Tag Archives: design

Cool Venice Apartment: chilled Cannaregio

9 Mar

lounge & dining area @ cool venice apartment (Image by HWL)

Searching for accommodation in Venice meant wading through websites offering a fearful combination of the fussy, the twee and the bland. Then, somehow, we stumbled across the self-described ‘Cool Venice Apartment’ on Facebook. Set in the Cannaregio district of Venice (a five minute walk from Ca d’Oro), the apartment is owned by a group of like-minded friends who pooled together for a two-bedroom pad in Venice. (And why wouldn’t you?)

Great things about the location – Venice is tiny so once you get your head around the maze factor everything is within walking distance. For us it made sense to steer clear of the heavily touristed San Marco and set ourselves up near useful things such as a bakery, supermarket, well-priced cicheti bars and some of Venice’s best restaurants!  Staying around here will also enable you to soak up the neighbourhood atmosphere without too much danger of being elbowed by tour groups over breakfast.

textures: ceiling beams, terrazzo & arched windows (Image: HWL)

Traditional Venetian flats are set over three floors – the first floor is essentially an entry way/storage area with staircase (left vacant presumably as a flood precaution), second floor is the living area and the third floor is for bedrooms. In this case the flat occupies only the first two floors, but is nonetheless extremely generous in size. While the master bedroom is a bit bigger with more clothes storage the second bedroom (with twin beds) is very light and spacious so there’s really no need for anyone to feel like they’ve drawn the short straw. The flat has lovely views from most rooms, the kitchen is well-equipped, and the bathroom has a jacuzzi (noisy, but after all that walking around its worth a try at least once).

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Given a Freehand in Miami

18 Jan

Miami style: NYC design firm Roman & Williams meld vintage patina with a cosy, contemporary aesthetic at the Freehand Hostel. (Image by Adrian Gaut)

Freehand, a new venture in ’boutique hostels’ that recently opened in Miami, will be a hit with the short-on-cash but big-on-style boho crowd that inundate the city every year for Art Miami Basel. Situated in an 1930′s deco building a block from the beach the hostel is kitted-out with a welcoming mix of vintage flair and contemporary art. Located in the former Indian Creek Hotel, the hostel is a new venture by the Sydell Group the taste-makers behind the ACE NYC and Palm Springs, the NoMad Hotel in NYC and  the recently opened Saguaro Hotel in desert art hub, Scottsdale. This is the first of several planned ventures in the ’boutique hostel’ space and it seems fair to say that they are onto something. If the interiors look inviting that’s because they are by New York outfit Roman and Williams, the space-maker team behind the buzzing  Breslin at the ACE hotel and the jaw-droppingly awesome 18th Floor Club at the Standard Hotel. In short: this joint has design credentials.

Bunking down at the Freehand Hostel in Miami, designers went for a nostalgic, slightly tongue-in-cheek ‘sea-side holiday’ camp atmos. (Image by Adrian Gaut)

The Rooms: From US$35 a bed, dorm rooms are a thrifty option for solo travellers, a band on tour, or a bunch of friends out to raise hell in Miami. Lovely double rooms (from US$150) are also available though it’s hard to say whether a quiet night’s sleep is assured, what with all the ji-jinx going down. (We can’t speak from experience as we haven’t tried it yet, so if you have, please let us know!)

Mixing it up: Freehand hostel in Miami also caters to grown-ups and lovers with these sweet double rooms. (Image by Adrian Gaut)

What we like the sounds of: The friendly, community ethos of a hostel combined with loads of style. The social strata mash-up, similar in ilk to the fantastic Michelberger Hotel in Berlin.

On the menu: a swish swimming pool, ping-pong tables, bicycles and organised events for interested guests based around art, music and local culture.

On yr bike! Freehand Miami offers guests hispter-ish accessories like vintage bicycles. (Image by Adrian Gaut.)

Drinking: The on-site bar, the Broken Shaker, promises affordable cocktails using herbs and spices from the on-site garden. (No doubt they also have their own supply of hipster bees creating politically correct honey for your organic breakfast in the morning as well…) A restaurant is planned for 2013.

