News - 26th Jun 2008

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HotelDesign: Back to the Future reprised - an hotel Miniview

Some time ago I wrote some articles looking for future trends in design. I was delighted when on my arrival in Las Vegas I was whisked off to eat in miX (yeah, it is written like that), the Alain Ducasse restaurant at THEhotel (yeah, it’s not a typo either) which is the one of a number of Michelin starred restaurants in Las Vegas. The cabbie asked me which bit of I was going to as I had asked for the Mandalay. I said the name of miX and he said it was in THEhotel – well I didn’t think I could have got the name wrong. “It has its own entrance” he said as we drove into the parking garage to the entrance to THEhotel. Still with a body clock 10 hours in arrears and struggling to adjust to Las Vegas I was completely unprepared for the shock of pleasure as I entered.

Entrance lobby immediately inside THEdoors (to the right, the chrome doors go elsewhere) to THEhotel shows the sense of place and the quality of finishes
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Entrance lobby immediately inside THEdoors (to the right, the chrome doors go elsewhere) to THEhotel shows the sense of place and the quality of finishes

In the previous articles I mentioned that one of my favorite interiors was that of the Eltham Place in South London – a 1930’s set of interiors carefully preserved first by the Army (the good old British Army Education Corps had the use of it from the 1939 war until the latter years of the 20th Century) and then by English Heritage. I must have a design sensibility that responds to the era, and the interiors at THEhotel struck the same chord with me. Based in Gold, black, white and buff the stylistic link with the 1930’s Art Deco was clear, an era that also produced one of my favorite pieces of architecture, the Chrysler Building in New York.

The ppowerful architectural framework for the interiors has been used creatively in making strong structural statements by the interiors team from Dougal Design Associates in Pasadena, who won awards for their previous design work on Caesars’ Palace and Forum, also for MGM. With a simple but powerful color palette and striking black banded light columns a strong theatrical interior is created. THEhotel is a stand-alone structure, serviced by its own entrance, lobby, lounges, cafe, gym and spa, yet still offers easy access to all the offerings of the Mandalay Bay. Visitors arrive via a dedicated valet service located in a covered garage, through a beautifully proportioned and imposing lobby with rich finishes in a restrained palette of black, brown and cream.

One of the management issues which have been solved in Las Vegas is how to check in the numbers of guests when your hotel may have 3,000, 5,000 or 7,000 bedrooms. The reception desk at THEhotel with just nine check-in station is described then as ‘intimate’. It is certainly striking with its large mural, and is approached, in the time honored fashion, through a parade of the other offerings of this hotel called, of course. THEbar, THEcafé, THEshop (sometimes this kind of branding grates on THEnerves!) The THEHotel spa is, ironically called the Bathhouse (no THE in the title) and was an award winner when opened (see Spa Design: BATHHOUSE Spa wins award). Unfortunately on my first visit I only had my little pocket camera, and by the time I had enjoyed Ducasse food and wine I couldn’t get any decent photographs. A few days later I decided to take a walk from the Wynn to the Mandalay for another look.

The walk to the Reception desk takes you past THE cafe, THE bar and THErest...
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The walk to the Reception desk takes you past THE cafe, THE bar and THErest...

Entrance area to THEhotel
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Entrance area to THEhotel

The concierge desk. Each alcove in the leather-clad wall holds a single rose
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The concierge desk. Each alcove in the leather-clad wall holds a single rose

The sense of theatre is strong in the corridors
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The sense of theatre is strong in the corridors



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