Posts Tagged ‘Hotel Interior Design’

19/12

Lisl

The Exchange, Amsterdam

The Exchange, a brand new Amsterdam hotel located on the Damrak, one of the liveliest and oldest streets of Amsterdam, has a special love of fashion. The hotel was developed in close collaboration with the Amsterdam Fashion Institute (AMFI) and is part of ‘The Red Carpet’, an urban-renewal project.

The hotel is spread across three buildings, one of them dating back to the 17th century, and shares the buildings with a contemporary department store, Options! and a restaurant, Stock. The project was initiated by Lloyd Hotel and Cultural Embassy with Suzanne Oxenaar and Otto Nan responsible for the concept.

Each of the 61 rooms in the hotel have been dressed up like models on a catwalk by graduates and alumni of the AMFI. The result is a mix of interior and fashion design, with each room having a distinct identity. The diverse rooms draw inspiration from the multiplicity of the neighbourhood the hotel is located in.

16/11

Lisl

21c Museum Hotel, Louisville

The 21c Museum Hotel opened five years ago in Louisville, but still seems fresh and above all interesting. New York-based architect Deborah Berke is responsible for the design of this museum / hotel – the only one of its kind in the entire US. Like a museum its exhibits change regularly, most of the pieces come from the private collection of the hotel’s owners – Steve Wilson and Laura Lee Brown.

The statement making hotel distinguishes itself from the outset, red plastic penguins from the Venice Biennale are perched on top of the building’s large entrance and have become visual markers as well as impromptu mascots for the hotel. An installation of four sculptures of children by Judy Fox loom over the reception desk of a lobby that has an uncanny resemblance to that of a contemporary museum.

As guests move through the rest of the hotel they can admire (and even interact with some of) the everchanging artworks on display, from communal areas right down to the stylish bedrooms.

This unusual concept hotel is so successful that the owners are currently planning two new locations, one in Cincannati and another in Bentonville.

(Images via Design Milk)

11/11

Lisl

Hotel Favorita, Porto

Hotel Favorita has recently been structurally transformed by Nuno Sottomayor and spatially by Sam Baron. The interiors of the hotel that takes its name from the iconic women’s name ‘Favorita’ – meaning the ‘chosen woman’, mixes and matches carefully selected vinatage and modern pieces, allowing it to go beyond purely a design hotel and becoming more of a home away from home with an exceptional attention to detail.

Portugal, and especially Porto, to me, is synomous with amazing tiles from yesteryear and the hotel unashamedly uses a wide selection of beautiful tiles with geometric patterns that complement both the modernist and the traditional furniture used throughout the hotel.

Bedrooms adopt a relaxed, pared back atmosphere. Simple furniture is introduced to spaces with timber floors and white walls, with decorations kept to a minimum.

The hotel that prides itself on being a one off also supports local arts, walls feature illustrations by Julio Dolbeth and Ruy Santos, artist from Portugal’s first design and illustration gallery – the Dama Aflita Gallery in Porto.

(Images via Yatzer)

24/10

Lisl

Anemi Hotel, Folegandros

Folegandros is a Greek island well known for its unspoiled nature, blue skies and white houses. The Anemi Hotel draws from this, and was designed with respect for the traditional Cycladic architecture. It is composed of a complex of small buildings that harmoniously sits on the landscape close to the island’s harbour village. The interiors are minimal, with attention to detail.

Plush white  interior spaces were designed to be stylishly comfortable; rooms feel like those from a elegant private residence, but with a touch of luxury associated with high end hotels. The minimal white and earthy palette is punctuated by designer chairs in blue and large, blown up photographs that add interest to the understated interiors.

(Images via Yatzer)

12/10

Lisl

Lisbonaire, Lisbon

The Lisbonaire is a new type of hotel in the hart of Lisbon. It occupies a 1960s building that received a full make-over this year, and consists of 19 apartments. While the overall design is coherent in its use of furniture, each apartment was designed by a different artist / designer and as a result has its own distinct character, which adds surprise and personality to the hotel.

The apartment by Alva:

Ana Cunha’s apartment:

Barbra Says created an apartment with a haphazard, urban feel by arranging posters randomly on walls and ceilings.

Joana and Mariana are responsible for an earthy toned apartment:

João Maio Pinto created playful graphics for the walls of his space:

Gwendolyn Van der Velden and Quim Albergaria created a colourful illustration of the city of Lisbon:

Nuno Luz’s suite has a bit of a pop art feel:

MAGA, a design studio in Lisbon created a unique space with innovative use of paper, not only on the walls, but also for folded light fittings.

Musa Worklab created three dimensional graphics for the walls,

DesignbyNada, an agency specializing in identity created a monochromatic interior with a strong typographic focus.

Pedro Falcão’s suite:

Mackintóxico’s suite:

Marco Balesteros created a wall that resembles a loose timeline:

Silva!Designers drew inspiration from neon hotel signs:

Vanessa Teodoro’s suite:

Vivóeusébio, a design collective, created a wallpaper that resembles vintage food wrappers – in the nicest possible way.

The identity of the hotel is visible in each of the individual interiors that are all refreshingly playful in their own way.

