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Posts Tagged ‘Hotel’

Floatel: Modular Floating Hotel Rooms Provide Portable Privacy

20 Jul

[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Travel. ]

floating hotel main structure

Combining centralized shared spaces like a conventional hotel and the mobility of a catamaran, this award-winning hybrid combines elements of community and seclusion on the water.

floating hotel design

Each individual unit comes with a standard living room, kitchen, bathroom and sleeping loft as well as deck space and a driving area for taking your space around a lake or sea. Meanwhile, the lobby structure bridges the gap between land and water and provides reception, restaurant, event and cafe spaces. Design themes also create a connection between the modules and the whole, including wood slats and white surfaces.

floating hotel room interior

floating hotel living deck

The rear-facing deck provides space for sunbathing and fishing, while also framing uninterrupted views of nature. Side and front windows can be closed off for privacy, or opened when venturing out on the open water with no nosy neighbors around to sneak peaks inside.

floating hotel open water

Designed by Salt & Water, the approach won a 2015 Millennium Yacht Design Awards for innovatively integrating architectural and nautical systems to create a unique experience for guests. Like the Botel, this remains a conceptual design for now, but clearly something is in the water since firms keep coming back to this novel combination of ideas.

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Scary Skylodge: Geometric Glass Hotel Pod Clings to a Cliff

09 Jul

[ By Steph in Destinations & Sights & Travel. ]

skylodge 1

Clinging to a craggy cliff like an oversized artificial barnacle, this pod is only accessible to those willing to scale the 400-foot rock face from the base of a Peruvian mountain. If you’re brave and hardy enough to pull off that feat, you’ll probably do just fine taking up residence in a hotel room that the rest of us will only ever have nightmares about. In addition to its precarious location, the Natura Vive Skylodge is completely transparent, so you can’t exactly forget that you’re hundreds of feet in the air while inside.

skylodge 2

skylodge 5

As fragile as they look, these three pods are made of aerospace aluminum and weather-resistant polycarbonate, so they’re not likely to be blown down or punctured in a storm. At 25 feet long and 8 feet wide, each one is spacious enough to accommodate eight guests, offering comfortable beds, a dining room and even a private bathroom.

skylodge 4

 

The journey to the pod is actually safer than it looks, as climbers can be tied to a steel cable as they traverse the trails, with ladders and bridges helping them to the top. This zipline route offers alternate access for those who aren’t experienced enough to make the climb. You can even hook yourself to the cables as you perch on a wooden observation deck positioned atop each pod, looking out over the valley.

 

skylodge 6

Solar panels capture energy to power four interior lamps and a reading light, and the ‘sink’ and toilet are dry. The roughly $ 300-per-person-per-night fee includes transportation to and from your hotel, guides, equipment, snacks, a gourmet dinner with a bottle of wine and an al fresco breakfast.

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Split Personality: Chaos vs Calm in Half-Painted Hotel Room

04 Jun

[ By Steph in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

half painted hotel room 1

This hotel room is a little bit minimalist, a little bit rock n’ roll, and if you’re too much of the former persuasion, the chaos of the latter half might irritate your less-is-more sensibilities. Seen straight-on, the installation by Kiev artist Pavel Vetrov looks like a Photoshopped illusion, or perhaps a split view of a before-and-after design project. Which side is the before and which the after depends on your aesthetic preferences.

half painted hotel room 2

half painted hotel room 3

A razor-sharp line divides the two halves of the room, beginning at the top of the back wall, traveling right through the center of the bed and across the floor to the other wall. Everything from the duvet and TV cabinet to the books and a canvas propped against the brick gets the half-painted treatment.

half painted hotel room 3

half painted hotel room 4

half painted hotel room 5

On the minimalist side, nearly everything is colorless, save for a few pops of vibrancy in the wall art. The other side is a creative explosion of paint and prints, with designs scrawled all over nearly every surface.

half painted hotel room tilt

The installation is inspired by a 2012 project called ‘Panic Room’ by French graffiti artist TILT, who took one half of a monochromatic hotel room and completely obliterated every hint of white. The original state of the room reflects a feeling of calmness, while the other half is utterly chaotic, hence the project’s name.

