ZANG'S

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London, United Kingdom
Architect, MA Interior Design, London Metropolitan University

Monday 21 February 2011

CASE STUDY: LANDFORM-SUN MOON LAKE

http://inhabitat.com/sun-moon-lakes-green-roofed-visitor-center-is-harmonious-in-its-surroundings/

Sunday 20 February 2011

CASE STUDY: Sami Rintala's Spa Boat


http://www.sackda.fr/2010/01/12/the-spa-boat/

Combining two of our favourite pursuits in one luxury package, the Spa Boat – designed by Norway-based, Finnish architect Sami Rintala – brings an added dimension to the standard spa weekend.

Taking a stripped-down 1950s fishing boat as the skeleton of his project, Rintala adapted the bare woods and curving walls as integral design elements of his vision.

DESIGNED BY RINTALA http://www.rintalaeggertsson.com/0.html


http://www.wallpaper.com/gallery/travel/the-spa-boat/17051589/25019#25033

Combining two of our favourite pursuits in one luxury package, the Spa Boat – designed by Norway-based, Finnish architect Sami Rintala – brings an added dimension to the standard spa weekend.

Taking a stripped-down 1950s fishing boat as the skeleton of his project, Rintala adapted the bare woods and curving walls as integral design elements of his vision.

The depths of the hold, where tons of North Sea fish were once stored, now plays host to a wood-clad spa area - featuring a Turkish Hammam, (complete with the obligatory steambath, bath tub and hot tiles) Zen lounge with wood burning fireplace and a sauna surrounded by panoramic windows.

The Scandi-inspired luxury continues on deck, with a hot tub designed for mid-winter Aurora Borealis gazing, whilst a seven meter-high diving board provides release for those with more frenetic agendas.

Boasting three, well-proportioned guest bedrooms, the Spa Boat can play host to as many as twelve guests at a time, whilst the on-board kitchen – which brings to mind many a pared-down Scandinavian eatery – comes complete with a host of professional chefs.

Moored in the Arctic city of Tromsø and unveiled at the end of last year, the Spa Boat offers an authentic – if wintry - take on the spa experience.


CASE STUDY: THERME VALS


http://www.therme-vals.ch/

«Mountain, stone, water - building in the stone, building with stone, into the mountain, building out of the mountain, being inside the mountain - how can the implications and the sensuality in the association of these words be interpreted, architecturally? The whole concept was designed by following up these questions; so that it all took form step by step.»

Peter Zumthor

MATERIAL AND PRESENCE

The architecture of the spa complex
from Peter Zumthor


The new thermal spa, formally opened in December 1996 and already listed by the Canton Graubünden as a protected building in 1998, is a self-willed construction set into the mountain slope. It replaced the bathing facilities of the hydro hotel (built between 1962 and 1970) which were too cramped and in need of repair. The new separate spa building is built in Valser gneiss. Stone by stone. A massive element set in to the gradient of the slope and dovetailed with the flank of the mountain. The great slabs of the roof are grassed over: sections of flower studded alpine meadow.

The architectonic language of the new spa has nothing to do with the design of the hotel complex built in the sixties. It is more profound underlining the essential in the context of a new interpretation of the constructional challenge; emphasising the special relationship of the new Therme to the primordial forces of nature and the geology of the mountainscape, reacting to the impressive topography of the valley and the position of the warm spring which rises out of the primeval mountain just behind the new spa.

The lengthy projection process culminating in the finished artefact of the spa was initially a process of playful discovery, of a patient and enjoyable quest far beyond the architectonic ideals. The fascination for the mystic qualities of a world of stone within the mountain, for darkness and light, for light reflections on the water or in the steam saturated air, pleasure in the unique acoustics of bubbling water in a world of stone, a feeling for warm stones and naked skin, the ritual of bathing - these notions guided us. The intention to work with these elements, to implement them consciously and to lend them a special form was there from the outset. Only much later, when the preliminary plans were almost finished, did we visit the old baths in Budapest, Istanbul and Bursa and then understood better where these archaic images had come from; archaic images apparently slumbering in a virtually archetypal awareness.

