ABSTRACT

This series investigates the historical, theoretical and practical aspects of interiors. The volumes in the Interior Architecture series can be used as handbooks for the practitioner and as a critical introduction to the history of material culture and architecture.

Hotels occupy a particular place in popular imagination. As a place of exclusive sociability and bohemian misery, a site of crime and murder and as a hiding place for illicit liaison, the hotel has embodied the dynamism of the metropolis since the eighteenth century.

This book explores the architectural significance of hotels throughout history and how their material construction has reflected and facilitated the social and cultural practices for which they are renowned. Contemporary developments in the planning and design of hotels are addressed through a series of interviews and case studies.

Illustrated throughout, this book is an innovative and important contribution to architectural and interior design theory literature.

part |118 pages

Introduction

chapter |46 pages

Beyond the Lobby

Setting the stage for modernity –the cosmos of the hotel

chapter |10 pages

Learning from Los Angeles

Hollywood hotel lobbies

chapter |13 pages

The Architectonics of the Hotel Lobby

The norms and forms of a public–private figure

chapter |14 pages

Shifting Spaces

chapter |16 pages

Tracing Tracks

Illusion and reality at work in the lobby

part |113 pages

Case Studies

chapter |6 pages

The Ritz, Paris

Looking to eighteenth-century France through the lens of nineteenth-century historicism for a twentieth-century hotel lobby

chapter |4 pages

Strand Palace Hotel, London

chapter |6 pages

Imperial Hotel, Tokyo

chapter |4 pages

Grand Hotel Gooiland, 1936

chapter |6 pages

Watergate Hotel

chapter |7 pages

The Amsterdam Hilton Hotel Old Amsterdam's Little America

Hugh Maaskant, with F. W. De Vlaming and H. Salm (1958–62) Apollolaan 138, Amsterdam Oud- Zuid, the Netherlands

chapter |6 pages

The War Lobby of Prora Kdf Seebad on Rügen

For 20,000 people, by Clemens Klotz (1936–9)

chapter |7 pages

Exploding the Lobby Hyatt Regency, Atlanta

John Portman and Associates, 1967

chapter |8 pages

The Viru Hotel, Tallinn Modernist in Form, Late Socialist in Content

John Portman and Associates, 1967

chapter |8 pages

Hotel Il Palazzo Venetian Blind in Fukuoka

Aldo Rossi (1986–9)