In the drink: chilling at the Freehand Miami Hotel (Image by Adrian Gaut)

Look out for: Art works by Miami artists Sky Farrell, known for her low-fi collages, and Justin H Long, inspired by all that is maritime.

Tips: If you’re planning to stay at the Freehand for Art Miami Basel book AHEAD, like now! (What are you waiting for?!)

For bookings: Contact Freehand Miami

Playing around in Miami: Click here for our Perfect Day in Miami

Sleeping in NYC

30 Nov

While we were dozing…three great new hotels have recently opened in New York City.  Here’s a little teaser for your next trip to the city that never sleeps. Full reviews to come when we relaunch of this blog sometime in early 2013!

Wythe Hotel, Brooklyn: hipster epi-centre, hot river views.

WYTHE HOTEL IN BROOKLYN

Picture all the hipsters in Brooklyn and then imagine opening up a hipster hotel sending  hipsters from all over the world into this hipster zone and what you have is a kind of hipster theme park where thoughtful interior design meets scruffy facial hair meets politically correct caffeinated beverages….

Sleep like a baby in the Baby Queen Room, Wythe Hotel, NYC.

Situated in the a former textile factory, the 72-room Wythe Hotel in Williamsburg makes a feature of its industrial past, while a renovation has opened up amazing new river views to Manhattan. Like Manhattan’s Ace Hotel, it aims to cater to the full-deck of clientele – lofts for the loaded, bunks for the broke. Also on offer, hipster-ish eating options at the Renard restaurant that draws the local foxes, Instagram competitions for guests and if you ask nicely they probably have a fixie out back that you can take for a spin. For details and bookings: Wythe Hotel.

HOTEL AMERICANO IN CHELSEA

Ever since we unwittingly stumbled upon some photos of the beautifully nostalgic  La Boca Chica in Acapulco a few years ago we’ve been watching the Grupo Habita hotel group to see what they would do next… The Mexican group’s latest ventures is situated in the heart of NY’s Chelsea art district, the hotel was designed by Mexico City-based architect Enrique Norten with interiors by Frenchman Arnaud Montigny (best known for his work on the Paris concept store Colette).

NYC likes to mix it up: Latin heart with a hint of modern Japanese at Hotel Americano.

The hotel’s steel exterior presents a hard shoulder to its gritty urban environment but inside an industrial aesthetic is softened by Danish-style leather sofas, wooden sleeping platforms a la  ‘urban ryokan’ (as the marketeers would have it) soft Japanese textiles and homely touches such as gas fireplaces (in suites). We like the occasional splashes of bright yellow that brighten up the neutral tones and remind us of New York’s iconic taxis. Perks include a roof top swimming pool that converts to a hot tub in winter. Guests can cement their hipster credentials by borrowing a bicycle from reception. Rooms priced from US$255. For details and bookings: Hotel Americano.

Sex and the city: she’s all your’s baby at Hotel Americano, NYC

NOMAD HOTEL IN BROADWAY

Broadway, NYC is at the centre of everything yet until now it’s been hard to find a cosy hotel to call home. We love the rich bohemian vibe of NoMad Hotel – the mash-up of pictures, textures and colours evoke a mood of travel, a sort of melting pot that reflects the make up of this most cosmopolitan of cities.

New York’s NoMad Hotel features art work drawn from the photographic travel series, Portraits de Villes.

Housed in a Beaux-Arts building, the interiors were given a classic make-over by French designer Jacques Garcia. The French influence is apparent in the art work drawn from Be-pôles’ Portraits de Villes  art book series that document a city through the eyes of a single photographer. Another French touch includes the in-house Kitsune boutique, the hipper-than-thou Parisian music and design label. The end result is an old school European-style hotel with a New York sensibility and service ethos. Modern nomads better be packing plastic: room rates start from $395. For details and bookings: The NoMad Hotel.

Not afraid to make a splash. The NoMad Hotel’s dining room evokes the exotic imaginings of an Anaïs Nin novel.

Town Hall Hotel, London

19 Oct

Except the 100 metres: a very East End Olympics, welcome to Bethnal Green. (Photo by HWL).