Our spa is no funfair with the latest technical gadgets, water games, jets, sprays and slides, but focuses on the quiet, primary experience of bathing, cleansing, relaxing in the water, the feeling of water all round the body, at various temperatures and in various settings, physical contact with primordial stone.

http://www.creativeclass.com/creative_class/tag/therme-vals/

The Therme Vals is a project of resistance, opposing the architecture of spectacle. Designed by Swiss architect, Peter Zumthor, the thermal baths at Vals is both a meditation on the essential elements – earth, wind, water & fire – and an economic initiative to drive tourism. The Therme Vals embodies the potential that architecture has to calm the body and mind in an ever increasing world of hyper speed, space and communications.

Nestled in the Swiss Alps, 100 miles South of Zurich with a population of less than 1,000, Vals is known for its spring water which is sold throughout Switzerland. In the 1980s, when a local hotel owner went bankrupt, the village stepped in and purchased the hotels, hoping to transform one of them into a hydrotherapy center. The village then commissioned Peter Zumthor to design the baths which would not only be an amenity for the community but an attraction for visitors.

Since its opening in 1996, the village has seen a dramatic increase in the number of tourists making tourism Vals’ primary source of income accounting for 2/3 of the local economy. Architecture aficionados and travelers alike are drawn to this magnificent building to experience how the architecture has established a dialogue with the powerful landscape that surrounds it and the healing qualities of the thermal bath water.

The design creates a series of spaces that are organized within and between structural box columns of concrete, faced in indigenous Valser quartzite. The roof is a system of thin cantilevered concrete slabs that are supported by the box columns. The roof slabs do not touch, allowing the natural light to dramatically enter the baths through linear glass skylights.

As you enter the baths, you pass through an acrylic curtain, into a world meant to delight the senses. It seems paradoxical that one of the most masterful works of contemporary architecture should have such an understated and unusual entrance.

The baths, ranging from a tepidarium that is 40 degrees Celsius to a much cooler outdoor pool, are organized in a complex labyrinth of chambers inside and between the structural column-rooms. The concrete inside the tepidarium is integrally colored a deep red.

The Therme Vals is more than just great architecture that can be appreciated in relation to the unbuilt Danteum project by the Italian modernist Giuseppi Terragni. It also demonstrates how a small village can be creative and entrepreneurial. The Therme Vals offers a seductive shift from the paradigm of the Bilbao effect where architecture is a vehicle for economic health through spectacle and display to architecture as a space of desire – for the engagement of mind, body and soul, and community – and an equally powerful driver of local economy.

For more information on the Therme Vals, please visit:
http://www.therme-vals.ch/bad/index_en.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therme_Vals

Photographs taken from Flickr account members: sim and Dee Adams


CASE STUDY: RACZ THERMAL BATH



http://raczthermalbath.com/racz-thermal-bath-factsheet.pdf

The hotel boasts its own Turkish bath, whihc dates from the Imperial Habsburg era in 1550 and is listed under UNESCo World Heritage. The historical facilities have been restored as an 8000 sq m modern luxury Thermal and Day Spa which includes 11 pools, relaxation aeras and saunas(including a Finsh Sauna) and a sunbathing terrace. In addition, the Spa has 21 treatment rooms offering the very latest and traditional therapies, cosmetic rooms for special beauty treatments, a hairdressing salon and dedicated VIP section.

An elegant new hotel wit a stunning comtemporary design, The Racz Hotel & Thermal Spa has 67 spacious and stylish rooms ranging from Deluxe and Executive to Suites. Most of the rooms and suites offer exceptional views of the Royal palace, the historical Thermal Spa or the park.

Saturday 19 February 2011

DESIGN FOR PRODUCTION







http://www.designbuild-network.com/features/feature91546/feature91546-5.html


Taking Refuge: Architects Build Small Spaces Exhibition Review

http://www.contemporist.com/category/interiors/page/2/

http://www.contemporist.com/2010/10/27/dentsu-london-office-interior-by-essentia-designs/#more-21984

http://www.contemporist.com/2010/10/22/building-fashion-at-hl23-by-richard-chai-snarkitecture/#more-21825

http://www.contemporist.com/2010/08/05/rolls-by-chikara-ohno-of-sinato/#more-17894

CASE STUDY 2: HershamGolf Course Underground Hotel


http://www.reardonsmith.com/projects/hersham.html

The planning application has recently been lodged to build a world-first among five-star hotels, designed by ReardonSmith. The proposal is for a luxury hotel and spa that will be mainly underground at Hersham Golf Club in Surrey, England. Located within London’s Green Belt, just one level of public area is at grade, concealed by a living green roof that mimics the undulating golf course and merges it into the surrounding landscape. Strict planning guidelines led to the 198 guestrooms being placed below ground, constructed in three “rings” around 800m2 gardens that allow light to permeate the guestroom facade.

