Tag Archives: contemporary architecture

serene hotels

A Look at Some of the World’s Most Calming Destinations

When in need of escape for the ultimate repose, it only helps that the destination you choose to retreat to inspires serenity and peace. We’ve compiled a list of the finest international hotels and resorts that dare you to forget your worries and unwind.

 

THE LIMING BEQUIA
Bequia Island, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 

The Liming Bequia

The Caribbean is a feast of color and fun, but its best secret lies in the blissful beaches like those at The Liming hotel in Bequia. Fully complementing its natural surroundings, this is the resort to enjoy the best of the Caribbean from the comfort a coveted little island. Some of the resort’s accommodations include a private mansion house as well as villas with their own hot tubs. Bequia is truly the destination to forget the rest of the world for a holiday and focus on the beauty of nature with ample sunshine.

 

 

AMANGIRI
Utah, USA

Amangiri

Wellness travel represents a conscious choice from the modern tourist to prioritize their own health, as well as the planet’s, in their destinations of choice. Planted in the middle of the desert, Amangiri is the ideal place to restore beauty, harmony, balance, and health in one’s life. With a minimalist design, its location is completely unimposing against nature and enhanced by the quiet of the surrounding desert.

 

 

CHEVAL BLANC RANDHELI
Maldives

Cheval Blanc

For a hushed haven, the azure lagoon of the Maldives calls out to the traveler. Cheval Blanc, located on a private island accessible solely by boat or plane, in the South Asian region is an impossibly tranquil hotel aggrandized by contemporary architecture and interior cues. With an activities program centered around wellness and complete relaxation, the exotic gardens and the white beaches are a cure to just about everything. 

 

ART MAISONS
Santorini, Greece

Art Maisons Greece

Perched on the volcanic island, the Aspaki and Oia Castle hotels act as a fortress of calm. With the whole of Santorini just outside the doors, Art Maisons offers a fully inclusive experience where one doesn’t really ever want to leave. Instead, unwind in the cave pools and experience the relaxing spa with sprawling views of the Mediterranean.

 

CASA WABI
Oaxaca, Mexico 

CASA WABI

Art tourism is on the rise, and Casa Wabi is Oaxaca’s leading art destination — a contemporary art gallery with a cinema, clay workshop space, an observatory, a mobile library for 35 local schools, beehives, and active participation in the local community. While one cannot necessarily stay at Casa Wabi for a holiday, the venue houses five rooms for artists to stay for residencies. It’s this kind of new nomadic travel that will be the future of modern tourism.

 

QUINTA DA COMPORTA
Carvalhal, Portugal 

Quinta da Comporta

The Portuguese villa Quinta da Comporta believes in nature’s rhythm. The dreamy wellness boutique resort just outside of Lisbon practically melts away any worry. It is one of those well-kept secrets yet entirely untouched by the crowds. Stroll besides its acres of pine trees, lush green rice fields, and white sand beaches for the ultimate dose of European relaxation. 

 

 

Toro & Liautard design BB Restaurant with chef Jean Imbert

Toro & Liautard: A Touch of Grandeur

When it comes to Parisian design, we are used to a Haussmannian style of subdued pastel hues and tender lines that is synonymous with French cool. Who would have thought that a young duo at Toro & Liautard, a two and a half-year-old interior design agency, would start changing the landscape of centuries-old Parisian design? Their varietal contemporary style puzzles together the old, new, and everything in between.

 

Hugo Toro and Maxime Liautard, the minds behind the firm, have opened new staple locations like haute-cuisine BB Restaurant, trendy brunch bar Klay Saint Sauveur, specialty store Maison Père, and Turbigo Apartment, just to name a few.

Hugo Toro and Maxime Liautard

Maxime Liautard (left) and Hugo toro (right) at Le Grand Café Capucines | Image courtesy of Leny Guetta

“We believe that our work is more about how you make a transition between the different materials and create a warm atmosphere,” says Toro. While each project differs from the other, there is a certain line of style to be drawn—it’s “nomadic and eclectic—always working with textures,” he explains.

On their own artistically vagabond journey, the pair really does draw inspiration internationally. After studying together in Paris, they traveled to study in Australia and stateside until Toro embarked on another architecture program in Austria. Once reunited in Paris, they launched their own agency. The duo rapidly expanded to a group of eight with an office at Carreau du Temple, in Paris’ famed bobo (bourgeois-bohème) Haut-Marais neighborhood (third arrondissement). They are now working on several projects including the reopening of Jacques Garcia’s Le Grand Café Capucines near the famed Palais Garnier (Opéra), as well as a house in Cap Ferret, several apartments, and an hôtel particulier.

Le Grand Cafe Capucines resigner

Le Grand Cafe Capucines resigner

A look inside Le Grand Café Capucines | Images courtesy of Leny Guetta

The city was intrigued and confused all at the same time when Klay Saint Sauveur restaurant opened within a larger athletic club in 2016, like a piece of Mexico City transferred to Paris. The tropical greenery, healthy brunch options, and contemporary design all seemed perfectly out of place in the powdery chic city. Le Perruche rooftop, atop Printemps, followed suit offering a new style of design as an alternative to minimalism with a punch of color and attitude, while still maintaining elegance. Both projects were designed by the same agency, then still little known and inexperienced.

Toro explains that “[clients] didn’t want us because we were too young for them, so we proposed something anyway and we actually got it.” This was the progression for their first project at Klay Saint Sauveur. The most recent buzz, however, happened around BB Restaurant at Blanche athletic club, also owned by the Benzaquen brothers.

Le Perruche rooftop by Toro & Liautard

Le Perruche rooftop atop Printemps department store | Image courtesy of Jérôme Galland

Behind the Art Nouveau facade, the building has housed an array of practices including a theatre, which the crew took as a foundation for the restaurant. “We wanted to give [BB] this theatrical aspect,” says Toro. “Each room is in kind of a setup design—and they are all connected visually and physically, but they all have their own intensity.” Days after opening, BB became Paris’ latest it-spot, especially with chef Jean Imbert at the helm of the kitchen. Images of the large palm tree lamps and concave mirrors transitioned by brass arches have been circling the Internet. “It had to be kitschy and at the same time sexy in relation with Pigalle,” he explains. “We designed 95% of the elements ourselves. I even painted the room with marble fabric on the wall myself.”

Toro & Liautard design BB Restaurant with chef Jean Imbert

Marble walls at BB Restaurant | Image courtesy of Leny Guetta

Toro and Liautard tend to approach each project with this kind of precision—perfecting every element both architecturally and decoratively. They design elements and scout others also trying to defy trends. “We are going to the flea markets and buying vintage pieces because for us an apartment has to be a patchwork of the new and old,” says Toro. Not only does the duo accent history and time in their work, but they do it internationally with elements reminiscent of Palm Springs, California (like the palm trees at BB) but also home elements from Paris. The final products are wrapped into a style new to France—the New Paris.

Toro & Liautard design BB Restaurant with chef Jean Imbert

A look at the tropical interior inside BB Restaurant | Image courtesy of Leny Guetta

Furthering their influence, the team was also commissioned to work on the reopening of the Parisian institution-restaurant Le Grand Café Capucines, originally designed by renowned Jacques Garcia. The result further solidifies Toro & Liautard’s mark on the contemporary design of their city.