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HOTEL REVIEW


Mamilla. “Of course, I wanted to create an architectural signature, a liaison between these two different projects that are now part of the identity of the Alrov group,” says Lissoni. Stair treads in the duplex guestrooms that make up half the hotel’s inventory are also made of black steel. Together with the ample use of mirrors, glass balustrades and the geometric layouts of the Travertine marble in the bathrooms they make the guestrooms literally edgy. Glass balustrades might be a housekeeping challenge, so too the step up into guestrooms on lower floors, but they do make the best of the views from the enormous windows. This aspect coupled with the deep pile rug, running out across the dark smoked oak floorboards from underneath the Living Divani sofa, and a sumptuous bed throw help soften the room aesthetics. Contract teams from B&B Italia, Cassina and Poliform – Italian furniture


manufacturers with whom Lissoni has worked in the past – were involved here, and the precision of their workmanship is impressive. Guestroom doors open within millimeters of sliding cupboard doors. The same pair of sliding doors keeps the corridor entrance uncluttered but sliding out and over the front of each other means that only one cupboard can be opened at once. More accuracy is seen in the joins of glass, steel and wood, or the fit of unfeasibly thick bathroom doors, lined on the inside with marble.


The guestroom design is not without


fault.When desk chairs are drawn back for use in certain rooms one leg sits up on the thick carpet unless a very odd seating angle is adopted. Get up from the chair and even guests of average height will bump their head on a pendant lamp. There are no suitable towel rails or even hooks within the bathrooms and the bright yellow, freestanding metal


076 MARCH / APRIL 2012 WWW.SLEEPERMAGAZINE.COM


ABOVE: The Tunes restaurant, under the direction of celebrated Dutch chef Schilo van Coevorden eschews traditional fine dining in favour of local authentic dishes based on seasonally sourced products RIGHT: Piero Lissoni has created a succession of luminous spaces based around a soaring glass atrium lobby, into which he has interposed striking modern architectural elements


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