Ground-level public spaces frame the golf course and landscape to create an unparalleled, luxurious dining, hotel and golf club experience. The entire development is set back from local residential areas and is positioned within an enclave of existing woodland to obscure it from the local residents’ view. With a gross area of approximately 20,000m2, ReardonSmith’s hotel and golf club scheme returns open space to the greenbelt and represents less built-up hard surface than the existing clubhouse and car parking, with the latter relocated to an underground garage.

A new access road, carefully woven into the terrain, will better manage traffic flow, while extensive re-vegetation and improvements to public footpaths will further enhance the locale. Combined heat and power generation, heat exchangers, ground source heat pumps, grey water recycling and rain water harvesting will minimise the building’s carbon footprint and significantly reduce resource demands in comparison to conventional five-star hotels.


http://www.designbuild-network.com/projects/hershamgolfcourseund/


On 9 April 2010, international leisure company Arkin Group Developments submitted an application to the UK's Elmbridge Borough Council to build the world's first underground five-star boutique hotel and spa beneath Hersham Golf Course in Surrey, UK.

The conceptual design of the Hersham Golf Course underground hotel and development was unveiled by ReardonSmith Architects in December 2009. Claudel Venture, part of the Arkin Group, will carry out the hotel and spa development.

The company acquired the 108-acre Hersham Golf Club in 2008. The project scheme will see a gross area development of about 22,107m² and an additional 10,194m² car parking area. The project is estimated to cost £72m.

Hersham Golf Course facilities

The underground hotel will have 198 rooms, a spa and subterranean parking facilities. The development will also include improvements to the golf course, a new club house, bars, restaurants and business and conference facilities.

Organic master plan

ReardonSmith Architects was appointed to design the hotel and spa at the Hersham Golf Club according to London's Green Belt. The architects conceptualised an innovative subterranean development by integrating the golf facilities, a five-star hotel and spa into a single organic composition.

The proposed plans include replacement of the existing surface buildings at the golf course with the subterranean structures and landscape development.

The existing club house and above-ground parking will be replaced by an underground parking area and decrease about one third of hard surface build-up. The project will improve the layout and visual attraction of the whole golf course.

If the project receives approval from Elmbridge Borough Council, improvement of local transport infrastructure with the construction of a new access road from Esher Road will also be undertaken. A new roundabout will be built on Esher Road between Lammas Lane and Molesey Road, connecting the access road. The infrastructure upgrades will decrease congestion on Assher Road and improve safety and traffic flow to the golf course site.

Design and structure

The underground five-star hotel and spa will blend into the natural surroundings. It will not only preserve but also improve the Green Belt of the course area by 33%.

The hotel and spa will be concealed by a plush, green living roof and reflect the undulating golf course landscape. The hotel's guestrooms will be built in three rings below the ground level and around the sunken garden courtyards. The 800m² landscaped courtyards will allow natural light into the rooms through a glazed façade.

Public spaces will be visible on the ground level with restaurants and leisure spaces. The majority of car parking will be below ground level. The golf club will use less light emission techniques to reduce the lighting level.

The entire development will be within the existing woodland enclave and out of sight of local residents. The golf course, landscape and one level of public area will be the main visible forms of the hotel and golf club development.

On 9 April 2010, international leisure company Arkin Group Developments submitted an application to the UK's Elmbridge Borough Council to build the world's first underground five-star boutique hotel and spa beneath Hersham Golf Course in Surrey, UK.

The conceptual design of the Hersham Golf Course underground hotel and development was unveiled by ReardonSmith Architects in December 2009. Claudel Venture, part of the Arkin Group, will carry out the hotel and spa development.

The company acquired the 108-acre Hersham Golf Club in 2008. The project scheme will see a gross area development of about 22,107m² and an additional 10,194m² car parking area. The project is estimated to cost £72m.

