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Architecture Design Travel

Design hotels: Tasmania dominates awards shortlist

Recognising excellence and innovation in design across Australia and New Zealand, the Eat Drink Design Awards just released its shortlisted venues for 2019 and the ‘Best Hotel Design’ category is full of some absolute beauties. From our beloved Calile Hotel to some gorgeous rural retreats, you don’t have to venture too far to find a world-class interior on your next local trip. And with three of the six shortlisted hotels in Tasmania, yet again the island state proves it punches above its weight on the design front.

The Calile Hotel (Fortitude Valley, QLD)
We featured this stunner soon after it opened and it’s no surprise to see the urban resort on the shortlist. Its neutral (but not boring) colour palette looks like a cool drink on a summer’s day – the perfect antidote to the Brisbane heat. We cannot wait to stay there.

Calile Hotel
Calile Hotel. Photography by Sean Fennessy

“A podium level pool terrace transports guests to holiday mode, hotel corridors continue the outdoor experience naturally – ventilated with ceiling fans via customised breeze block screens and significant planting extends across the project, a verdant overlay linking streets to rooms,” says Richards and Spence, the firm behind the design.

Calile Hotel
Calile Hotel. Photography by Sean Fennessy

Denison Rivulet (Denison Rivulet, TAS)
As mentioned, Tasmania is a design mecca but it’s rather impressive to see three of the shortlisted hotels are from the island state – the Denison Rivulet being one. Designed to take in its bucolic landscape, we love the unexpected gold flourishes that feature throughout – a bit of luxe in the bush is always a good idea!

Denison Rivulet. Photography by Adam Gibson.
Denison Rivulet. Photography by Adam Gibson.

“The cabins are spatially compact but high in amenity – as a continuation of the tradition of Tasmanian coastal shacks which provide both prospect within a large landscape, as well as a sense of intense enclosure,” say the project’s designers Taylor and Hinds Architects.

Denison Rivulet. Photography by Adam Gibson.
Denison Rivulet. Photography by Adam Gibson.

Stillwater Seven (Launceston, TAS)
Another of the Tassie hotels shortlisted, this project involved major alterations and additions to the first and second floor of an 1830’s flour mill.

Stillwater Seven. Photography by
Stillwater Seven. Photography by Anjie Blair

“Weathered corrugated iron, heritage sandstone and giant Oregon trusses are highlighted and enhanced throughout the redefined interior. Each new space is filled with tactile patterns and finishes – raw edges, steel thresholds, burnt timbers and textured paintwork yearning to be touched,” says Cumulus Studio, the firm responsible for the design.

Stillwater Seven. Photography by Anjie Blair
Stillwater Seven. Photography by Anjie Blair

krakani lumi (Wukalina Mount William National Park, TAS)
Another Tassie hotel, this unique venue is the result of a collaboration between Taylor and Hinds Architects (who feature again!) and the Aboriginal Land Council of Tasmania. Located in the Mount William National Park, the venue serves as accommodation for a guided walk through the cultural landscape, from wukalina (Mt William) to larapuna (Eddystone Point).

krakani lumi
krakani lumi. Photography by Adam Gibson.

The language of the project is derived from the siting, form and qualities of the traditional seasonal shelters of Tasmania’s first peoples. This context and the notion of the story-telling interior is an important conceptual foundation for the work. The telling of the creation is an initiation into the spiritual and cultural interior of the landscape,” says the team behind the project.

krakani lumi. Photography by Adam Gibson.
krakani lumi. Photography by Adam Gibson.

Drifthouse (Port Fairy, VIC)
Two holiday apartments located within a period home, this project is located in the south-western Victorian coastal town of Port Fairy and represents boutique regional accommodation at its best. We love its relaxed, understated interiors.

Drifthouse. Photography by Martina Gemmola.
Drifthouse. Photography by Martina Gemmola.

“Fundamental to the brief was to work with the clients’ relaxed aesthetic and to ensure that the new work sat comfortably within its garden setting, juxtaposed by not jarring with the heritage buildings, the past omnipresent and pivotal,” says Multiplicity, the firm behind the project.

Drifthouse. Photography by Martina Gemmola.
Drifthouse. Photography by Martina Gemmola.

United Places Botanic Gardens (South Yarra, VIC)
Comprised of three two-bedroom and nine one-bedroom suites, this minimalist yet luxe boutique hotel is located in Melbourne’s South Yarra.

