Inner City Sanctums
Treat yourself to a SXSW detox retreat at Lake Austin Spa Resort
Finally, the masses of skinny jeaned hipsters and badge-wearing out-of-towners have evacuated our city. Now thoroughfares are navigable. Our favorite brunch spots have available tables. The only thing still experiencing the painful pangs of partying like rock stars all week? Our minds and bodies.
After a few weeks of late-night parties, early morning panels, too much free beer (is there such a thing?), secondhand cigarette smoke and standing in interminably long lines just to stand up some more, I decided to soothe my festival aches and pains at the Lake Austin Spa and Resort.
And after the scenic 45-minute drive from my house downtown, my over-stimulated mind was forced to slow down and soak in the quiet, natural beauty of the 19-acre lakeside property. The secluded destination spa and resort, named #1 in North America by Conde Nast Traveler, features beautiful, blooming gardens and a stellar, sprawling lakeside landscape design (spearheaded by Trisha Shirey, the resort’s Director of Floral and Fauna), dotted with cozy lending libraries, dining areas, indoor and outdoor pools and a few hammocks beckoning to you from beneath shaded trees.
In fact, the only thing that resembles SXSW in this serene setting is the Lakehouse Spa’s menu of services, which might have more unique treatments than last weekend’s musical performances.
The secluded destination spa and resort, named #1 in North America by Conde Nast Traveler, features beautiful, blooming gardens and a stellar, sprawling lakeside landscape design
Looking over the detailed spa menu, I didn’t know if I should try the River Rock Pedicure, with heated basalt stones that could relieve the tension from my aching feet and legs, or the Eucalyptus Uplift body brush and massage, designed to boost natural immunity and oxygenate the body.
But I was personally in need of a Texas-sized dose of post-SXSW pampering, so I indulged in the Tour of Texas, one of Lakehouse’s signature services, which features an exfoliating prickly pear body scrub, aloe vera body wrap, scalp massage and full-body massage with prickly pear lotion. After the two-hour treatment, my body felt invigorated and my skin was re-energized and re-hydrated after my spring break sun exposure long after I left Lake Austin.
For anyone who doesn’t want to hibernate in the luxurious spa facilities or their cozy guest room (which is a distinct temptation), there is a wide variety of classes (all included with an overnight stay) to purge any lingering SXSW toxins. Activities like Rise and Shine Yoga, Tai Chi on the docks, cardio kickboxing in the treehouse loft studio, kayaking and riding hydrobikes on the calm lake waters whipped my weary body back into shape.
And forget late night pizza deliveries and greasy food truck offerings. The resort’s “healthy spa cuisine,” prepared by a talented culinary team, led by Executive Chef Stephane Beaucamp, is portion controlled and features only the freshest ingredients, many of which come from the onsite gardens and other Texas-based organic farms. A self-service beverage bar — with hot teas, coffee, fresh juices and fruit — is available throughout the day.
Guests can even extend their stay by starting a continued wellness plan, with one of the available nutrition or cooking classes in the demonstration kitchen. And, if anyone takes a particular shine to one of the herbs in the organic gardens, they can borrow a pair of shears from the front desk and take home a few fresh leaves as a small souvenir.