Hersham Golf Course facilities

The underground hotel will have 198 rooms, a spa and subterranean parking facilities. The development will also include improvements to the golf course, a new club house, bars, restaurants and business and conference facilities.

Organic master plan

"The Hersham Golf Course Underground Hotel project is estimated to cost £72m."

ReardonSmith Architects was appointed to design the hotel and spa at the Hersham Golf Club according to London's Green Belt. The architects conceptualised an innovative subterranean development by integrating the golf facilities, a five-star hotel and spa into a single organic composition.

The proposed plans include replacement of the existing surface buildings at the golf course with the subterranean structures and landscape development.

The existing club house and above-ground parking will be replaced by an underground parking area and decrease about one third of hard surface build-up. The project will improve the layout and visual attraction of the whole golf course.

If the project receives approval from Elmbridge Borough Council, improvement of local transport infrastructure with the construction of a new access road from Esher Road will also be undertaken. A new roundabout will be built on Esher Road between Lammas Lane and Molesey Road, connecting the access road. The infrastructure upgrades will decrease congestion on Assher Road and improve safety and traffic flow to the golf course site.

Design and structure

The underground five-star hotel and spa will blend into the natural surroundings. It will not only preserve but also improve the Green Belt of the course area by 33%.

"ReardonSmith Architects was appointed to design the hotel and spa according to London's Green Belt."

The hotel and spa will be concealed by a plush, green living roof and reflect the undulating golf course landscape. The hotel's guestrooms will be built in three rings below the ground level and around the sunken garden courtyards. The 800m² landscaped courtyards will allow natural light into the rooms through a glazed façade.

Public spaces will be visible on the ground level with restaurants and leisure spaces. The majority of car parking will be below ground level. The golf club will use less light emission techniques to reduce the lighting level.

The entire development will be within the existing woodland enclave and out of sight of local residents. The golf course, landscape and one level of public area will be the main visible forms of the hotel and golf club development.

Environmental impact

Hersham underground hotel and spa will be a sustainable development and built to reduce the overall carbon footprint.

"Hersham hotel and spa will be built to reduce the overall carbon footprint."

The development will include a combined heat and power generation installation, grey-water recycling facilities, ground-source heat pumps and heat exchangers, and rainwater harvesting.

The eco-friendly systems will decrease demand for resources compared with a traditional five-star hotel.

Golf course landscaping

The upgrade of the golf course will include plantation of additional indigenous shrubs and trees on a wider site. The new access road and improved public footpaths will be integrated into the existing natural surroundings with extensive re-vegetation.


The development will include a combined heat and power generation installation, grey-water recycling facilities, ground-source heat pumps and heat exchangers, and rainwater harvesting.

The eco-friendly systems will decrease demand for resources compared with a traditional five-star hotel.

Golf course landscaping

The upgrade of the golf course will include plantation of additional indigenous shrubs and trees on a wider site. The new access road and improved public footpaths will be integrated into the existing natural surroundings with extensive re-vegetation.

"Hersham hotel and spa will be built to reduce the overall carbon footprint."

http://www.e-architect.co.uk/england/hersham_golf_club_hotel.htm

Claudel Venture Holdings, part of the international leisure company Arkin Group, has today published its plans for a 5-star boutique hotel and luxury spa at Hersham Golf Club, Surrey. The unique, sustainable and innovative subterranean development, designed by international hotel architects ReardonSmith, will include high quality restaurants and bars, business facilities and improvements to the golf course along with a brand new clubhouse.

Mr Cahit Atasoy, CEO of Arkin Group Developments, said:

"Our vision is to create a stunning boutique hotel and spa destination that will be truly unique and prestigious. It will blend into the natural woodland setting and enhance and increase the level of green landscape. At the same time the Golf Club will be improved and remain an inclusive and open amenity for the local community."

Sidharth Bhatia, Project Leader, ReardonSmith Architects, said:

"Our aim is to design a five-star hotel that is commercially viable while being sensitive to the demands of the ecosystem. Through the combination of innovative design and intelligent building technology we are replacing existing surface buildings with subterranean ones and, in effect, visually returning land to the Green Belt."

Hersham Golf Club stands in an area of natural woodland and the proposals respect and reflect this existing beauty. The 200 plus room hotel has been designed to blend into the surrounding environment, with the guest rooms below ground level set around beautiful sunken garden and courtyard spaces and a living green roof that reflects the natural landscape. The total area of green landscape on the site will be increased, returning areas of 'hard-standing' paved area back to grass and trees.