The neighbourhood: What’s the deal?
Bethnal Green: the real East End. Our friend Pete likes to reminisce how there didn’t used to be any supermarkets in the area because the chains were worried that people would steal the food. Today the mix is decidedly eclectic (and don’t worry, there is a Waitrose!). Bethnal Green is halal pizza, Vyner St First Thursday art openings, take away curry, chador-wearing teens, free Russian newspapers, boating nomads living on the canals, and graphic design hipsters on fixed gears stopping off for a latte. In short, all the diversity of London in one slightly industrial zone that is still a while off total gentrification.

We like the gleam of old fashioned timber at the Town Hall Hotel, in London. (Photo by HWL.)

The Hotel: What’s the concept?
It’s a design hotel inserted into the body of an former Town Hall. The UK doesn’t mess around when it comes to privitisation – post offices, libraries, Town Halls – they’re all up for grabs. The hotel group, the Singaporean-based Unlisted Collection, has done well to retain the building’s original elegance. Built in Edwardian times the edifice also features some deco extensions – there are loads of original details throughout. It’s been used as a film set a number of times with appearances in the period drama Atonement; based on Ian Mc Ewan’s Booker Prize nominated novel of the same name; and Guy Ritchie’s edgy crime heist Snatch – ask at the hotel’s reception if you’d like to watch these or other films during your stay.

An elegance of stairways at the Town Hall Hotel – note the designer chairs in the lobby, one of the trademarks of Singaporean hotel group, the Unlisted Collection.

The crowd: What’s the vibe?
Mixed. The edgy flavour and slightly out of the way location of the neighbourhood means the hotel offers a very good price for the standard of facilities – big rooms, designer chairs, even a swimming pool. Among the crowd you will find a mix of in-the-know globe trotters as well as middle-aged couples standing on the corner and looking bewildered as as a bus pulls up and unloads 100 cape-wearing Somalians.

A dash of deco, a glint of gold. (Photo by HWL.)

Tell us about the rooms:
Room are very generous and some of the apartments have good-sized kitchenettes so if you’re planning a long-term stay you can DIY bacon and eggs.  In terms of aesthetics, the hotel has gone for a ‘classic look’ that is in keeping with the building, but to our mind it was a little, well, corporate, compared to the groups other offerings such as the showy Waterhouse on the Bund in Shanghai.

A very generous standard hotel room in the basement level at the Town Hall Hotel. Note, for more light, request a room on one of the higher floors. (Photo by HWL.)

The Hotel: What is it ideal for in the context of London?
The hotel is perfect for Shoreditch-friendly street smart types who are doing business in the East End or frequent visitors who want to soak up some of the community atmos in the area. Highlights include Broadway Market on Saturday, taking the fixed-gear for a zip down the tow-path, ogling the handsome waiters at the fashionable eatery Bistroteque or grabbing a £1 lager and wandering about the Vyner St art openings. Note that the hotel is on the Central Line which is ideal for exploring sites and central London (click here for Tube map).

The hotel has retained many of the original details, including this rather quirky fireplace in the middle of a very long bathroom. (Image by HWL.)

Pluses: What is to love?
Both of the in-house restaurants are very good. Viajante, headed by a chef who interned at the legendary El Bulli, does a wonderful and very reasonably priced set lunch and dinner. (Book in advance and request a table at the front so you can watch you meal being prepared with tweezers.) Swimming pools are not a given in London hotels, so we appreciated the opportunity to do a few laps. The bar is also a lovely spot to meet friends for drinks.

Lighten up: breakfast is served in the lovely Corner Room restaurant. We also recommend it for a cosy and elegant meal during your stay. (Photo by HWL.)

Minuses: Where could it improve?
Based on our stay, we would say that the staff are not quite up to standard (a number of incidents suggested a lack of experience) and there were some technical issues with the heating system. Also, while we appreciate the need to diversify the business to functions and weddings, events shouldn’t take place at the inconvenience of other hotel guests. We’re as big a fan of Freddy Mercury as anyone, but do we really want to hear the reverberations of Another One Bites the Dust as the wedding DJ attempts to crank-up the party? Probably not.