(Images via Lisbonaire)

17/09

Lisl

Hôtel Americano, New York

Hôtel Americano is the lastest addition to the family of hotels by Grupo Habita, the people behind Hotel Básico, and their first foray out of Mexico. The hotel is located in Chelsea, close to the High Line and blends beautifully with its industrial chic surroundings. The building is set apart by a robust, but delicate looking facade of steel mesh and was designed by Ten Arquitectos of Mexico.

Interiors hint at 1960s Italy, but remain thoroughly contemporary in their details. Subdued colours are punctuated and accentuated by bright pieces of furniture.

Bedrooms feature wooden platform beds and boast spectacular city views. Comfort is combined with technology: guests can access all the lasted culture and dining listings via Ipads.

(images via superfuture)

22/08

Lisl

The Michelberger Hotel, Berlin

The Michelberger is somewhere in the grey area between a hotel and a hostel, and is proof that hotel design is becoming increasingly diverse, individual and tailored to travellers needs. Communal spaces are comfortable refuges for tired travellers, and are stocked to the brim with reading material. Books and magazines aren’t reserved for shelves and coffee tables, one-off lampshades are made of the sheets of vintage reads.

Dining spaces are equally nice, with large windows, subway tiled walls, bare concrete floors and a mix-and-match collection of chairs.

Guestrooms are as quirky as the rest of the hotel and also feature books very strongly. Even details like the ‘do not disturb’ signs have been custome made to fit the playful design.

(Images via weheart)

15/11

Sigrid

TOKYO LLOVE HOTEL, POP UP HOTEL

This pop-up hotel in Tokyo is based on the phenomenon of the Japanese love hotel. Designed by eight Japanese and eight Dutch designers, each room is a unique installation which visitors can actually pay to stay in. Each designer has responded to the theme to create a room for every mood!

The pop-up hotel, initiated by Amsterdams’ Lloyd hotel,  celebrates 400 years of trade and cultural relations between Japan and the Netherlands, using theme ’still in Llove’ as it’s driver. The entrance area and cafe see the two cultures collide in bold graphic wall coverings including images of windmills, mount fuji and historical figures who symbolise love, designed by Thonik.

Highlights of the hotel include this ‘clockwork’ room by designer, Joe Nagasaka. The ricepaper from the traditional screens was removed leaving just the frames, adding to the mechanical aesthetic and the bed is mounted on a rotating disk, to be turned at the occupants will.

Another favourite of mine, room no. 304 by Riyuji Nakamara features a ‘water line’ out of fishing line creating the feeling of being underwater throughout the room, especially when lying on the bed as plastic toys float above you.

Photographs by Takumi Ota

The brief has inspired some exciting responses from the designers. Other rooms popular with visitors include a pebble filled room with trees in place of furniture by Yuko Nagayama and a pink and white room with the theme of fertility by Scholten&Baijings.

Image via Designboom

07/09

Lisl

The Waterhouse at South Bund by NHDRO

Who knew military buildings made good hotels. Architects NHDRO proved this to be true when they converted disused Japanese army headquarters in the South Bund District of Shanghai into a luxury hotel. The Waterhouse hotel features exposed concrete and brickwork, staying true to the structure’s previous function and resonating with the industrial past of the docks it borders, while clearly contrasting old and new. The architects added a Corten steel extension to the roof, new circulation and narrow interior windows, surprisingly allowing glimpses into private rooms. Apart from the beautifully raw architectural fabric, the building offers views onto the the neighbouring Huangpu River and the breathtaking Pudong skyline.

(Images by Pedro Pegenaute)

22/07

Riya

Project Orange at the Hoxton Hotel

If you thought Hoxton couldn’t get any more hip; think again. Project Orange has designed a new 15sqm concept room for the Hoxton Hotel, Shoreditch around the theme of ‘East London’.  The 200 room hotel (opened by Pret a Manger boss Sinclair Beecham in 2006) has become known for its radical, cheap airline approach to room-pricing, styling itself as a ‘luxury budget urban lodge’. Any preconceptions of tacky rooms decked out in ‘EasyJet’ orange should be quickly be banished however, as the hotel has also gained a reputation for its stylish interiors and unparalleled design quality.

Project Orange’s room doesn’t disappoint, with a design that nods to the mid-nineties gentrification of Shoreditch without overlooking its gritty urban context. They say:

“Our interpretation of the context led us to propose a bedroom set within aged and distressed building fabric with a mixture of newer, more luxurious artefacts placed within it. The walls, floor and ceiling reflect something about the urban condition, whilst the loose furnishings offer comfort and provide users with what they need.”

The surfaces of the room have been left raw; plaster walls, a purposefully distressed carpet and a painted concrete ceiling are particularly good at communicating the shabbiness of East London, backed up by a built-in bed and bench structure that has been constructed from old reclaimed floorboards. Contrasting textiles and patterns remind of the vibrant nature of the artists’ community that resides in Hoxton, while more decadent pieces are a reference to the business suits and briefcases of the City nearby.  A high-spec circular glass shower, for example, creates a focus in the bedroom and brings natural light into the bathroom.

The concept room has been designed with a view to completing a further 150 bedrooms, exploring the brand of urban comfort.

(images via Project Orange)


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