In upgrading the golf course and the wider site, additional trees and shrubs will be planted, using native species in keeping with the local landscape to protect and enhance its current natural character. Innovative lighting techniques will significantly reduce the levels of light emitted from the golf club. The vast majority of the car parking will be underground, out of sight.

As part of the development, there will also be major improvements to the local transport infrastructure. A new roundabout on Esher Road will be built between the existing Molesey Road and Lammas Lane roundabouts, which will increase safety by reducing speeds along Esher Road. The roundabout will also link to the dedicated new access road serving the Club and the hotel. These infrastructure upgrades will help to alleviate the current congestion around Assher Road and better manage the flow of traffic onto the site. The new road, like the rest of the development, will be integrated into the existing natural setting. It will be hidden from view by the design of the landscape and the use of the latest materials to 'green' the road and blend it in with the surroundings will also be considered.

Hersham Golf Club Underground Hotel image / information received 041209




CASE STUDY: UNDERGROUND SPA

http://www.carmodygroarke.com/projects/residential/053.html

The client's brief was to create a place for exercise and relaxation beneath the a nineteenth century mansion, as part of an extensive renovation to create a new private family home.
Their brief was clear - a space to be discovered underground, and of entirely different character to the house above.
As its most fundamental principle the space, excavated from the bedrock of the site, seeks punches of daylight from wherever possible at ground level. Underground, the simple sculptural treatment of stone, plaster and water are given definition by a subtle mixture of natural and artificial light. The main stone-lined space contains a 17 metre long, stone-lined swimming pool and is surrounded by smaller stone blocks containing treatment rooms - sauna, spa and gymnasium.
The undulating form of the plaster ceiling which hovers above the pool, conceals all the technical equipment for the pool-space environment, revealing only a halo affect of daylight and artificial lighting.

Client: Private
Location Limerick, Ireland
Status: Completed November 2008
Photography: Christian Richters

SPA LIST

CASE STUDY : SANDERSON SPA HOTEL IN LONDON


http://www.morganshotelgroup.com/en-us/company/

As a follow up to St Martins Lane, Morgans Hotel Group opened Sanderson in London’s stylish Soho district in 2000.

This first of its kind “Urban Spa” is a magnificent landmark property with a spectacularly landscaped interior courtyard that opens to the sky and is surrounded by guestrooms.

The property combines modern and classic elements to create a one-of-a-kind oasis and refuge in the middle of bustling London. Set on the ground floor of Sanderson, Suka restaurant offers modern authentic Malaysian cuisine prepared with European sensibility in a relaxed and casual ethos.

The Purple Bar, with its veritable symphony of purples, lavenders and violets, is a chic and intimate lounge that has become one of London’s hottest gathering places. Sanderson’s agua spa has a peaceful, dreamy and almost cloud-like ambiance with its miles of diaphanous white curtains, 14 all-white treatment rooms, chill-out zone and mediation beds.

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http://www.metazone.co.uk/search.asp?station=Goodge%20Street

Located in North Soho, Sanderson is Ian Schrager's second London hotel designed by Philippe Starck, Sanderson is an urban oasis with Agua Spa (facials by Eve Lom), inner courtyard with a Japanese garden. Long bar Purple bar and Spoon+ (restaurant by Alain Ducasse) are the places everyone wants to see and be seen in. Come for the cure…

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http://www.hotel-online.com/News/PressReleases2000_2nd/Apr00_UrbanSpa.html

Ian Schrager and Philippe Starck Create Sanderson, Their Most Radical and Subversive Hotel to Date
NEW YORK - April 18, 2000--Continuing to lead the charge against the status quo, hotelier Ian Schrager has once again set off in a completely new direction. Close on the heels of the great success of St Martins Lane, his first London hotel, he has again teamed with Philippe Starck to create Sanderson, their most radical and subversive hotel to date.

Opening Tuesday, April 25 Sanderson is the first hotel of the Next Wave - a new archetype is born, and the bar for the entire industry is raised higher still. In a world where style is knocked off and mass-marketed at the speed of light, Schrager is keeping alive those most endangered of artistic species: experimentation, risk-taking, innovation and originality. Sanderson is all about charm, poetry, excess, glamour and elegance. It is an ironic combination - a balancing act - between extravagance and simplicity.