A room with a kitchenette. The apartments enable a division of sleeping and living areas, with room left over for guests. (Photo by HWL.)

Tips: let’s hear them.
Have a well-made morning coffee at Hackney Bureau. Check out Viktor Wynd’s Little Shop Of Horrors – an art slash curiosity store that doubles as the Last Tuesday Society HQ, specialising in off-beat events. See what’s on at the Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club – a sort of tongue-in-cheek venue where activities might include a roller skating tea-party, a David Lynch inspired cabaret evening, or a retrospective of John Water’s films. (Note that attending in costume is encouraged.) Pellicci, one of London’s best known old school caff’s is around the corner, if you can stomach a fry up, give it a go, otherwise, stick to a cuppa served strong enough to strip your teeth. Low-key but pleasant activities ideal for a Sunday include visiting the V&A Museum of Childhood, strolling in Victoria Park (duck feeding is optional), or taking a look at Anish Kapoor’s rather silly Orbit sculpture at the recently inaugurated Olympic stadium.

A mere dawdle from the Town Hall Hotel will get you to Hackney Empire, a great coffee and lunch spot. Note street artist Conor Harrington’s work on the wall above it. (Photo by HWL.)

Bookings: Contact the Town Hall Hotel

Lullaby: Catch former Bethnal Green resident Peter Doherty in a nostalgic mood in The Last of the English Roses.

Michelberger: Hipster Hotel in Berlin

4 Jul

Our drawing of our Loft Room on the 2nd floor at the Michelberger Hotel. For the last couple of years we have been drawing our favourite hotel rooms, and we now have a nice collection of Moleskin Japanese albums… (Image by HWL)

The Michelberger Hotel in Berlin has been on our hipster hotel hit list for a few years now. Finally, we had the chance to go! A Leonard Cohen soundtrack and retro glasses of well-priced prosecco in the hotel’s candle-lit bar kicked-off the perfect sojourn in Berlin…

Wise words in the lobby of the Michelberger Hotel, Berlin. (Image by HWL)

The neighbourhood: Looking on a tourist map of Berlin you feel like the Michelberger might be a little bit out-of-the-way – but not at all. The location offers all the transport links, from trains to bike paths, to get you into the heart of the action (naked sun-bathing in the Tiergarten, jostling it out with the tourists at Brandenburg Gate, strolling the bijou boutiques in Mitte or tagging  hapless passers-by according to your tastes). But more importantly in Berlin it’s the suburbs where the good stuff is happening – so if you want to eat, drink and make merry, you’re in close proximity to the emerging areas of Kreuzberg and Neukölln. Note that East Side Gallery – the largest remaining painted stretch of the Berlin Wall is just around the corner.

The Clever One – an example of the Luxe room category at the Michelberger Hotel – has a saucy librarian aesthetic. Now to take off those heavy frames and shake-out that hair.

The Hotel: The Michelberger weds a bohemian aesthetic and happening vibe with a friendly welcome (OK, so it’s less of a wedding duo and more of a love triangle).  It seems to have taken the best of those 20-something travelling experiences (camaraderie, sociable communal areas, friendly service) and combined them with the best of hotel living – clean rooms, fresh linen and a more sophisticated design aesthetic. The cool bar area is great at any time of the day – if you find yourself knackered at the end of a big day in Berlin and can’t convince your feet to take you back out over the threshold, there’s no shame in spending a night in. (Well, only a little bit.)

Boomshakalakaboom: the exterior of the Michelberger Hotel in Berlin (Image by HWL)

What we loved: The creative atmosphere, the playful design aesthetic, the friendliness of the staff. Late check-outs on request for night performers such as burlesque dancers/DJs/musos/ and other creative slash types. While we didn’t take advantage of them we thought the free daily activities (eg: Sunday outing to the Mauerpark Flea Market) were a nice touch for travellers in the mood for company and hassle-free entertainment.