United Places
United Places. Photography by Sharyn Cairns.

“We were briefed to create an immersive environment for discerning guests in a category dominated by ever-expanding art hotels. Our approach was to employ cross-disciplinary collaboration to celebrate exceptional local creatives. From the Laura Woodward kinetic sculpture in the foyer to the digital Community Guide created by the hotelier, spirit of place is at the heart of our approach” says Carr, the firm behind the project.

United Places. Photography by Sharyn Cairns.
United Places. Photography by Sharyn Cairns.

For more on the awards | Melbourne hotel penthouse transformed into seven loft rooms

Categories
Architecture Design Designers Interviews Travel

The Calile Hotel: Brisbane’s stunning new urban resort

With its chic retro vibe and faded luxe colour scheme, Brisbane’s new Calile Hotel is arguably one of Australia’s most Instagrammed spaces – its stylish mix of brass, cork, concrete and sophisticated pastel hues proving difficult to resist for the design savvy.

The lobby bar
The lobby bar

“The pool is the focal point of the hotel, with the rooms wrapping around its raised podium, and Hellenika restaurant tucked neatly alongside,” says Ingrid Richards, co-director of Richards and Spence, the architects responsible for the brand-new build that has been described as an ‘urban resort’ and looks to locations rather than specific design periods for inspiration.

The pool
The pool

“We resisted the nostalgic reference to styles, instead we looked at other cities for precedence. We wanted to establish a civic vernacular that celebrates our own unique hot weather and outdoor lifestyle. In Brisbane, it is a mistake to reference cities like New York, London and Melbourne, rather we looked to other hot weather cities with a resort focus to inform our design – Miami, Palm Springs, Rio De Janeiro and Mexico City,” says Ingrid’s co-director Adrian Spence.

The pool
Measuring 27 metres by 8 metres, the pool is lined with light green stone tiles

“For Richards and Spence, embracing our climate and tropical surrounds became the foundation to create what is Australia’s first urban resort. In our opinion there is no other city-based Australian hotel conceived as a resort. City-based hotels in our country are pitched to the corporate market, focussed on the conference, rather than on the pool and the hotel’s surrounds. The Calile has changed that,” says Ingrid.

Guest room
Guest room

“The pool area, with its associated outdoor dining cabanas and sun lounges has been key to creating that feel. As are the external naturally ventilated corridors and lift lobbies with ceiling fans and planters,” says Adrian who explains that operable windows and balconies continue the resort theme in the rooms.

Bathroom
Guest bathroom
Bathroom
Guest bathroom

“Our climate allows us to live outdoors most of the year. The naturally ventilated rooms allow guests to share our unique outdoor lifestyle, again reinforcing a sense of place that is uniquely Brisbane. Who wants to be in a conference room all day then go to a hotel room that is locked up and air conditioned? We live outside all the time in Brisbane, so why not do so in a hotel room if you can? Many rooms open onto a generous scallop-edged balcony,” says Ingrid.

The brutalist exterior
The hotel’s brutalist exterior

Calile Hotel

Externally, there is enthusiastic use of white bricks – 270,000 to be exact. “White bricks form archways at the ground, and facades at high level and continue inside to maintain an outdoorsy vibe. Bricks endure over time physically and stylistically,” says Adrian. Breeze blocks were used too, for both design and ventilation qualities. “Again, we collectively associate breeze blocks with hot weather places which reinforces a sense of place,” says Adrian.

Guest room with city view
Guest room with city view – note the cork clad walls
Guest room
Guest room

And as for the gorgeous interiors, they are comprised of a mix of cork lined rooms, luxurious brass and marble and a pastel palette that runs from terracotta to sage, peach and sea green. “It is a deliberately restrained palette, designed to endure over time,” says Ingrid.

Photography: Sean Fennessy

For more | Another Brisbane hotel

Categories
Architecture Design

Hotel interiors: A sneak peek of stunning new QT Perth

Impeccably dressed for those who appreciate the finer things, QT Perth is set to open its doors to guests this August and we can’t stop swooning over the sneak peeks of the interiors!

Merging industrial glamour with a contemporary, urban-cool aesthetic – to say the hotel has been meticulously designed is an understatement.

Longstanding QT guest room designer, Shelley Indyk has created wildly individual and thoughtfully designed guest rooms where you will find handmade ceramics by local craftspeople including Dale Frances.

