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Design Designers Interiors Addict Travel

Parisian grit meets glamour in new Sydney hotel with rooftop bar

Bursting with character, Darlinghurst’s The Strand Hotel has completed the final phase of its multi-level restoration. The 99-year-old pub with the new rooftop bar and 17-bedroom hotel is now open. Creating a boutique refuge in the heart of Sydney’s CBD, The Strand offers sophistication with a mix of well curated French style.

The project was overseen by George Gorrow, co-founder of cult denim brand Ksubi, with principal architect Tom de Plater of Public Hospitality and Public Design Studio as creative director.

A contemporary blend of Parisian elegance and bohemian spirit, The Strand Rooftop is an idyllic open escape for both hotel guests and locals alike to soak up the afternoon sun underneath the kaleidoscope awning or watch the city at dusk, lit up with the glow of festoon lights. The rooftop offers a playful and vibrant mix of colourful textures, warm timber and lush verdant landscaping that encloses the intimate space.

“We’ve designed the rooftop to provide an unexpected and charming escape amongst the anonymity of William Street, with a deliberate strong contrast to the aesthetic experienced through the brooding texture and materials of the hotel rooms and bistro below” says Tom.

The bar serves its signature drinks, the French Ginger Mule and Thyme & Basil Daiquiri, alongside a menu of light dishes such as tuna tartare and fried shallot with sesame crackers, corn and gruyere croquettes, fried chicken with pickles and hot sauce and the Rooftop toastie with leg ham, mustard and pickles.

The rooftop will also host a series of live entertainment and weekly DJs each Friday and Saturday from 6pm to midnight and 4pm to 10pm on Sundays.

Describing The Strand Hotel as a drink, George wants the hotel to feel like a dirty martini; classic, with a twist. “The Strand has been designed with the intimacy and personal service of a boutique hotel, creating a community hub of likeminded people, that makes you want to return again and again. My purpose is for the character of the hotel to grow and continue to build over time, just as if you were building your own home.”

The Strand’s 17 boutique hotel rooms with refined, contemporary interiors feature crisp white linens, rattan bedheads, deep green finishings and contrasting dark floorboards. With five different guest rooms to choose from, starting at $199 a night for a king single through to $359 for a deluxe queen, each calm oasis is filled with considered essentials that will keep guests both pampered and plugged-in.

As guests enter from the bustling William Street, they will be welcomed through to a charismatic hotel house of Parisan sensibility where grit meets glamour and dark black surfaces paint a masculine edge to contrast the refined furnishings and warm cream textures of the walls, showcasing the history and character of the building.

The bistro

The architectural design has been born off the history of the site with a winding staircase taking guests up to a two-story labyrinth of winding halls, where George has hand selected Australian photographers such as Simon Lekius, Denniela Rache, Chris Searl and Domonic Rawl to adorn the walls.

Meanwhile on the ground floor, The Strand Bistro is bolstered by a playful sense of mischief, drawing cues from turn-of-the-century Paris, with a modern laidback interpretation of French cuisine. Spoons of beluga caviar sit proudly alongside humble steak frites and duck leg pie served with grilled broccolini, mash and gravy and baguettes with cultured butter. Culinary director Nick Mahlook has designed the Bistro menu to hero seasonal Australian produce while the extensive drinks list boasts an impressive line-up of French and Australian wines, aperitifs, cocktails and beers and a 49 strong whisky list.

The Strand Bistro, Hotel and Rooftop are now all open for bookings.

The Strand | 99 William Street Darlinghurst, NSW 2010

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Designers Travel

Little National Sydney hotel combines design efficiency and luxury

Nestled above Sydney’s Wynyard station, overlooking the CBD streets, DOMA Group enlisted award-winning architecture and interior design firm, Bates Smart to create a modern approach to accommodation at Little National Sydney.

The theme of natural light and efficiency of space is evident in every considered detail of the guest rooms. The floor to ceiling window draws guests toward the bespoke super king-sized bed, which cleverly incorporates charging ports, television and lighting.

These rooms – although small – don’t compromise on comfort or luxury, as their resourceful design and clever floor plan fit every feature of a high-end hotel into a compact space, without overwhelming or crowding the area. Additionally, the rooms are very reasonably priced considering their amazing location – right in the heart of Sydney.

This full use of the space continues with the joinery design – to minimise bulkiness, the joinery has been crafted to look at one with the furniture and welcome the natural light through the window.

“Little National Sydney’s design focuses on providing everything you need, but nothing that you don’t,” says Guy Lake, director at Bates Smart and the creative force behind the hotel’s architecture. “We wanted to ensure this hotel felt refined and understated, without compromising on quality and space.”

While the property draws inspiration from its inner-city location, the compact, urban site provided a new set of challenges for the Bates Smart design team. Placed directly on top of transport infrastructure, the building is supported via a steel frame structure; an innovative solution to the constraints of its location.

This exterior features a simple linear form with soft curved corners, creating a seamless connection with outside. Horizontal bands double as sunshades, a subtle nod to the previous transport house, harmonising with the heritage context of the building.