Paper lantern: while you can start the day in the breakfast room, we preferred a quiet coffee and pastry in the cafe/bar area…a very chilled way to wake up. (Image by HWL)

Minuses/Room to improve: Rooms on the first floor may be exposed to some bar noise; some room categories (Loft, Band) have mezzanine sleeping areas accessed by precarious and narrow staircases – not recommended for the non-mobile, the non-thin or if you’re planning to get drunk a lot. (In the latter case, we recommend crashing out on the day bed on the ground floor.) Mezzanine rooms are warm and could get rather hot in summer – if you of the sensitive ilk, pack ear-plugs so you can sleep with the windows open without being woken by traffic and assorted merry pranksters of the night. While the cleaning staff get our full sympathy (imagine lugging cleaning implements up those teeny stairs) some rooms could do with a little more maintenance – the odd scuff mark removed etc – to keep things looking sharp.

Bunking down with the roadies in one of the big band rooms. Both these and Loft Rooms feature mezzanines.

Tips: Ask for a room on the third or second floor for more light, better views, and more distance from the bar/street noise. Those facing the main road will get the sun in the morning. Transport enthusiasts and urban planners will enjoy watching the stream and interaction of pedestrians, cyclists, tramways, the U-Bahn and S-Bahn  lines and street traffic. The hotel has two excellent maps at reception featuring their personal guide to the city – one of cultural sites; one of bars and restaurants. We recommend you pick one up.

Hello sunshine: we advocate a Loft Room with a window desk for anyone with a transport spotting related compulsion. (Image by HWL)

Bookings: for bookings contact the Michelberger Hotel.

Lullaby?: That’s too easy. Fall asleep to the Leonard Cohen classic…

Beautiful Chaos

4 Apr

Check out this video documenting graffiti artist Tilt‘s recent installation in a Marseilles hotel room. To find out more about the project, there’s a nifty Q & A with Tilt in the New York Times…. To Book a room, contact Au Vieux Panier. Tilt’s ‘Panic Room’ will set you back €135. If bubble letters give you nightmares why not spend the night in purgatory in the ‘Mass Confusion’ room instead? Nuff said, the video speaks for itself.

Hotels We Love in Paris: Bonjour (Hi)-Matic

18 Oct

Business as usual: Hanging Five at the Hi-Matic Hotel in Paris.

So, we’ve been meaning to blog about the Hi-Matic Hotel in Paris for a while now… But we’ve just come across this little video (below), and we reckon it pretty much does the job for us, so perhaps it will do for now? The 42 room Hi-Matic Hotel by Matali Crasset, Patrick Elouarghi and Philippe Chatelet in the fashionable 11th district is reasonably priced (think around the €100+ range), is in a cool neighbourhood (bobo central) and promotes a green ethos.

The Princess and the Pod, at the Hi-Matic Hotel, Paris

The hotel plays around with interesting ideas, such as rooms that fold away Japanese-style during the day and funny, chopped up living spaces reminiscent of cubby houses or half-built lofts with jewel-like colours. The costs are kept down due to the DIY (auto-’matic’) of the check-in procedure etc – there’s no staff, you simply collect a key and let yourself in. Perks: Vending machine offering snacks, books and toys. A dainty (read well-chosen, if not copious) organic (‘bio’) breakfast served on trays a la ‘in-flight’. Tips: Note that sleeping/bathroom arrangements are small and, for lack of a better word, ‘intimate’. Room to Improve: There do seem to be some issues with clothes/luggage storage and overall practicality of the design. Approach in the spirit of weekend’s living experiment! (And enjoy!)

*****

If you’re staying at the Hi-Hotel, definitely try to book a table at the lovely Septime. If it’s too pricey or you can’t score a table, the tiny Le Mouton Noir (‘Black Sheep’) Mouton on the same street is pretty good and reasonably priced, but do ask for on street level (downstairs is damp,while the mezzanine is claustrophobic).

Booking: Hi-Matic Hotel

*****

One of the hotel’s collaborators, the rather whimsical designer Matali Crasset known for her colourful and playful takes on furniture, is currently responsible for an odd little installation at the Pompidou Centre; Blobterre, a sort of growing greenery installation in the children’s section. We reckon a Hi-Matic Hotel + Blobterre could make a suitable quirky machine-for-living meets the Triffids sort of weekend. (Especially right now with Paris in full art swing with FIAC, and off-events such as Slick Paris and some amazing shows on at the Pompidou etc.)