The lavish suites offer a mix of rich tones and hues, rich jarrah timber, polished brass and striking sculptures by artist Patsy Payne. With dark stone bathrooms, signature QT gel beds and an opulent mini bar, QT’s guest rooms and publics spaces channel the history of excess from 1980s Perth with a wink to fashion and vintage.

Designer Nic Graham, part of QT’s core creative team, has reimagined what a hotel should be like – creating thoughtfully designed areas for locals and visitors to come together. The rooftop bar has spectacular views across the Swan River, Perth Hills and the Stadium, while the café on the ground level will be a perfect spot to grab a cup of coffee and a quick pow wow.

Showcasing the best of QT’s signature service and design, the bold 18-storey hotel boasts 184 guest rooms, a signature bar & grill restaurant concept, rooftop bar, café and seven conference rooms.

Luxuriously perched in the emerging trendy part of town, QT Perth is located on the doorstep of the Murray Street Mall and the city’s shopping hub, and only moments from the spectacular Bell Tower, Elizabeth Quay and the stunning Swan River.

QT Perth is now taking reservations from 1 August 2018.

For more hotel inspiration: Gourmet Traveller reveals 2018’s best Australian hotels

Categories
Design

Gourmet Traveller reveals 2018’s best Australian hotels

Currently in its fifth year, the 2018 Gourmet Traveller Hotel Guide Awards were handed down this month (seriously, it really is awards season!) and the winners have given me a serious case of wanderlust. From a new boutique inner-city Sydney hotel with its own cinema to a wharf side Hobart hotel boasting a deluxe mini-bar, the fabulously specific categories include ‘Best Bed’ and ‘Best Club Sandwich.’ How fun! What they all have in common is some seriously good design!

'Hotel of The Year' Paramount House. Image source: Sharyn Cairns
‘Hotel of The Year’ Paramount House. Image source: Sharyn Cairns

“We’re seeing more hotels championing local makers and produce, and thinking hard about how to connect guests with the neighbourhood. We’re excited to showcase the new ideas and achievements of a dynamic industry that’s central to the lives of gourmet travellers,” says Gourmet Traveller’s editor Sarah Oakes.

The 'Best Bar' award winner - Crown Towers, Perth.
The ‘Best Bar’ award winner was Crown Towers in Perth

Produced by a team of reviewers from the magazine, who check in unannounced and pay their way, the awards choose the nation’s top 50 hotels and the best performers in 11 awards categories as well as outlining Australia’s leading lodges and resorts and the best forthcoming hotel openings.

'Boutique Hotel of The Year' Jackalope.
‘Boutique Hotel of The Year’ Jackalope

Housed in a 1940’s warehouse in Surry Hills, in the former Australian headquarters of Paramount Picture Studios, is Paramount House Hotel which was awarded ‘Hotel of the Year’ honours. The hotel has an established café, arthouse cinema, health club, co-working space and forthcoming restaurant and bar as well as 29 rooms. “The hotel was designed to give guests a sense of place – something that doesn’t feel generic and offers a real slice of the area,” said co-owner Russell Beard.

'Hotel of The Year' Paramount House Hotel. Image source: Will Horner
‘Hotel of The Year’ Paramount House Hotel. Image source: Will Horner

“It takes a village to make a great hotel. Paramount House Hotel’s unique appeal lies in the strength of the building’s creative community and the immediate neighbourhood,” said the Gourmet Traveller reviewers.

Mornington Peninsula's Jackalope took out two awards
Mornington Peninsula’s Jackalope

The highly original Mornington Peninsula hotel Jackalope took out two gongs – ‘Boutique Hotel of the Year’ and ‘Best Club Sandwich’ for its unique take on the culinary classic that features drunken chicken, pickled green tomatoes and bacon jam.

The 'Best Pool' award went to Elements of Byron in Byron Bay.
The ‘Best Pool’ award went to Elements of Byron in Byron Bay

The ‘Large Hotel of the Year’ award went to Hobart’s wharfside Macq01 who also took home the ‘Best Minibar’ award for its large and proud line-up of Tasmanian products.

Winner of the 'Large Hotel of the Year' and 'Best mini-bar' awards was Hobart's Macq01
Winner of the ‘Large Hotel of the Year’ and ‘Best Minibar’ awards was Hobart’s Macq01

‘Best Bed’ went to Mayfair Hotel in Adelaide while ‘Best Breakfast’ went to Halcyon House at Cabarita Beach in northern New South Wales. ‘Best Pool’ was awarded to Elements of Byron in Byron Bay while Crown Towers Perth took out the ‘Best Bar’ award.