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Anti-Gravity Hotel: Sleep Suspended in Levitating Space Suit

26 May

[ By Steph in Boutique & Art Hotels & Travel. ]

antigravity sleep 1

If various aches and pains or a childhood fantasy about being an astronaut make you wish you could sleep in antigravity, here’s a way to make it happen – sort of. A group of architecture students at the AA Visiting School Slovenia have designed a ‘levitating’ suit suspended from ropes so you can find out what it feels like to sleep in ‘3D.’

antigravity sleep 2

The suit is essentially a bunch of mini hammocks that support individual parts of the body, including the feet, knees, hips, arms and neck. Pulleys allow the wearer to adjust the ropes to distribute their weight in whatever way feels most comfortable, so you can recreate your favorite sleeping position in mid-air.

antigravity hotel 5

It’s part of a project called KSEVT Hotel, which invites visitors to spend a night at the Cultural Centre of European Space Technologies in rural Slovenia. The experience is meant to replicate what it feels like to sleep in space, minus the straps that astronauts use to keep themselves from bumping into things in the night.

antigravity hotel 6

“The site-specific added value to the KSEVT exhibition is the experience of levitation in an environment of gravity. The team’s field of research was the transition from conventional 2D sleeping to the experience of 3D sleeping.”

It’s an intriguing idea, and can probably be quite comfortable if you adjust all the ropes just right, but you’d better hope you don’t have to go to the bathroom once you’re strapped in.

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Natural Luxury: Iceland’s Eco-Friendly Northern Lights Hotel

15 May

[ By Delana in Boutique & Art Hotels & Travel. ]

ion hotel iceland

Iceland has become quite the tourist destination for world travelers thanks to its ethereal landscapes, amazing history, unique culture, and unspoilt views of the Northern Lights. It’s the Northern Lights that draw eco-conscious travelers to the breathtaking Ion Hotel by Minarc Architects.iceland ion hotel

minarc ion hotel

earth friendly luxury ion hotel iceland

The hotel was designed to provide visitors with an unobstructed view of the otherworldy surroundings while itself blending into the landscape. Emerging from the mossy mountain like a natural rock outcropping, the Ion Hotel could almost be mistaken for a body of hardened lava extending out into the mountainous area.

scenic overlook ion hotel

northern lights hotel iceland

glass walled outlook ion hotel iceland

An abundance of floor to ceiling windows were designed to let in natural light while allowing an optimized view of the hotel’s settings. A glassed-in lounge at the building’s terminus lets visitors gaze out on the utterly exquisite Northern Lights after the sun goes down.

eco-friendly ion hotel iceland

locally inspired rooms ion hotel

ion hotel bar

But the Ion isn’t all about looks; it is also a decidedly Earth-friendly place to spend a vacation. The luxury hotel uses locally-sourced materials included repurposed natural materials like lava and driftwood. The huge windows cut down on the building’s electricity consumption by reducing the need for artificial lighting.

interior ion hotel iceland

brown trout ion hotel interior

iceland northern lights ion hotel

Local customs and culture inspired the interior design of the hotel; nods to the country’s history and notable features can be seen in every area of the building. When locally-sourced materials are not available, Fair Trade products are used instead. And as a truly exceptional feature, the hotel utilizes the abundant surrounding natural hot springs as a source of clean geothermal heating and hot water.

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Converted Crane: 150-Foot-Tall Dutch Hotel Spins in the Wind

19 Feb

[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Travel. ]

a Faralda NDSM Crane Hotel Amsterdam

Featuring three suites toward its peak (and a spa pool to top it off), this boutique hotel is situated in one of the tallest and oldest maritime cranes in the world – and despite the steel frame weighing a whopping 250 tons, it still slowly rotates with the weather.

a Jacuzzi Top deck

a dutch hotel vup

After three years of rehabilitation, code approval and other obstacles (include the search for a 500-pound bomb left from a previous World War), this remarkable transformation is complete and rooms are now open for rent at the Faralda Crane Hotel.

a dutch historical use

a dutch crane lift

The lower part of the structure also features a conference, television and festival room that can be tied to renting out the rest of the spaces or used independently. If that isn’t exciting enough for you and your friends, guests can also bungee jump from the top of the crane as well.

a dutch restoration project

a dutch crane hoist

The rotational effects (top able to move independently of the bottom) are not to be underestimated, demanding a great deal of engineering ingenuity: “Because the Faralda Crane hotel keeps spinning in the wind it is fit with a rotating shaft and a pivot bearing with gold. In the drag link are the gold connectors to guarantee the Internet connection to the Amsterdam Fire Department. The genius and always turning piping system has been specially designed for this Crane.”