Get Religion: Stay @ Le Corbusier’s La Tourette

27 Sep

La Tourette, the monastery designed by Le Corbusier near Lyon in France, offers design fanatics a chance to experience his architectural theories in a spiritual context, without having to take radical vows of chastity and poverty. At La Tourette, guests are welcome to book themselves into a cell for a night – or longer – for a unique and thrifty taste of Modernism with a splash of Catholicism (or the other way around, according to your tastes).

It's quite something: the crypt at La Tourette by the architect Le Corbusier (image by HWL)

Bearing Le Corbusier’s design trademarks – stilts, a free-floating facade, horizontal windows and a roof-top garden – the concrete structure is grouped around an internal courtyard in the manner of a traditional monastery. Within its walls is a series of interconnected spaces, providing its inhabitants with the opportunity for personal, community and spiritual life; the three pillars of human life. Commissioned by the Dominicans and built between 1956 and 1960, the building was designed to house both novices – who spent several years at the convent – and friars who were life-long inhabitants. Today it also welcomes visitors, such as Le Corbusier fans!

It's complicated: courtyard at Le Corbusier's La Tourette (Image by HWL)

Le Corbusier developed a building scale based on what was then the average size of the average French man – 1.75 metres (5ft8″); but noting that  the ‘hero’ in American movies and books of the time, was invariably described as ‘6ft tall’ (1.88m) – he created a secondary, more ‘heroic’ scale that could be applied to international or big budget projects. At La Tourette visitors are housed in the novice cells based on the 1.75cm scale. (The friar’s rooms are based on the larger scale to accommodate the few more modest possessions they may accumulate over the course of their lifetime.)

Interior life & exterior world, desk & personal balcony @ La Tourette (Image by HWL)

By contemporary standards, the cells are small and basic, but they are also cosy and efficient. This is the kind of set-up Virginia Woolf was probably imagining when she wrote about having A Room of One’s Own. Each compact room contains four distinct spaces delineated by its unique light source and activity: an entry with hand-basin and clothes storage; a bed with reading light; a desk with chair; and a private balcony with a little nook for candles etc. At opposite ends of the room are louvres to enable cross ventilation. Pared down to its essentials this modest room enables the full gamut of a monk’s day-to-day living: rest, reflection, privacy and contact with the outdoors. This is real minimalism minus the chichi price tag.

The hallways circulating the living space are designed to accommodate meditational pacing. Small blocks of strategically placed concrete, and ‘concrete flowers’ that obscure the windows at the end of the corridor, enable light to enter but block external views; this allows the thinker to walk without having their thoughts interrupted by the view. The end windows are positioned off-centre to draw walkers (who subconsciously follow their axis) to orient themselves closer to the internal courtyard and away from the living cells, thus assisting with noise and privacy. As our guide said, “It’s not symmetrical, but it is balanced.”

Le Corbusier's La Tourette: hall leading to chapel (image by HWL)

Staying at the Convent: From an accommodation perspective, the Convent’s sleeping arrangements are evidently basic: each cell is equipped with bed linen, a blanket and a single bed. (You do have to make your own bed and no, you cannot share it.). It’s no thrills, but it’s clean and somehow pleasing. Showers and toilets are taken in a communal ablutions room – one for men another for women. Meals are taken in the large communal dining room with beautiful verdant views through windows that were designed in conjunction with the mathematically-minded composer Xenakis. The building is heated but we suspect it could be brisk in the cooler months.

Le Corbusier's La Tourette: dining rm windows inspired by Xenakis (Image by HWL)

This is supposed to be a place of spiritual and intellectual reflection so there is a rule of silence throughout the convent. However, the hard concrete surfaces and old-fashioned door sealants mean that the convent is far from sound-proof and with some visitors going to bed at midnight and others getting up at 6am, and couples accustomed to sharing a room, whispering urgently to each other through their cell doors “Have you got the toothpaste!?”…well, it’s not exactly silent. (For the sake of your own peace and others, it’s best to leave small children at home). Despite all that, the intention of silence was enough to create a meditative atmosphere and after 24 hours of quiet and a good walk in the adjoining forest we felt calm and refreshed.