The 'Best Breakfast' award winner Halcyon House.
The ‘Best Breakfast’ award winner Halcyon House

The full list of winners:

Hotel of the Year: Paramount House Hotel, Sydney, NSW

Large Hotel of the Year: Macq01, Hobart, Tas

Boutique Hotel of the Year: Jackalope, Mornington Peninsula, Vic

Regional Hotel of the Year: Lake House, Daylesford, Vic

Best Service: Spicers Clovelly Estate, Montville, Qld

Best Breakfast: Halcyon House, Cabarita Beach, NSW

Best Pool: Elements of Byron, Byron Bay, NSW

Best Bar: TWR, Crown Towers Perth, WA

Best Bed:Mayfair Hotel, Adelaide, SA

Best Club Sandwich:Jackalope, Mornington Peninsula, Vic

Best Minibar: Macq01, Hobart, Tas

You can peruse the complete list of the nation’s top 50 hotels in the June issue of Gourmet Traveller which is on sale now.

For more | A Hunter Valley hotel revamped by Greg Natale 

 

 

 

Categories
Designers

Our guide to Australian weekend getaways for interiors addicts

Who doesn’t love a holiday? If I could, I’d be jetting off every week… but alas there’s work and bills and money doesn’t grow on trees! So that’s where weekend getaways come in. They’re cheap(ish), only a drive away and allow you to appreciate all the beauty Australia has to offer. And when I say beauty I don’t just mean the great outdoors, but rather exquisitely designed accommodation. Below are our top picks for interiors addicts.

Halcyon House, Cabarita Beach, NSW

The former surfer motel turned luxury hotel is situated at one of the country’s best surf breaks and one of its most idyllic beachfront towns, Cabarita Beach in northern NSW. With 19 rooms and two suites, each is individually designed with a definite sense of beachside nostalgia. Featuring an on-site restaurant and bar, plus a beachfront pool and terrace, it’s the ideal setting for a luxurious holiday.

Halcyon House, Cabarita Beach, NSW
Halcyon House, Cabarita Beach, NSW

Hotel Hotel, Canberra, ACT

Canberra got cool when Hotel Hotel arrived! A collaboration between designers, artists, artisans and fantasists, each of the 68 rooms (plus apartments and lofts) are unique. With a love for the well made and the handmade, the beds are made from reclaimed oak and the walls are a mix of concrete, cork, earthen clay and natural fibre wallpapers. To top it off there’s an onsite restaurant and bar, the go-to place for lucidity to debauchery between 6.30am and 1am!

Hotel Hotel, Canberra, ACT
Hotel Hotel, Canberra, ACT

The Byron at Byron Resort & Spa, Byron Bay, NSW

Set within a 45 acre rainforest but just minutes from the centre of Byron Bay, the resort truly offers the best of both worlds. Whether your walking to the beach – pass a scrub turkey and tree frog, swimming in the infinity pool, practising yoga with the chilled but professional staff or stuffing yourself at the restaurant, the experience is quintessential Byron Bay.

The Byron at Byron Resort & Spa, Byron Bay, NSW
The Byron at Byron Resort & Spa, Byron Bay, NSW

QT Hotels & Resorts, Nationally (Sydney, Bondi, Melbourne, Falls Creek, Canberra, Gold Coast and Port Douglas)

The un-chainlike chain, QT Hotels & Resorts offers a personalised guest experience, top-notch dining and that signature touch of quirk. From the cockatoo-shaped lamps and retro beach chic at the Gold Coast to the politician photo-framed mirrors in Canberra, each hotel has a distinct playful personality.

QT Melbourne
QT Gold Coast

Art Series Hotel Group, Nationally (Melbourne, Bendigo, Brisbane and Adelaide)

Dedicated to Australian contemporary artists, each hotel takes design inspiration from its namesake artist, be it landscape artist John Olsen at The Olsen in Melbourne’s South Yarra or indigenous artist Yannima Pikarli Tommy Watson at The Watson in the Adelaide Hills. With original artworks and prints adorning the walls, the multifaceted art-inspired experience comes complete with art libraries, art tours and art utensils available on demand.

