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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

QT Melbourne the latest design hotel to hit OZ

The seventh outpost for the luxuriously quirky designer hotel brand, QT Melbourne opened recently and, with its super stylish interiors, it’s sure to set tongues wagging. Located in the city’s luxury fashion precinct – an area known as the ‘Paris end,’ the hotel was designed by the acclaimed architect Angelo Candalepas, with interiors created by interior designer Nic Graham and architectural design specialist Shelley Indyk.

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Guest room

The hotel boasts handcrafted black steel, stone and timber that together create an industrial minimalist feel throughout the 188 guest rooms and 15 apartments. There are glamorous touches too though with a smattering of brass, bronze and splashes of vibrant colour.

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Feature staircase

One of the more memorable design aspects of the hotel is, funnily enough in this mod-con age, the staircase. “The decision to resurrect an old grand staircase feature, which traditionally always existed in luxury hotels is the stand out design element. It’s not a contemporary setting, but a striking aspect and focal point within the space,” says the hotel’s interior designer Nic Graham.

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Custom carpet runners line the hallways

The bold, colourful feel continues in the hallways via custom carpet runners designed by Shelley alongside Jo Wooley from Brintons. The effective concept is designed to look like paint being poured out into the hallways and guest rooms.

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The hotel also features a plethora of contemporary art, from a range of disciplines, in its public spaces and guest rooms. The vibrant commissions include pieces from Melbourne based artists Gabriella and Silvana Mangano, Grant Stevens, Claire Healy, Sean Cordeiro, Jennifer Steinkamp and street artist James Beattie. Janet Burchill and Jennifer McCamley’s ‘Interpretation of dreams’ is one of the hotel’s key works and features suspended spirals of neon light.

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Janet Burchill and Jennifer McCamley’s ‘Interpretation of dreams’

Rooms start at $220 per night (opening special), book your stay here.

Categories
Travel

The fabulous QT Sydney Hotel, where you can drink, dine and sleep in serious style

It’s official. I have a new favourite place in the CBD: the QT Sydney Hotel. Come to think of it, there aren’t many places I love in the city so that makes this even more exciting. The QT is my idea of the ultimate in design, atmosphere and comfort. I want to move in!

QT Sydney lobby
QT Sydney lobby

I was lucky enough to have a tour last week, but I’d already visited the bar and restaurant (Gowings) a couple of times. It’s like nowhere else I’ve ever been. I’ve stayed at a number of 4 and 5 star hotels and frankly, despite the quality and comfort, their cookie cutter beige-ness is always a bit predictable and disappointing. But this? This is something else!

The history and original features certainly help. QT, slap bang in the middle of the CBD and a stone’s throw from shopper’s paradise Westfield (and even closer to Topshop), melds together two of Sydney’s most prominent buildings: the State Theatre and the old Gowings department store. The amount of care and skill that has gone into weaving together these two buildings and preserving their historic features (some because they had to and some because they wanted to) is impressive. And this adds a whole extra layer of uniqueness that you simply couldn’t design.

Almost all the furniture is bespoke (QT Collection) but many of the decorator pieces have been brought in from around the world and even local op shops. There’s not a hint of beige, rather Yves Klein blue, magenta and citron. It’s dark in a good, cosy, dramatic way. Much of the art, curated by Amanda Love, is digital (some with its own soundtrack).