Le Corbusier's La Tourette: chapel with Miro-esque skylights (Image by HWL)

The crowd: there are three main groups: the actual residents, the Friars; groups, such as volunteer gardeners preening the grounds, or writers attending a workshop; and tourists – primarily of the archi-fanatic variety and easily spotted by their trademark hipster glasses and manic photo taking! Dining tables are organised according to the purpose of your visit – a group of unwitting Japanese tourists created quite a stir among the grey-haired green-thumbs by going free-style and accidentally breakfasting at the Gardener’s table.

Le Corbusier's La Tourette: meditative strolls in the forest (Image by HWL)

Perks: First up, don’t miss the guided tour! Also, we don’t want to over-hype it, but the church at La Tourette is something really special, make sure you enter it from inside the monastery so you get the full effect (i.e: not from the external side door that takes you directly into the church). If you take the tour you can also access the magical Crypt. We were amused to see that Le Corbusier wasn’t satisfied with merely designing the entire building; he also felt compelled to sign his hand-drawn crucifixes. (Not that he had an ego issue or anything.) The smaller chapel with its avant garde fluorescent lights is also delightful. Note that the tours are open to everyone – you don’t have to be a guest.

Autographed crucifix anyone? The Crypt at La Tourette (Image by HWL)

Tariffs: €35 per night, per person with breakfast. You can also have diner there, but you will need to pre-order at the time of the booking or significantly in advance. Alternatively, come prepared to picnic on the grounds. Failing that, Lyon is a half an hour drive away, or you can eat at the neighbouring villages such as L’Arbresle.

The ominously named Hotel Terminus (Place de la Gare, in L’Arbresle) has some retro charm, we enjoyed the trout with almond sauce, but locals were raving about the house speciality: frogs. We were also recommended the cute-as-a-button Le Capucin in an old, quaint part of town.

Booking: if La Tourette’s official website is still under construction, you’ll find them listed on the Dominicians site here. Practical information is listed here. Note, there is a train that connects from Lyon, but the walk to the monastery from the station is definitely uphill and there are no taxis, not advised for non-minimalist packers.

Alternatives: If you’d like to visit Couvent de La Tourette, but not to sleep there, we can suggest the following alternatives in nearby Lyon: the quirky and cosy College Hotel which has a slightly scholastic meets gentlemen’s club feel. If you haven’t had enough architecture, you can try Renzo Piano in a slightly corporate mood at Hotel de la Cité. If you feel the need for sumptuous digs fit for a Pope, book yourself into Cour des Loges.

Sleeping with Le Corbusier: you might also like our story about Hotel Le Corbusier in Marseilles.

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Zaha Hadid: Future Shock

14 Sep

Who dares wins: a Star-chitect Off between Zaha Hadid & Jean Nouvel in Paris. (Image by Zaha Hadid Architects)

There’s something funny in the forecourt of the Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris. A sleek and slippery object that looks like a curvy space ship crossed with a piece of futuristic footwear has landed. It is in fact a mobile art pavilion, designed by Zaha Hadid Architects. Commissioned by Chanel, which has donated the structure to the Institute, the pavilion was transported in shipping containers and toured several of the world’s fashion capitals, before coming to rest in Paris where it will be used as an additional exhibition space to showcase art by the Arabic world.

The pavilion is an interesting addition to the Institute which is already on the archi-tour hit list thanks to its own design pedigree – it was designed by Jean Nouvel in the 1980s and was one of President Mitterand’s Grand Travaux.

Islamic-inspired 'jealous windows' at Jean Nouvel's Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris (Image by HWL)

The pavilion’s first show is fittingly dedicated to Hadid, an Iraqi-born and educated architect, who has since trained and settled in London. Showcasing several of her current projects, with an emphasis on those in Middle Eastern countries, the exhibition seeks to demonstrate a synergy between Islamic influences (from traditional calligraphy to the intricate geometry of mosaics) and Hadid’s style that somehow melds two extremes: organic molecular and geometrical structures such as branching and cell repetition with the crazy artificiality of skyscrapers.

the geometry of skyscrapers: Zaha Hadid (Image by HWL)

As far as the exhibition goes it’s more of a taster than Hadid’s exhaustive (and exhausting) 2006 Guggenheim retrospective, the tone and content on offer is more promotional than analytical and there’s scant insight about the woman herself.