The Schaller, Bendigo, VIC
The Blackman, St Kilda, VIC

The Estate Trentham, VIC

The brainchild of designer and stylist Lynda Gardener, The Estate is a beautiful 1902 federation home in the heart of Trentham, one hour from Melbourne. Boutique accommodation at its best, the interiors are inspired by Scandinavia — think fresh white walls, dark floors and airy rooms; complemented by a mix of old and new furniture from European fleamarkets to local country finds. Two bedrooms are in the house and an original potato pickers shed houses the third. Lynda is also the mastermind behind three other, equally beautiful boutique Victoria properties: The White House Daylesford, The Apartment St Kilda and The White Room Fitzroy.

The Estate Trentham, VIC
The Estate Trentham, VIC

Saffire Freycinet, Coles Bay, TAS

The environment is the real star of the show at Saffire Freycinet. Set in Tasmania’s Freycinet National Park, you’ll wake each morning to the pink-granite rocks of Hazards mountains and the blue water of Coles Bay. With the architecture and interiors inspired by nature the design is uncontrived and luxurious, creating an almost seamless feel between the inside and out.

Saffire Freycinet, Coles Bay, TAS

We hope you liked our list. Let us know what you would add. 

Categories
Travel

The many faces of Dubai

dubai getaway

dubai tourism platinum heritage shangri-la hotel bloggerati australia 1001 events

This Bloggerati Getaway was proudly sponsored by Dubai Tourism

Wow, jet lag. No fun, and especially hard to beat when you’re pregnant! However, totally worth it for the amazing experience I was just lucky to take part in in Dubai. I hope you enjoyed following my travels on Instagram. I often worry you’ll get annoyed with me ‘spamming’ you and feel like a bit of a show-off, but it seems you all loved coming along for the virtual ride, which is great! I hope I’ve inspired some of you to visit the place by sharing the sheer variety of things it has to offer.

While I couldn’t do everything I wanted to (including hot a air balloon ride!) due to being pregnant (and probably particularly risk-averse) I still had a wonderful time. I left with a more positive and rounded opinion of Dubai than before we left. Sure, I expected flashiness and luxury and the odd token camel, but I had no idea how much there was to do and see there.

Image by Sonia Stackhouse, Life, Love & Hiccups blog
Image by Sonia Stackhouse, Life, Love & Hiccups blog

It felt like we had a different lunch at a different fancy hotel each day. Oh yeah, that’s because we pretty much did! The hotels were, without exception, just amazing. Some of the best interiors, food and service I’ve ever experienced. No cookie cutter approach here. There must be serious opportunities for interior designers here because there so many wonderful hotels and they’ve all made the effort to be something different. Stunning!

A suite at the Kempinski Hotel Dubai Mall of the Emirates which looks out onto the slopes of Ski Dubai. So surreal!

If you’re a thrill seeker (I am certainly not, pregnant or otherwise), well, you’re in for a treat. Hot air balloons, sea planes, indoor ski slopes, mega water parks, go-karting… these are all things our group experienced. My favourite part of travel though, is always learning more about the local culture and of course, sampling the food (hello, eating for two!). Dubai is an extremely interesting place as far as culture goes, being that around 90 percent of the population are immigrants, from a huge variety of places. True Emiratis are few and far between.

Covering our hair before we went inside the mosque, with Ann-Maree Russell from The House that AM Built
Covering our hair before we went inside the mosque, with Anne-Maree Russell from The House that AM Built

It remains though, a Muslim country, but a very progressive and relaxed one for the most part. Tolerance of radical or extremist views is pretty much zero. There is a real effort to help visitors understand Islam in a religious and cultural context, which, in the current terrorist climate, is probably more important then ever. We had the opportunity to ask any questions we wanted while enjoying a traditional meal at The Sheikh Mohammed Centre for Cultural Understanding and I really enjoyed our tour of the Jumeirah Mosque, where we were talked through what Muslims believe in, how they pray and more. Super interesting. The interior of the mosque, although nothing ornate, was beautiful in its geometric patterns. Depictions of people and animals are not allowed in Islamic buildings; instead you will find wonderful geometric patterns and beautiful calligraphy of verses from the Quran. The decoration is so distinctive and and I loved its symmetry and colours.

Inside the mosque
Inside the mosque

Another favourite for me was the Frying Pan Adventures food tour, which took in the bustling fish market, the spice souk, a coffee museum and a wonderful breakfast by the water of rosewater iced tea and yoghurt with granola. Delicious! And then there was of course the desert safari, which I’ve already written about.