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Converted Crane Hotel 150 Foot Tall Resort Spins In The Wind

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Faceted Facade: Crystaline Hotel Shaped Like Amethyst Geode

06 Feb

[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Travel. ]

gemstone shaped hotel

Grand or gaudy, brilliant or just big, this giant-sized, crystal-styled structure is to be the first in a series of gemstone-inspired hotels in which guest rooms are tucked behind colorful glazing – even its designers at NL Architects concede the scheme is at least “slightly insane.”

geode inspired rock hotel

rock cut open atrium

rock hotel entry space

Dubbed the Amethyst Hotel, this project draws on a long history of cultural associations with this crystal: “The violet-coloured quartz stone has been the subject of numerous myths through history – in Greece it was believed to prevent drunkenness, while medieval soldiers used it for protection during battle, and others thought it could strengthen the immune system or prevent nightmares.”

rock guest room space

rock faceted facade glazing

geode shaped amythist hotel

Kamiel Klaasse and Pieter Bannenberg also drew inspiration from the long-standing tradition of having huge atrium spaces at the heart of hotel designs, seen in major chains like Hyatt and Marriott in the United States and around the world.

rock building at night

rock building in context

rock building site model

Instead of constructing the whole building around an central atrium, however, this approach conceptually slices the structure through its center, just as a geode is cut open to reveal the inner cavity and its hidden crystals.

rock building floor plan

rock building side elevation

rock building front elevation

Set to be built on an artificial island in China (though shown here in various theoretical settings), the design is already arguably serving part of its purpose simply by having been proposed: it is being discussed, debated, critiqued and commented upon by architects and designers around the world and as they say: all press is good press.

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Black Gold Hotel

26 Sep

Im vergangenen Jahrzehnt ist die Wirtschaft der Mongolei mit beispielloser Geschwindigkeit gewachsen. In jedem Jahr stieg das Bruttoinlandsprodukt um mehr als zehn Prozent.

Das Wachstum des Landes rührt größtenteils aus einem Boom in der Bergbauindustrie, denn die Mongolei verfügt über große Vorkommen an Bodenschätzen wie Kupfer, Gold und nicht zuletzt Kohle. Globale Branchengiganten haben längst begonnen, enorme Summen in das zentralasiatische Land zu investieren.

Eine Kohlestaubwolke schwebt über einer Straße durch die mongolische Steppe.

Ein chinesischer Bergarbeiter blickt in den sonnigen Himmel.

Der italienische Fotograf Michele Palazzi hat über drei Jahre hinweg das Land mehrfach besucht und den wirtschaftlichen Auf- und den gesellschaftlichen Umschwung in der Mongolei dokumentiert.

Wie die unregulierte beschleunigte Entwicklung des Landes die traditionelle Lebensweise der viehtreibenden nomadischen Bevölkerung bedroht, zeigt er in seiner Arbeit „Black Gold Hotel“.

Ein Kameltreiber steht zwischen seinen Tieren.

Wasserdampf steigt aus dem Kessel in einer Jurte auf.

Eine junge Frau liegt auf dem Sofa und schläft.

Viele mongolische Familien haben die traditionelle Lebensweise inzwischen aufgegeben und sind in große städtische Zentren gezogen, um Arbeit in der Industrie zu finden. Nicht selten führt sie dieser Entschluss jedoch in den finanziellen und sozialen Abgrund, nämlich dann, wenn sie aufgrund des immensen Zustroms an Gleichgesinnten keinen Job finden.

Zwei mongolische Ringer kämpfen miteinander

Paartanz auf einer Veranstaltung in einer Turnhalle.

Der Fotograf begleitete die Nomaden auf ihrem Zug durch die Steppe, lernte die neuen Stadtbewohner kennen und verbrachte einige Zeit mit den Bergarbeitern. Nah ist er an den Menschen, einfühlsam und unaufgeregt zeigt er uns, wie sie leben.