Interior of Hadid's Mobile Art Pavillion: we can confirm it looks better without people (Image by Zaha Hadid Architects)

For all that, it’s an interesting experience to see an exhibition of Hadid’s work in a pavilion that she also designed; the space and the objects certainly inform each other in a stimulating way, though the effect is a little bit like being in a showroom. Certainly, if I was Hadid I’d be bussing in the Saudi’s and those heads of nation states desperate for a new status building that will help put them on the map – if anything can convey the concept of ‘Hadid’ world, it’s this. Not that they need the business. (Aside: too bad they didn’t have Hadid’s cool kitchen unit.)

Is it a bird, a plane? Zaha Hadid's Mobile Art Pavilion, currently docked in Paris. (Image by Zaha Hadid Architects)

Twenty years ago Hadid was a brilliant and well-connected academic, dreaming up architecture that was virtually impossible to build; now it’s not. Standing there and looking at her work, gave me an insight to how visitors to the Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret’s Pavillion de l’Esprit Nouveau at the 1925 Exposition des Artes Decoratifs must have felt. I think they must have felt something along the lines of: ‘This is the future’ and ‘WTF?!’.

Dates: Zaha Hadid, Une Architecture runs until October 30, 2011. Information: Institut du Monde Arabe Tips: you must buy your ticket inside the institute, and if it’s your first visit, don’t forget to take the elevator to the top floor for a great view of Paris from the terrace.

Everyone's a critic: street art commentary on Zaha Hadid's CMA-CGM Tower in Marseilles (Image by HWL)

Smooth Operator: Morgans, NY

3 Jun

A discreet welcome: Morgan’s facade

Guest Review by Michel Beziat

In the crowded boutique hotel market, Morgans boasts an interesting claim to fame: it was the first original ‘boutique hotel’. The term was coined when Morgans was developed by the late French interior designer Andree Putman for Ian Schrager in the 1980s. (The hotel recently underwent a second refurbishment by the same Andree Putman, in 2008). Given the current 80′s revival, now felt like a good moment to see how it has fared the last decades. (In the interim Schrager has kept ahead of the hotel game with developments including the über-fashionable Hudson.) The association of high-design and Mad Men location led us to expect – and fear – a serious dose of attitude so we were surprised when we discovered a rather simple, and even familial ambiance.

The Hotel: It’s ‘classic NY’ in a beautiful red brick building. Anonymous – there’s no hotel sign or name on the front door – which somehow gives you that wonderful feeling of coming back home at the end of the day. The sentiment is heightened by very cosy and intimate common areas, such as the 4th floor salon or the little outdoor terrace which is great spot to hang out if you can’t afford the penthouse on the same floor… (Ed– Hell, even if you can, why not slum it for a change?) On a sunny day, you can make the most of the deck chairs and the gorgeous views onto the Empire State building.

French designer Andree Putman works her magic at Morgan’s

The staff members were friendly and professional, without overdoing it. The room service manager didn’t hesitate to join us in the morning at our breakfast table to help us with our program for the day, he also shared some very amusing hotel anecdotes – sorry, I can’t remember any of them! – and his favourite addresses.  (For ideas about what to do during your stay, see HWL’s Perfect Day in NY and check out our Suggested New York books….) Breakfast, by the way, was lovely. Tasty and generous, and included in the room’s price.

As far as the clientele goes, it’s a good balance of European tourists and professionals working in the area, which gives it a nice local flavour. Oh, and Andree Putman is a regular client too.

The Neighbourhood: You can’t easily beat the location, right bang in Midtown, a block away from 5th Avenue, two blocks from the Empire State Building, three from Grand Central Station. Times Square and Central Park are around the corner, about 15 minutes walk away. It’s a great base to explore everything by foot.

The building next door hosts a convenience store which is, well, convenient, when you come back to the hotel totally knackered and want to get something – food, drinks, pharmacy – without going back out. Continue reading 

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