For the majority of our stay, we were ferried around in comfort and taught more about Dubai by the fabulous 1001 Events and, in particular, tour guide Xavier, whose smiling face and enthusiasm I now miss seeing every day!

Waterside breakfast on the food tour
Waterside breakfast on the food tour
Fresh prawns at the bustling fish market
Fresh prawns at the bustling fish market
frying pan food adventures
Our group on the food tour
Forget every date you've ever tasted before: these were something else!
Forget every date you’ve ever tasted before: these were something else!
Don't mind if I do, sir!
Don’t mind if I do, sir!
Me sitting up front. Photo thanks to Melbourne Girl. Click for details
Me sitting up front. Photo thanks to Melbourne Girl. Click for details

You may well have heard that the legal system is harsh, and it is, but it is this respect for the law that means Dubai is stupidly safe. Leave your bags wherever you like, things do not get stolen. It’s not worth someone’s while. You’ve probably also heard that as a woman, you need to cover yourself head to toe in order not to attract unwanted attention. It’s not strictly true and Dubai is much more relaxed than I’d anticipated. That said, I still advise dressing appropriately and respectfully. And I still managed to get offered the opportunity to model saris within minutes of arriving, despite having just stepped off a 14-hour flight, looking worse for wear and being completely covered up! It’s that blonde hair and lipstick, isn’t it?!

I have so much more to tell you about but I’ll save it for next week!

dubai getaway

dubai tourism platinum heritage shangri-la hotel bloggerati australia 1001 events
Categories
Travel

Six things I’ve learned from six months of travel

Hi readers, I’m ho-ome!

Our almost six-month travel adventure around Europe and America is over and we arrived back in Sydney yesterday (the less said about the jet lag, the better!). We have been to so many places (in no particular order): Tuscany, Rome, Milan, Amsterdam, Barcelona, Paris, London, Oxford, Bath, Geneva, Nice, Monaco, Marrakech, Edinburgh, Skye, Berlin, New York, Boston, Chicago, San Francisco, Vancouver and Singapore. I know we will talk about and share stories from this trip for the rest of our lives. It has been amazing, but we were more than ready to come home to reality, routine and our friends and family in Australia.

Damian and I on the Brookyln Bridge in New York
Damian and I on the Brookyln Bridge in New York

As with most travels and holidays, they give you the opportunity to take stock and put everything in perspective, so I thought I’d share a few of my key learnings from six months on the road, seeing the world while running my business!

1. I am a massive homebody. I already knew this but nothing could have prepared me for how much I would miss normality and routine and the simple pleasures of home. Top of my list now (as we move in with my excellent in-laws) is finding us a new nest. I can’t wait to have all our things around me again, to not live out of a suitcase and to only have to consider one timezone. I feel like I don’t want to travel or see an airport again for years (although I’m sure my travel bug will be back before then!). But it has made me realise that I am a simple soul, easily pleased by a lot of the little things in life. Just being in my home, with my stuff and my husband, will be amazing! Yay!

2. Although I always try to pick the ones with great design, the things I actually value most in a hotel are good WiFi, a bath and tea and coffee-making facilities! You would not believe the number of top hotels we stayed in (I know, shut up!) that didn’t have a kettle or a coffee maker in the room. This would make my blood pressure rise, even if everything else was perfect. Is it just me that can’t do anything before the first coffee of the day (therefore going out of a hotel to get it is not an option!) and needs a nice cup of tea or herbal tea last thing at night (you don’t need to know how many hot drinks happen in between but suffice to say I am English!)? And tubs! Again, largely influenced by growing up in England, I am a huge bath lover and it upsets me that so many hotels rip them out these days in favour of shower cubicles big enough for about six people! When we came across a hotel with a bath I’d be in my element, especially after the huge amount of exploring we’d do on foot each day. And I have vowed not to move into a new place unless it has a bath. Our last home didn’t have one and even though it was perfect in almost every other way, the lack of bath still pained me. Taking baths is key to my mental health!

