
Pullman Lima San Isidro
When you book Pullman Lima San Isidro in Lima, Peru through our Accor Preferred partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a $100 hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Daily complimentary breakfast for 2, per room
- $100 USD credit to be spent on property (conditions defined at check-in)
- Early check-in & late check-out (upon availability)
- Upgrade at time of check-in (upon availability)
Location
San Isidro occupies a particular place in Lima's geography, a district where corporate glass towers stand alongside jacaranda-lined residential streets and the occasional pre-Columbian huaca. The neighbourhood evolved from a quiet satellite of Miraflores into Peru's financial nerve centre, though its upper-class residential character persists in pockets of walled gardens and members-only clubs. Walk these streets in early morning and you'll hear the hiss of espresso machines alongside the chatter of executive assistants hurrying to offices, the air carrying a faint mineral tang from the Pacific a few hundred metres west.
The district's cultural weight extends beyond balance sheets. Five kilometres northeast, the Historic Centre of Lima unfolds in colonial splendour: a UNESCO-inscribed testament to Spanish imperial ambition, where baroque churches and wooden balconies survived centuries of earthquakes. San Isidro itself holds fragments of older Peru, the earth mounds of ancient ceremonial sites rising incongruously between bank headquarters.
Jorge Chávez International Airport lies twelve kilometres northwest, connected by the Vía Expresa and Javier Prado Avenue. The Lima Golf Club's manicured fairways begin just one kilometre from the property, a telling marker of the neighbourhood's priorities and character.
The Mercado de Productores de San Isidro, 2.3 kilometres from the property, offers a different education: papaya the colour of sunset, purple corn for chicha morada, and fishmongers hawking corvina and lenguado with ice-crusted hands. Vendors here speak in rapid-fire Spanish, pricing by the kilo in soles rather than tourist-friendly portions. The Municipal Market Miraflores, slightly closer at 2.1 kilometres, balances local commerce with occasional tourists seeking ceviche at lunch counters where lime juice runs freely and ají amarillo burns bright.
Lima's Pacific coastline begins 2.8 kilometres west at Playa 3 Picos, though the grey-sand beaches here serve surfers more than sunbathers. The coastal Malecón stretches along dramatic cliffs in Miraflores, a district that bleeds into San Isidro's southern edge. Start with a morning walk through the Bosque El Olivar if you're staying longer, an olive grove planted by Spanish settlers that now serves as San Isidro's green heart, its gnarled trees offering shade and a peculiar silence despite the surrounding city.
Lima wears its garúa like a second skin from May through November, a coastal mist that settles over the city in pewter layers, softening the light and dampening surfaces without ever committing to real rain. Temperatures hover in the mid-teens Celsius, the air perpetually damp, the Pacific grey and restless beyond the cliffs.
Summer arrives in December and stretches through April, burning off the fog to reveal fierce sunlight and temperatures climbing into the upper twenties. The city shakes off its monochrome palette; beaches fill with families, and the Malecón becomes a parade of runners and cyclists. January and February bring the warmest days, the kind that make coastal walks feel earned rather than obligatory.
Autumn transitions quickly, March and April offering the last gasp of clear skies before the garúa reclaims its territory. Winter's coolest months, June through August, see Lima at its most subdued, though the chill rarely bites below seventeen degrees.
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