This week's instalment of the #SBIDinspire interior design series features the refined and sustainable hotel experience with QO Amsterdam. The QO represents a departure from most hotels, at its heart is an ethos focused almost entirely on curating and working with the natural environment. Aiming to be one of the most sustainable hotels on the planet; at every stage of design, the environmental impact was considered the forefront of the decision making process. The building itself actually breathes, with exterior panels that automatically open and close to keep heat in and out to ensure as little power is required to heat the building! Conran&Partners were responsible for designing the QO's Guest Rooms, curated by the IHG Interior Design Department, to create a space that felt pure, clean, minimal yet timeless, luxurious and hugely appealing.
Company: Conran&Partners
Project: QO Amsterdam
Project Location: Amsterdam, Netherlands
What was the client's brief?
To create a hotel with a difference that provides contemporary luxury with a social and environmental conscience. The hotel is a ‘circular’ design that produces its own energy, grows its own plants and cares about its community. Our concept was to combine materials that bring a feeling of luxury with others that reflect the industrial spirit of the area, the building itself and the philosophy of the QO.
What inspired the design of the Project?
We looked at what luxury means today to develop what the guest would enjoy spatially – taking into account the amazing views through the full height windows and the size of the rooms available to us.
We overlaid this with research on natural, sustainable and local materials to bring in the context and make very conscious decisions about the materials we were using, for example using engineered brick for the bathroom enclosures, exposed concrete ceiling, and a local limestone for the vanity. Keeping the palate paired-back and natural helped to reflect the story. We wanted to be true to how the building is actually built. So we enhanced and celebrated what it’s made from. Then we brought them together within a space which we deliberately designed open-plan so you immediately experience the light and incredible views as you enter.
What was the toughest hurdle your team overcame during the project?
Tight timelines and restrictions in the layout and services – but challenges are opportunities in our view!
What was your team’s highlight of the project?
Working with a team passionate about the end result and having the opportunity to create a very modern version of luxury. For example, the rooms as a whole are all controlled by an innovative iPad control systems, and ingenious touches of hidden technology that make a stay surprising and effortless. By simply putting your foot out of bed, a gentle nightlight detects this movement and glows outside the bathroom to calmly direct you without the need for switches or buttons, or the risk of accidentally switching on the master switch in the middle of the night!
Why did you enter the SBID International Design Awards?
This project is very special with numerous passionate different parties involved working together to create a hotel that shows the industry that hospitality can be sustainable.
Questions answered by Tina Norden, Director at Conran&Partners
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Conran&Partners | SBID International Design Awards 2018
This week's instalment of the #SBIDinspire features a design project with particular grandeur. Stonehill & Taylor upheld a traditional design scheme sympathetic to the historically Federalist architecture as they crafted a hotel suite fit for royalty - or in this case, a Presidential audience.
Located on the 14th floor and newly expanded to 4,000 square-feet, the Presidential Suite features historic accents and elegant furnishings, as well as an array of artwork ranging from pastoral landscapes to Chinoiserie accent pieces. Immediately upon entrance to the space, the grand entry hallway sets the tone for the suite, with floors elaborately patterned in three types of marble. This exits dramatically into the rotunda, a bright, 12-foot-high octagonal dome that opens to the reception, fitness room, and master bedroom entryway. The living room area features gold, rich red, and pewter details with a baby grand piano as the focal point, while the bedrooms have a palette of powder blue, cream and taupe. The master bedroom leads to a spacious bathroom haven that features a steam shower and the only freestanding tub in the hotel.
SBID had the opportunity to speak with Vince Stroop, Principal with Stonehill & Taylor.
Company: Stonehill & Taylor
Project: InterContinental New York Barclay Hotel - Presidential Suite
Project Location: New York, United States
What was the client’s brief?
In 2012, Stonehill & Taylor came on board to manage the architecture and interior design of room 702 of the InterContinental New York Barclay hotel. Because the hotel has been renovated multiple times throughout the years, its style was often mismatched. Our brief was to strip the hotel back to its original intention, following a Federalist style of architecture and interior design. More specifically, we wanted to create flourishes in the Presidential Suite to distinguish it from the rest of the hotel—as a result, you’ll see lots of symmetry, millwork detailing, and the layering of materials like marble and stone.
What inspired the design of the project?
