The Landmark Hotel's terrace, where the Aburra Valley wraps the whole horizon and the cocktails come sized for tasting.
Cierto sits on the terrace of the Landmark Hotel at Calle 14 # 43D 85, on the Manila side of El Poblado, and sells one thing better than any competitor: geometry. The Rooftop Guide lists it for its 360 degree view of the Aburra Valley, and at golden hour the ring of mountains does the work a designer never could.
The house gimmick earns its keep. Tiny Cocktails, the bar's miniature tasting builds, let a table work through four or five recipes without writing off the night, and the kitchen runs Nikkei plates, ceviche, makis, and tacos, that hold their own against the view. Wanderlog reviewers single out the surf and turf maki and the house cocktails.
Who would hate it? Anyone allergic to hotel polish or peak hour service waits. This is a view bar, and it behaves like one.
The deck wraps the hotel's top floor with open sightlines on every side, low seating toward the rails, and an intimate, upscale Manila mood after dark, as the official site frames it. Tripadvisor reviewers describe the space as beautiful and the service as the variable; sunset slots fill first and the rail seats go with them.
Start with a Tiny Cocktails flight to map the list, then commit to the build you liked at full size; standard cocktails run about COP 45,000, with spritzes and gin and tonics slightly under. The Nikkei kitchen is not an afterthought: the surf and turf maki and the ceviche are the two plates reviewers on Wanderlog and Tripadvisor name unprompted. Skip the imported beer list; it exists for the unadventurous.
Golden hour brings couples, hotel guests, and groups staging birthday photos against the full ring of mountains; after 9pm the deck loosens into a lounge. Casacol's city rundown files it among El Poblado's best rooftops, which means weekends need a booking.
The most complete view in El Poblado, with a kitchen and a cocktail format that justify the elevator. Book the rail for sunset, order the flight, and let the valley close the argument.
