A site that feels like arriving.

B&Bs, boutique inns, and small restaurants that want every visitor to feel like they’ve already booked the room.

Cedarbrook Inn — a concept build. The businesses are fictional, the craft is not.

01 · What we keep hearing

Three things that probably sound familiar.

Booking widgets that ruin the mood

A beautiful room photo, then a clunky third-party widget. We integrate booking without the seams.

No sense of place

Sites focus on the rooms. Guests want to know about the morning light, the bakery down the street, the host.

Reviews scattered everywhere

TripAdvisor here, Google there, a guest book by the door. We bring the warmth into one place.

The approach

Rooms, recipes, and the neighborhood — treated with the warmth they’re meant to convey.

See the Cedarbrook Inn build →
02 · For hospitality

Built around the arrival.

Room pages that breathe

Hero photo, what the morning looks like, what’s included — and the rate stated plainly on the page. Paced like a magazine, not a spec sheet.

Booking that flows

Cloudbeds, Mews, or your own engine. We embed it, style it, make it feel native — the mood survives the checkout.

Menus that stay menus

A real menu page — text, not a scanned PDF — legible on a phone at the table, updated by sending us the new one.

Neighborhood guides

Where to walk, eat, and find quiet. Written by you, designed by us — the page that turns a booking into a trip.

Reviews, well-quoted

Pulled from TripAdvisor and Google, displayed like blurbs in a travel magazine.

The practical page

Directions, parking, check-in times, what to do if you arrive late — the page guests actually open from the car.

03 · The ledger

What your site includes, line by line.

See what every plan includes →

The front page

The feeling of arriving — one photograph, one promise, one Book button.

Room pages

The light, the rate, what’s included — one page per room.

Booking integration

Cloudbeds, Mews, or your engine — embedded and styled to feel native.

Menu / dining page

Text, not a scanned PDF — legible at the table, easy to keep current.

Neighborhood guide

Where to walk, eat, and find quiet — in your voice.

Reviews

TripAdvisor and Google, quoted like a travel magazine.

The practical page

Directions, parking, check-in — what guests open from the car.

Gift cards

A Stripe-backed gift card flow for stays and dinners.

Add-on

Every build draws from this ledger — Foundation distills it into one good page, Studio gives the essentials their own rooms, Atelier builds the whole table.

05 · Hospitality questions

The ones we hear first.

Cloudbeds, Mews, Little Hotelier, Lodgify, and direct OpenTable for restaurants. Others on request.

Make every guest feel like they’ve arrived.