Hotel Q! by GRAFT
The international architectural firm GRAFT designed the Hotel Q! in Berlin, Germany.

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Project description from GRAFT:
Hotels become home through time spent within. For a short while they provide visitors a world where new identities can be inhabited; they permit a new telling of each individual story and enable a taste of the future. Hotels have the ability to seduce, to experiment with old habits and inspire new rituals.
Around the corner from the buzzing Kurfürstendamm strip, GRAFT designed a hotel landscape that challenges the classical spatial canon through the folding of topographical structures. With a tectonic logic, a folded horizontal landscape distorts and creates hybrid zones with double functional occupancies. An oblique object is simultaneously a separating wall and usable furniture. The lifted floor is surface for circulation or the beginning of a space that has emerged from underneath the skin of the building.
The flow of this inside landscape creates generous spatial connections rather than a typical dissection into multiple singular spaces. The topographical treatment of the design problem maximizes versatility of program and creates a continuous flow of form and space. The visitor will discover a narrative that departs from conventional perceptual experience and allows for ambiguous readings of the space.
The inhabitant becomes a participant in this landscape, changing his interaction with architecture and furniture by ‘walking up the walls’ in order to take a seat and perch above the distinguished crowd. Beds seamlessly blend into bathtubs offering themselves like hot springs bubbling up from the ground, so that a visitor may slow down and dream with his eyes wide open.
For the motives on the ceiling within in rooms we collaborated with photographer Christian Thomas.
Visit the GRAFT website – here.
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Michael McTigue on 16 Feb 2011 at 11:07 am #
It’s like the future called from 2003.
anita on 17 Feb 2011 at 11:23 am #
Why is it remaining me the well known design of the good old Trabant logo from the end of fifties?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trabant
Lots of redundant lines, waste of space…..