In one of my new favourite cities: Amsterdam
In one of my new favourite cities: Amsterdam

3. Technology is brilliant! Despite the fact that for most of the 5.5-month trip I’ve been running this blog with a massive nine-hour time difference and from various hotel rooms and my aunt’s coffee table, it has all gone remarkably well. Some people didn’t even realise I’d gone! Thanks to hotel WiFi, Skype, my trusty (and now quite battered MacBook Pro) and WordPress’ scheduling function, I have been able to do almost everything I needed to on the go, juggling work with sightseeing and family and friend time. I couldn’t have done it without my trusty editorial assistant Olivia back at home on the ground in Sydney (as well as the people I outsource my ad sales and tech support to and trust implicitly). She has been a lifesaver, attending events I obviously couldn’t, writing and being an all round organised superstar. You know what though? I can’t wait to work full-time again and to not have to consider time zones! Being at my own desk is going to make me feel so much more organised and calm! The blog has continued to grow while I’ve been traveling and this is more than I could have hoped for.

With Mr Francis in Barcelona
With Mr Francis in Barcelona

4. The people in your life are the most important thing. Of course, I already knew this, but this trip just reinforced that. I feel so incredibly lucky to have friends and family who love me on both sides of the world, in the UK (where I lived until I was 26) and here in Sydney. It really is overwhelming. I left England last week with such mixed feelings of sadness to leave and happiness to be coming back to my Australian friends and in-laws, knowing I’ll return before too long.  You couldn’t really ask for more. An absolute highlight was getting my “little” sister (who is not a fan of flying) on a plane for the first time in years for a family trip to Berlin.

5. I have so much more to see in my own home country. We planned to see loads of the UK but ran out of time after spending a month in the States and taking countless side trips to Europe. Our last trip was to Scotland, where we visited Edinburgh, Inverness, Loch Ness, the Isle of Skye and a few other places in between. Exotic it was not. Sunny, it was not either! But it was beautiful and rugged and vast and I loved it! I really want to see more of England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales and share that with my Aussie husband, so on future trips “home” we intend to do just that. You know what they say about not appreciating what’s on your doorstep!

6. My marriage is pretty great. Spending 5.5 months 24/7 with any one person is never going to be easy, but we managed not to kill each other. In fact, we did much better than that. What a great first year of marriage we are having. Before you know it, it will be October and our first wedding anniversary!

Thanks to everyone who has taken an interest in our trip for your kind words on Instagram in particular. I hope you have enjoyed sharing our once-in-a-lifetime adventure!

Damian and I in the middle of nowhere in Scotland. A rare moment without rain!
Damian and I in the middle of nowhere in Scotland. A rare moment without rain!

It is great to be back. I’d love to see some of you at the events I’m taking part in with Jason Grant at the new West Elm Chatswood this Saturday and West Elm Chapel Street in Melbourne, next Saturday 6 September. Please RSVP on the stores’ Facebook pages (Chatswood and Chapel Street) if you’d like to attend. Hope to see you there!

You can read some of my travel pieces and hotel reviews from the trip over on the Expedia blog.

Categories
Bedrooms Expert Tips Travel

8 interiors ideas to steal from hotel rooms

I’ve done a fair bit of traveling lately, as you may have noticed (I know, I know, understatement!).

We’ve been lucky enough to stay in some amazing hotels recently. Here are just a few of them.

It has got me thinking about what makes a great hotel room design and how many of these features can be replicated at home to create that hotel or sanctuary feel, or even just a touch of everyday luxury.

I’ve shared my top eight ideas to steal from hotel rooms on the Haymes Paint blog this week.

Enjoy!

All the above hotels can be booked through Expedia.

Categories
Travel

Addict Abroad: The College Hotel, Amsterdam

On our trip to Amsterdam last month, we stayed in a really cool coverted school called, not surpisingly, The College Hotel! But it was much more stylish and comfortable than the name might suggest!

college hotel amsterdam

I love a bit of hotel luxury but I’m more interested in boutique accommodation than the predictability of international hotel chains. The College ticked all my important boxes: interesting interiors, a very large and comfortable bed, friendly and attentive (but not over the top) staff, coffee-making facilities (don’t roll your eyes, caffeine is important!), free wifi and a full size tub!

Sadly, there was no snow on our visit but the sunshine was very welcome!

With just 40 rooms, the four-star hotel feels intimate and cosy. I can’t fault the location, 15 minutes door to door by tram from Centraal Station in the leafy, quiet and fashionable Zuid (south) area, and even closer to the museums.

Read the full review on the Expedia blog.

Read more about what we got up to and what we recommend in this great city, in the Interiors Addict’s Guide to Amsterdam.