All diesen Menschen gemein ist, dass sie bestmöglich versuchen, mit den Umständen umzugehen. Doch Umweltverschmutzung durch Müll, Kohlestaub und Industrieabfälle vergiften die Vegetation und machen denen, die wenig haben, das Leben schwer.

Ein mongolische Junge sitzt auf dem Rücken eines Kamels und schaut in die Weite der Steppe.

Eine Bushaltestelle in der verschneiten mongolischen Steppe.

Inspiriert zu dieser sehr persönlichen Arbeit, so der Fotograf, habe ihn der Film „Die Geschichte vom weinenden Kamel“. In ihm stecke viel Poesie und auch ein nostalgisches Element, dem er nachgehen wollte.

Doch auch einen journalistischen Anspruch habe er an das Projekt gehabt, selbst wenn er sich selbst eigentlich nicht als Journalisten betrachte.

Ein Mann steht auf einem voll beladenen Lastzug mit den Habseligkeiten der Nomdenfamilie.

Zwei im Bau befindliche Hochhäuser in der Nähe eines der Kraftwerke in Ulan Bator.

Sein politisches Interesse habe ihn 2009 nach seinem Studium an der Scuola Romana di Fotografia zum Bildjournalismus geführt, erzählte Michele Palazzi mir. Er habe stets den Drang, zu verstehen, warum etwas so ist, wie es ist und den Dingen auf dokumentarische Weise auf den Grund zu gehen. Doch erachte er seine Sichtweise keineswegs als absolut maßgeblich oder objektiv.

Ein Parkplatz vor einer Mauer mit der Aufschrift Dream Land.

Eine Kellnerin deckt den Tisch in einem Restaurant.

Der Modernisierungsprozess in der Mongolei habe ihn schier überwältigt. Als er das erste Mal die Hauptstadt Ulan Bator besuchte, habe er beim Anblick des Stadtbildes sehr gemischte Gefühle gehabt – eine ungare Mischung aus Chaos, Nostalgie und Ausweglosigkeit, die ihm übel aufstieß.

Dass sich die Modernisierung nicht einfach anhalten oder gar umkehren lässt, sei Michele bewusst. Auch wolle er keinesfalls etwas oder jemanden konkret verurteilen. Ihm sei es in erster Linie persönlich wichtig, zu dokumentieren, was ihn umtreibe.

Blick aus einem Wohnblock in einer Plattenbausiedlung in Ulan Bator.

Eine junge Frau steht vor einem Spülbecken und trocknet sich die Hände ab.

Eine junge Frau spielt Tischtennis.

Ohne Förderung, ohne Auftrag widmete er sich seinem Projekt und unternahm immer wieder auf eigene Kosten Reisen in die Mongolei, um seinem Thema auf der Spur zu bleiben.

Viele Menschen habe er kennengelernt, zeitweise bei ihnen übernachtet, ihnen bei der Arbeit geholfen, mit ihnen gegessen und mit den Kindern gespielt. Es beweist, dass er mit Hingabe bei der Sache ist. Er sammelt nicht nur Bilder ein, er lebt die Story.

Fans feiern während eines Konzerts einer mongolischen Metal-Band.

Zwei Männer stehen an einem Feuer auf einer Mülldeponie, wo sie nach Wiederverwendbarem suchen.

Eine junge Frau bereitet sich auf ihren Auftritt als Striptease-Tänzerin vor.

Herausgekommen ist eine Reise in Bildern in den Alltag der Menschen im ganzen Land, von den Familien in der Wüste Gobi, die sich trotz aller Schwierigkeiten entschieden haben, den Traditionen der Steppe treu zu bleiben bis zu den Jugendlichen in Ulan Bator, die eher einen westlich orientierten Lebensstil führen.

Von den Kindern der Armen, die gezwungen sind, im Zivilisationsmüll nach Schutz und Essbarem zu suchen, bis hin zu denen, die auf der Suche nach dem Glück in der Stadt das Nomadenleben hinter sich gelassen haben und jetzt zwischen beiden Welten gefangen sind.

Ein Mann steht zu Silvester auf einer verschneiten Dorfstraße und zündet Feuerwerk.