It is a hotel that gives you not only what you need, but what you want - what you desire. In Sanderson, Schrager has created a dynamic dreamscape - a lavish “Urban Spa” that is the first of its kind. Sanderson is a breakthrough hotel in the truest sense - a marked departure not only from the conventional hotel, but even more on the edge than Schrager’s previous groundbreaking hotels. Echoing the mood of today, it marks a return to extravagance and light-hearted fun, to a time when glamour held sway and opulence reigned supreme. Unlike the over-the-top ostentation of the 80’s, however, this is a “New Luxury” that is smart, pared down and tempered with a healthy dose of wit and irony. Simply put, Sanderson is a hotel with modern sex appeal.

All of Schrager’s hotels are like worlds unto themselves - they are separate realities - but never more so than with Sanderson. Set within one of the world’s most sophisticated and cosmopolitan cities, Sanderson is an “Oasis” - an antidote to minimalism and the rigors of urban living with spa-like qualities artfully integrated throughout. Ravishingly beautiful and surreal, where proportions are played with, where humorous Technicolor touches abound, where beautiful objects are placed in front of, between and just beyond layer upon layer of diaphanous curtains, where the separation between reality and fantasy has been purposely blurred, a dreamy and theatrical otherworld is created before your eyes. Reminiscent of a film by Cocteau or Resnais, the hotel is a bit like a movie set, and the script is the stuff of dreams.

Because of the building’s landmark status, Sanderson presented a unique opportunity. Instead of feeling confined or hamstrung by the need to integrate so many of the existing architectural elements into the overall design plan, Schrager and Starck embraced the challenge, and the hotel is clearly the richer for it. The classic 60’s murals and mosaics, when juxtaposed with a giant, out of proportion Louis XV armoire, a handcarved African chair or an etched Venetian mirror, add a new dimension of theatricality to the space. The result is a more layered and sophisticated environment that is totally original, unlike anything before it and impossible to categorize or define.

As you glide through the front doors and are immediately met by Salvador Dali’s curvaceous red lips sofa set against flowing sheer white curtains - you know that you have been utterly transported - that the dream has begun.

From the 18th-century silver silk opera curtains that dramatically drape the “Indoor/Outdoor Lobby,” to the front desk of large screen video monitors playing an ever-changing series of images by video artists from around the world, to a Louis XIV style sofa that seems conventional but for being covered in bright blue silk and stretched to a length of 35 feet - it is all part of the fun, the quirky, the surprising and fantastic fantasy.

Perhaps the most unexpected of all of Sanderson’s many pleasures is its interior
“Courtyard Garden” - a lushly landscaped private park that is open to the sky - providing a spectacular sanctuary that is unique in London. All the hotel’s major elements radiate from this central garden, and, because it is surrounded by floor to ceiling glass walls, it can be appreciated from any point within the Indoor/Outdoor Lobby. With its enormous flowering magnolia tree, fountains, mosaics, reflecting pool, and scores of potted trees and flowering plants - it serves as the hotel’s ultimate “piazza” - a serene and lovely place to meet, eat, drink, socialize or just relax. A sylvan gem set amidst the hustle and bustle of the city, the Courtyard Garden never fails to surprise and delight all who enter.

If the Courtyard Garden is Sanderson’s heart, then the enchanting new Agua Bathhouse is most assuredly its soul. A sybarite’s delight, the Bathhouse is like entering a cloud you may never want to leave. Its design is pure magic - all white, and light and ethereal. Its purpose is simple - to provide pampering, spiritual relief, and a sense of tranquility while catering to your health, beauty, well-being and fitness.

Conceived by Rita Norona Schrager, a former ballerina with the New York City Ballet, and Leila Fazel, a former dancer with the Dance Theater of Harlem, Agua combines ancient eastern and holistic traditions with modern technology to create an environment that is nurturing and restful. Like waking from a great dream, you emerge feeling relaxed, rejuvenated, and better than when you started.

Continuing the Schrager tradition of marrying cutting-edge style with the highest commitment to excellence in service and amenities, Sanderson has much to boast about in its new restaurant by Jeffrey Chodorow. Spoon+ at Sanderson is the ultimate expression of culinary freedom and sophistication. The original “mix and match” menu allows almost limitless possibilities and variations, orchestrated by one of the world’s greatest chefs, Alain Ducasse.