The hotel was originally built in 1926 when there was a revival of the Federalist period. We sought to return to these design principles. Take for example, the Presidential Suite’s grand entry hallway. It features a classic floor pattern created using three types of Italian marble and leads to a dramatic rotunda featuring an 11-foot-high octagonal dome and acts as the centre point of the suite which opens to several of the other main spaces.
The Presidential Suite is heavily used by world dignitaries and demanded the latest in technology and high security standards—it required a separate HVAC system, shatter-proof glass, bulletproof wall construction, and sound-proofing—which was tricky to reconcile with the classic nature and traditional style of the design brief.
This hotel is located very close to the United Nations Complex and deeply rooted in political history. Bill Clinton even ran his 1992 Presidential campaign from its very address. The real excitement however, is that former President Barack Obama has stayed in the Presidential Suite both before and after restoration and former Vice President Joe Biden was the first to occupy the suite post-renovation. Our involvement with the hotel and the suite was a labour of love, and it’s thrilling to think that it’s used and appreciated by leaders from around the world.
We entered the competition to bring recognition to this project and to offer the SBID audience a window in to the hotel’s design. The wider public may not have the opportunity to visit the hotel, but through this competition, they can get a glimpse of what it would be like to stay in the Presidential Suite.
Questions answered by Vince Stroop, Principal with Stonehill & Taylor.
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Stonehill & Taylor | SBID International Design Awards 2017
This week's instalment of the #SBIDinspire series features MKV Design's glorious renovation and extension of Hôtel Royal Savoy, Lausanne, Switzerland. Drawing on the Art Nouveau heritage of the original property while redesigning the spaces in the old building, aiming to delight today’s international travellers and local guests. By contrast, the new wing is resolutely modern in style with smart, streamlined interiors. Throughout, luxury has been taken to a new level with elegant new guest rooms, magnificent suites and captivating public areas while connection to the hotel gardens as well as the city has been restated with ingeniously created views at both ground level and from the rooftops.
SBID had the opportunity to speak with Maria Vafiadis, Founder and Managing Director of MKV Design.
Company: MKV Design
Project: Hôtel Royal Savoy
Project Location: Lausanne, Switzerland
Hotel Royal Savoy was once one of Lausanne’s Grandes Dames but was closed and in disrepair when the project began. The vision was to reinvent the legend, taking design cues from the old building but essentially creating a new hotel. In the process, the footprint of the hotel was virtually doubled with the addition of a new wing.
The concept of the classic grand hotel is particularly Swiss and design inspiration was found in the hotel’s beautiful gardens, its quintessentially Swiss views of Lake Geneva, the Art Nouveau heritage, whispers of history and the owner’s private art collection.
The new plan takes guests on a journey through distinctive spaces, each one heralded by a custom-designed decorative screen. From the classical arrival hall onto the lounge where a grand double-height space is revived as a glamorous showpiece with dramatic lighting and new furniture that hints at Art Nouveau. There are new plaster mouldings, in a style similar to the original, while elegant hand stencilling replicates earlier decoration to the walls. The bar is the next stage, looking towards a new glazed extension and the sudden vista of the gardens. To one side, the walkway, which may be fully opened-up to the sunshine, flows through the garden to the new building.
In reality, there weren’t any great hurdles in this project. We’re used to reinventing Grand Dames for the next generation and always find them a great joy and privilege to work on as we relish the research and sensitive considerations that this kind of project involves.
The spa was a certainly a highlight for us. The boldly contemporary design means that it is completely unlike anything else that Lausanne has to offer and it is thrilling to see how well it is being received by both hotel guests and local people. It was also a real pleasure to be able to work with some of the original elements of the hotel such as a historical wall mural depicting a rural idyll, which was relocated from the entrance lobby to the restaurant, as well as antiques and artwork from the owner’s personal collection.
Further to this, the team relished the opportunity to create guestrooms in both the new and heritage buildings that made the most of the spectacular views over Lake Geneva and the beautiful hotel gardens. The opening up of the rear of the original building with the glazed extension and terraces continues this connection between indoor and out.
SBID is one of the most highly respected awards schemes in the industry. We value the calibre of the projects entered and take pride in having our work judged by such an esteemed panel.
Questions answered by Maria Vafiadis, Founder and Managing Director of MKV Design
If you missed last week's Project of the Week with JHP Design, click Here
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MKV Design | SBID International Design Awards 2016
Photography by Robert Miller.
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