Meryanne Loum-Martin built Jnane Tamsna, one of the world’s most celebrated boutique hotels, on a nine-acre garden in Marrakech — and she has no plans to stop there. The Paris-based former attorney, hotelier, and cultural convener speaks with WABE Arts about the property, the Diaspora Salon she hosts alongside the annual 1-54 African Art Fair, and her ambition to launch a global Black-owned boutique hotel brand. She also reflected on a growing connection to Atlanta — and what she hopes to build here.
A world-renowned retreat rooted in culture
Long before “experiential hospitality” became a marketing phrase, Loum-Martin was already practicing it in Marrakech.
She first visited Marrakech in the mid-1980s to help her parents find a holiday property. What she found was a gap: the city’s cultural legend, fueled by figures like Yves Saint Laurent, was entirely inaccessible to most visitors. “If you didn’t have the means to stay there, you did not get anything which had to do with Moroccan style,” she explained.
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