This breakthrough dining concept has been created with an emphasis on health and nutrition to permit patrons to, in effect, customize their own menu based upon what is important to them (low cholesterol, low fat, high protein, no carbohydrates, etc.) without sacrificing the pleasures of what dining out is all about. Combining the most traditional cooking methods with the most modern, including induction, steam, spit roasting, grilling, poaching, and wok, Spoon+ at Sanderson balances a respect for health with true gourmet cuisine.

Almost as varied as the menu’s choices are the number of settings in which to enjoy them - from the exquisite dining room, to the open-air private Courtyard Garden, to the “Long Bar,” an 80-foot long glowing onyx bar, to the privacy of your room.

The Guestrooms are quite possibly the most radical interpretation of a hotel room that has ever been attempted. There are no interior walls - instead the bathroom and dressing room are encased in a glowing floor-to-ceiling glass box. This box is wrapped in layers of luxurious silk curtains of varying opacity - all electronically controlled by the guest - allowing for privacy and variety when desired. Daring and drop-dead gorgeous, the rooms are infused with a frank sensuality and unparalleled softness.

Romantic, yet in a totally modern way - a silver leafed 19th century sleigh bed floats in the middle of the room, atop a rug that was inspired by a letter written by Voltaire and beneath a soothing landscape painting that is hung on the ceiling instead of the wall, all the better to help you drift off to a dream world of your own making. There is a tactile quality to all of the surfaces, whether the cool glass walls of the bathroom, the soft, silken hand of the bed linens, the sheer filminess of the curtains, or the thick wool carpet underfoot - there is simply an irresistible urge to touch everything. The rooms have a boudoir-like sensibility, an almost illicit quality that derives from their unabashed sense of luxury. In short, the rooms at Sanderson are extremely sexy.

“We are passionate about continuing to reinvent the hotel, coming up with breakthrough concepts and going off into uncharted territory,” says Ian Schrager, who with Steve Rubell opened the legendary Studio 54 in New York in the ‘70’s, and pioneered the Boutique Hotel in the 80’s. “Sanderson represents the first hotel of the Next Wave - a hotel for modern people that crave something original, different and magical. The words “spa,” “health,” and “wellness” get tossed around a lot these days, but when we thought about doing a true “Urban Spa” in London, we were serious about not merely paying lip service to this concept. We wanted to do something that’s never been done before - to create a completely integrated environment - one devoted to your physical, emotional and spiritual health - in an exquisitely beautiful setting, and all in the middle of one of the most cosmopolitan cities on earth. Whether in your room, the restaurant, Courtyard Garden or the Agua Bathhouse - the feeling evoked is one of genuine sanctuary...Come to London for the cure.”

In addition to St Martins Lane and Sanderson in London, Mr. Schrager will open Hudson in September 2000 on New York City’s stylish and world famous 57th Street. This magnificent landmark property, a former television studio, contains 1,000 rooms with rates starting at $95 USD per night, a truly spectacular public space that has ceiling heights of 40 feet, extensive fitness, recreational and spa facilities and a private outdoor garden park. This one of a kind gathering place embodies, refines and takes further the concept of “Cheap Chic” - first introduced by Schrager in 1990.

Sanderson is one of an expanding number of properties owned and operated by Ian Schrager Hotels (ISH), for which Mr. Schrager serves as chairman and chief executive officer. ISH now owns and operates Paramount, Morgans and Royalton in New York, Delano in Miami, Mondrian in Los Angeles and St Martins Lane and Sanderson in London. The company is currently in the process of developing the Hudson and Empire in New York, as well as Astor Place in Greenwich Village - the company’s first original building designed from the ground up in a unique collaboration by the world-renowned architects Rem Koolhaas and Herzog & de Meuron (their first project in New York) - as well as the Clift in San Francisco, Santa Barbara’s Miramar, and a hotel, apartment and urban entertainment complex in Buenos Aires. As well, ISH is currently working on a number of other property transactions in various stages of completion. With ISH, Ian Schrager will continue to vigorously pursue his strategy of developing multiple unique properties at various price points in international gateway cities in the United States, Europe, South America and around the world.