before Check-In
Planning works best when it stays loose: book the room, hold a table at Belle & Grey, and let the rest of the weekend unfold. The Hotel Landing is especially useful for travelers who want a stay that feels considered without turning into a rigid schedule.
That is the appeal for couples planning a quick escape, friends building a weekend around a good table, or business travelers who want a polished place to land outside Minneapolis. The pieces are already there: bikes, dining, spa, meeting spaces, and everything close enough to walk. You just decide where to start. Browse current offers before you arrive.


Arrive on Lake Street
Lake Street in Wayzata has an easy Friday-evening energy: boutique storefronts, outdoor tables filling up, the clock tower visible down the block, and Lake Minnetonka close by without making itself the entire point.
From here, the weekend moves at whatever pace you set. On foot to dinner, by Lake Cruiser to the Lakewalk, or simply back through the lobby between a spa appointment and a late reservation at Belle & Grey. The neighborhood does the work; the hotel keeps things steady in between.




Settle Into Rooms Built for Rest and Routine
The rooms are quiet without feeling generic: crisp linens, tufted headboards, chrome details, navy accents, soft daylight, and enough workspace to make a business stay feel intentional.
The Wellness Suite takes that further. There is a Peloton in the room, which sounds like a small thing until you are actually using it before breakfast, with the rest of the day open ahead of you.







Make Time for Läka Spa
Läka Spa brings the Nordic-inspired side of the property into focus. The best spa visuals are tactile: wicker chairs, taupe lounges, tea, slippers, treatment rooms, natural light, and glass showers that make the pause feel protected.


This is where the weekend slows down. After a morning in the neighborhood or a workout in the suite, spa time gives your weekend a softer middle. A Natur Healing Massage, a Nordic Radiance Facial, or the Harmonic Couples Package in a room lined with floor-to-ceiling windows.



Let Belle & Grey Shape the Night
Dinner shifts the pace and feeling of the stay. Belle & Grey brings in the warm lighting, polished wood, backlit bottles, striped banquettes, cocktails, and a room that makes you want to stay for another round.

The kitchen is led by Chef de Cuisine Tsu-Hung Liu, a Culinary Institute of America graduate who trained at The Greenbrier and cooked under James Beard Award winner Nancy Oakes in San Francisco. The menu moves from wagyu beef tartare and lobster pot pie to pan-roasted walleye and a Belle & Grey burger made with local wagyu. Next door, The Library keeps things quieter: whiskey, wine, its own menu, and a room that has already become one of the more sought-after seats in Wayzata.




Leave Room for a Private Table
Not every Wayzata weekend is a quiet one for two. Sometimes it is a rehearsal dinner on the mezzanine porch, a corporate team stepping away from the city for a day, or a wedding that takes over the Great Lawn and spills into the banquet rooms. The design language is the same throughout, which means the occasion scales up without feeling like a different property.




Sunday morning in Wayzata is quiet in a way that earns it. Coffee from La Colombe, a slow walk down to the water, checkout that does not feel rushed. Maybe one more drink at The Library first. The weekend had a shape; it just did not announce itself.
