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Cheshire Architects used local Kiwi materials and craftwork for the interiors of this hotel in Auckland, New Zealand.
The 99-room The Hotel Britomart, which is located on Galway Street in downtown Auckland, involved the restoration of a century-old existing building and the construction of a new 10-storey block.
The interiors are designed to reflect the surrounding area’s mish-mash of the historic and the contemporary.
Inside the new brick-and-glass structure, the rooms are intended to resemble softly lit timber cabins with timber-clad walls and a basin tucked in the corner revealable by a hidden cavity slider.
Rooms come in three colour variations depending on their orientation to the sun and light levels.
There are also five rooftop penthouse suites, three of which have private terraces overlooking the harbour, designed in collaboration with Seattle-based Lucas Design Associates.
“The experience of staying in one of the typical hotel rooms is like staying at an elegant friend’s apartment, while the hotel suites emulate the warmth and comfort of a luxurious New Zealand lodge,” said Cheshire Architects.
“Despite the scale of a hotel project, nothing in the building is left untouched. Many bespoke objects were made for this hotel, such as the timber bedside lamp and lanterns in the rooms, tree branch bronze handles and moulded glass for the chandelier.”
In the main lobby, which sits beneath the brick mass of the new building, stone paving was used to mimic the street outside.
The greeting desk is made from sandblasted oak, with a live Totara tree – a species endemic to New Zealand – emerging from a hole in its surface.
It sits opposite a bench crafted from recycled kauri wood, also found only in New Zealand.
A seating nook in the lobby features a blue stone coffee table sourced from port city Timaru and a wall of black cracked plaster made using Auckland clay.
The hotel’s open kitchen, situated in an open laneway dissecting the two buildings, appears nestled in a log store and has green tiled walls depicting a Tui bird, another Kiwi native.
Throughout, the studio said it had emphasised showcasing local materials and craftwork, with many fittings made from recycled products.
The Hotel Britomart is the first in New Zealand to earn a five green star rating from the NZ Green Building Council, a voluntary sustainability rating system for buildings in Australasia.
It is expected to emit 50 per cent less greenhouse gas emissions than if it met minimum sustainability requirements.
The hotel is shortlisted in the hotel and short-stay interior category at Dezeen Awards 2021.
The photography is by Sam Hartnett.
The post Cheshire Architects uses local materials to create The Hotel Britomart in Auckland appeared first on Dezeen.
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