The hotel’s communal guest areas are the real hero of the property; light-filled and generous in size, the spaces have been designed as an experience in their own right. The spectacular open plan rooftop with double height ceilings features an expansive library work-space, exclusive bar, and custom-built fireplace with intimate lounge seating.

The indoor-outdoor setting foregrounds the natural world against the stunning Sydney skyline, creating the feel of a private oasis – while still within walking distance of the CBD.

“We are so pleased to have crafted the Little National Sydney for DOMA,” says designer Hayden Crawford, who led the Bates Smart interior design team. “It’s a fresh and exciting offer for Sydney – especially the rooftop, which will be a destination like no other in the city. It still feels like a Little National hotel, but it creates an oasis in Sydney’s dense urban landscape.”

For more on the Little National Sydney

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Architecture Design

Little Albion Guest House: Sydney’s hottest new hotel?

In the race to create Australia’s most dazzling hotel interior, the baton was passed recently to a new boutique establishment in Sydney’s Surry Hills, the Little Albion Guest House. Formerly a convent and boarding house, the three level space was dark, dilapidated and fronted onto one of Sydney’s dodgier streets but all that is a distant memory with the hotel destined to become one of the city’s coolest establishments.

Reception
Reception – the eggplant leather sunken lounge & pendant light evoke the 1970’s

“The hotel occupies a tiny North-South oriented urban infill site in a densely built urban environment, and hence it is deprived of natural sunlight. It is sandwiched between two heritage buildings – a former Presbyterian church to the West, which is now a hip commercial office building, and a former school hall to the East, which is now a mixed-use apartment building. All three buildings form part of a heritage conservation area,” says the project’s architect Terence Yong.

The hotel is sandwiched between an office building and former convent
The hotel is sandwiched between an office building and former church

“We introduced new internal plans and guest room layouts whilst retaining and amplifying the existing building’s unique heritage features, and reinstating its lost features. This results in new, character-themed guest rooms that eschew formulaic interiors – they feature a cool mix of heritage and contemporary details that are true to their own DNA and that of Surry Hills,” says Terence.

The sunken lounge in the lobby
The sunken leather lounge in the lobby is a fabulous communal space

Designed by Connie Alessi and Cressida Kennedy, the interiors are truly spectacular – opulent and elegant, they haven’t left a detail to chance and manage to combine art deco and seventies elements with aplomb.

The communal honour bar
The 24 hour communal honour bar is a stunning feature

The 35 guest rooms feature bespoke detailing such as custom designed art deco inspired door hardware and solid walnut bedheads, green onyx desks, leather desk chairs and steel and brass open wardrobes.

Guest room
Guest room

These unexpected gold tiles in the bathroom evoke a Gustav Klimt painting.
The unexpected gold tiles in the bathroom evoke a Gustav Klimt painting

The bathrooms were carved from solid marble blocks and feature custom brass tapware, bespoke designed vanity frames with Elba Stone tops and custom art deco inspired mirrors. Hand-painted Moroccan feature wall tiles round out the eclectic mix.

Guest bathroom
Guest bathroom

“The interiors remind one of the different eras that the existing heritage building has gone through thanks to its art deco, mid-century and retro-inspired spaces. The portraits in the stairwell of the building remind one of the once significant figures in the local area history too,” says Terence.

Guest room
Guest room

Guest bathroom
Guest bathroom

Custom carpet
Custom carpet lines the hallways

“The building is capped with a North-facing, beautifully landscaped secret rooftop garden with sweeping views of the city,” says Terence.

The rooftop garden
The rooftop garden

“The aesthetics are about engaging memory – making memory and provoking memory,” says Terence. I for one, can’t wait to make my own memories there on my next trip back to Sydney. Just, wow!

Photography: Tom Ferguson

For more | Gourmet Traveller 2018 best Australian hotels

Categories
Interiors Addict

The InterContinental Double Bay: opening soon & looking great

Restored rare white marble, Parisian-style balconies, a rooftop infinity pool with jaw-dropping views and a nautical-themed gin bar; these are just some of the many stunning design features of what is soon to become Sydney’s newest luxury hotel, the InterContinental Sydney Double Bay.

Rooftop Bar - resize With its doors opening in November, the former Ritz Carlton has been transformed by renowned architecture and design firm Bates Smart into a hotel that combines beautifully reinstated features of the original building on the outside and smart, contemporary and understated luxury on the inside.

Typical Guest Room resize With an overall design that combines a neutral palette, metallic finishings and splashes of pale blue and yellow tones, Bates Smart studio director Brenton Smith said the intention was to reinstate the glamour of the building.“The interior and exterior fabric of this iconic building provided an ideal canvas to overlay a design which engages with the European characteristics of the architecture, while the unique location enabled us to take references from the stunning and iconic bay.” And boy did they succeed, with the pièce de résistance of the transformation being the rooftop pool and lounge with a spectacular panoramic vista of the bay. Limestone split rock walls housing inlaid artefacts and curios, striped day beds and oversized Turkish pots lend a Mediterranean air to the space, framed by private cabanas.

Presidential Suite_Lounge resize The InterContinental Sydney Double Bay features 140 guest rooms including 14 suites. If you’re keen to be one of the first to experience it, book into one of those gorgeous rooms here!