Eine junge Frau beim Karaoke.

Wer sich weitere von Micheles Arbeiten anschauen möchte, dem empfehle ich an dieser Stelle einen Blick auf seine Webseite.


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
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Stay on the Go: 13 Stackable, Movable Modular Hotel Designs

17 Jul

[ By Steph in Architecture & Offices & Commercial. ]

Modular Hotels Main

These hotel rooms can be stacked on top of each other, swapped out for easy renovation and easily transported from one place to the next thanks to their modular design. From a shipping container hotel to floating hotel with detachable boat-like rooms, the 13 designs featured here are anything but stale and static.

Modular Bamboo Hotel
Modular Hotel Bamboo 2

Modular Hotel Bamboo 1

Using cheap and highly renewable bamboo as a sort of scaffolding, the ‘One with the Birds’ modular hotel concept by Penda stacks pyramid-shaped volumes high into the sky while barely making a mark on the ground below. The low-impact, tent-themed hotels would be easy and quick to reproduce and expand as necessary. Inspired by Native American tipis, the structures use X-shaped bamboo joints to hold horizontal bamboo rods in place, which support the flooring. Joints would be tied together with rope so the whole structure can be disassembled and reused in other projects.

Bayside Marina Hotel
Modular Hotels Bayside Marina 1

Modular Hotels Bayside Marina 2

Long, narrow two-story prefabricated cottages based on the form of the shipping container are grouped together along the seaside of Yokohama as the ‘Bayside Marina Hotel.’ The containers are staggered along the site to give each residence a different view. The units are fabricated in Thailand and transported to Japan, where they’re assembled on-site.

Botel Floating Hotel with Detachable Rooms
Modular Hotels Botel 1

Modular Hotels Botel 2

Ever wish you could detach your hotel room from the main building and move it somewhere else? With ‘Botel,’ not only can you do that, your hotel room is actually a boat. The concept by Ivan Filipovic enables guests to explore their surroundings autonomously while retaining access to all of the amenities provided by the core structure. Dock at the main part of the hotel to have dinner or go to a nightclub, or enjoy a little privacy in a separate area of the bay.

Shelf Hotel: Swappable Modules in a Frame
Modular Hotels Shelf 1

Modular Hotels Shelf 2

What if hotel rooms of various sizes, shapes and levels of luxury could simply be swapped out like objects on a shelf? The Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti, envisioned for Xian, China, sets little removable modules within a framework raised above ground level to preserve green space below. The modules would consist of hotels as well as homes and offices.

CitizenM Hotels
Modular Hotels Citizen M 1

Modular Hotels Citizen M 2

Now open in various cities around the world, including Amsterdam, Glasgow and London (pictured), CitizenM hotels provide affordable luxury by fitting compact yet comfortable rooms within a simple frame for an industrial, urban appearance. The shipping container-like rooms are stacked on top of each other like LEGOs and contain a king size bed, pod-like toilet, shower and sink as well as lighting and other functions controlled via iPad.

Next Page – Click Below to Read More:
Stay On The Go 13 Stackable Movable Modular Hotels

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Broken Mirror: Shard Hotel Views Reflect Next-Door Rooms

18 May

[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Travel. ]

shard hotel london night

Splintered corners, giving The Shard in London its iconic multifaceted look, are now also responsible for letting guests of Europe’s tallest hotel see into the spaces of their nighttime neighbors.

shard broken reflection mistake

As the Financial Times reports,a  series of glass panels standing out from the structure have turned into a series of accidental mirrors, giving room-with-a-view a new meaning in the context of this building.

london hotel interior problem

During the day, visitors to the Shangri-La can see out in nearly all directions, but at night with inside lights on they also get an uninvited sneak peak back into adjacent bedrooms. Designed by Renzo Piano, the famous building may not be as problem-plagued as its car-melting sibling but it certainly has some issues yet to be resolved.

shard hotel london day

The solution so far offered by the hotel seems somewhat incomplete – they are notifying guests of the issue and advising them to use curtains. Still, not everyone will remember to take such steps and many will want to leave their curtains open, since they came for the lovely views in the first place. In the end, one is left to wonder how no light modeling of the building revealed this potential problem (image above by Patrick Collins).

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