<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?>
<!-- generator="FeedCreator 1.7.2" -->
<rss version="2.0">
	<channel>
		<title>The Cool Hunter - Travel</title>
		<description>Latest articles on Travel by The Cool Hunter - for more checkout www.thecoolhunter.net</description>
		<link>http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au</link>
		<lastBuildDate>Tue, 07 Oct 2008 21:50:43 +0100</lastBuildDate>
		<generator>FeedCreator 1.7.2</generator>
		<image>
			<url>http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/images/M_images/joomla_rss.png</url>
			<title>The Cool Hunter</title>
			<link>http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au</link>
			<description>Latest articles on Travel by The Cool Hunter - for more checkout www.thecoolhunter.net</description>
		</image>
		<item>
			<title>Dolder Grand Hotel - Zurich (The Ultimate Suites)</title>
			<link>http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=1364&amp;Itemid=4</link>
			<description>“Someone has finally understood how the ultimate suite should look and feel,” was our chief globetrotter’s seldom-heard endorsement, when he encountered the recently opened four top suites and spa at Zürich’s Dolder Grand Hotel. (http://www.doldergrand.com/)  Designed in 1899 by Jacques Gros, the famed health spa/hotel has a perfect city location overlooking Lake Zürich and the Alps. The grand old hotel has been re-imagined as a modern luxury hotel by a star team of professionals - architecture by London’s Foster and Partners (http://www.fosterandpartners.com/Projects/1171/Default.aspx), interior design by United Designers (http://www.united-designers.com), also of London, and the spa concept by spa-industry visionary, Arizona-based Sylvia Sepielli (http://www.sylviaplanninganddesign.com) .  The star power continues in the four top-level suites inspired by four famed guests. The top-most, 4,300 square-foot (400 square-meter) Maestro Suite channels the style of Herbert von Karajan. The sweeping two-level suite with dashing classical undertones features red leather chairs, dark timbers, a circular tower dining room, pale-marble bathrooms with whirlpools and steam showers (and one with a sauna), massive windows and a lounge-style terrace. The late Swiss surrealist painter and sculptor Alberto Giacometti inspired the Carezza Suite on the top floor of the spa wing. Sculpturally inspired furnishings and organic shapes create a peaceful lounge feel, enhanced by the neutral colors and the modern fireplace. The two-bedroom suite has a separate living room, TV lounge and marble bathrooms. Also on the top floor of the spa wing, the Masina Suite gets its dramatic inspiration from Giulietta Masina, actress and wife of Federico Fellini. Night-blue and soft white evoke a feel of elegance and smoky glamour. A large Fendi sofa and a flat-screen TV are perfect for film noir nights. Floor-to-ceiling windows add further drama. Orange sofas, dark wood panels and pink furniture adorn Suite 101 created to reflect the legacy of the Rolling Stones. The decor has a retro vibe and an edge with distinctive, casual luxury. The suite includes a bedroom, living room, dining room, an ensuite kitchen and meeting room for 10.In 8-12 weeks, when The Cool Hunter Hotel booking service launches, you can book this and all other favourites right here with us. - Tuija Seipell</description>
			<pubDate>Fri, 08 Aug 2008 00:57:14 +0100</pubDate>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>The Limes Hotel - Brisbane, Australia</title>
			<link>http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=1358&amp;Itemid=4</link>
			<description>The Limes Hotel (http://www.limeshotel.com.au/) recently opened by Damian Griffiths in Brisbane, Australia, is the first Australian hotel to join the worldwide boutique hotel group Design Hotels (http://www.designhotels.com/) .Holistically designed by globe-trotting Australian-based designer Alexander Lotersztain (http://www.derlot.com/), The Limes Hotel reflects Lotersztain's vision in every facet - from cocktail ingredients to bed linens, bench tops and the facade. By incorporating the 'Limes' branding into the hotel's striking external facade, Lotersztain sought to communicate the 'Limes' aesthetic on a grand scale. Located in Brisbane's 'Valley' district, The Limes Hotel sits between the bustle of Brunswick St. Mall's pubs and clubs and the classier restaurants, boutiques and cafes of James St.From the in-room iPod docks and 32-inch flat screens to the complimentary hand-made chocolate brownies and L'Occitane cosmetics the hotel is full of memorable touches. Perhaps the hotel's most hip feature is its rooftop bar. Taking in sweeping views of the city, the open-air atmosphere makes the most of Brisbane's balmy tropical surrounds transforming seamlessly into a cinema for a more upmarket viewing experience.  For first-time visitors to Brisbane, The Limes Hotel is a perfect choice, combining the energy and vibrancy of a growing city with world-class sophistication and design. - Nick Christie</description>
			<pubDate>Tue, 05 Aug 2008 07:24:33 +0100</pubDate>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Kakslauttanen Hotel - Finland</title>
			<link>http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=1182&amp;Itemid=4</link>
			<description>


When you tire of the endless sandy beaches and azure waters of warm
climates, but you are not quite ready for space travel, head to Lapland
for a dramatic, mystical getaway. The snow igloos that pop up each
winter to complement the 20 spectacular glass igloos and 31 luxury log
cabins at Kakslauttanen (http://www.kakslauttanen.fi/) resort in Saariselkä, Finland, are definitely cool in all meanings of the word. 

You can lie in your bed under the glass ceiling of your glass igloo,
cozily covered by thick down duvets, and watch the snow fall gently in
the light-blue air of the endless night. It is surreal and magical. You
actually do forget that it is cold and, in fact, you are not cold. The
duvets and clothing provided ensure that you are really feeling cozy. 

There is also a snow chapel, the world’s largest snow restaurant for
150 people, a Finnish traditional smoke sauna, an eight-meter-tall
glass tepee (designed to resemble the typical Lapp tepee called kota)
for cocktail parties under the Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights,
revontulet in Finnish), and a honeymoon suite or two. You guessed, it,
this place is hugely popular for fairytale winter weddings. 

Snowmobile safaris, ice swimming and other frisky activities will keep
you and your guests entertained for days! You can start your Finnish
lessons with Hyvää päivää, which means hello, or literally, “have a
good day.” By Tuija Seipell
</description>
			<pubDate>Tue, 05 Feb 2008 16:09:57 +0100</pubDate>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Fujiya Ginzan, Tokyo</title>
			<link>http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=1173&amp;Itemid=4</link>
			<description>Since 1991, San Francisco-native Jeanie Fuji has acted as the
traditional Japanese okami (land lady or female inn keeper) of the Fujiya
Ryokan (traditional wooden inn) in the Ginzan Onsen (hot springs) area.



That year, she married Fuji Atsushi, the son and heir of the
350-year-old inn and started her rigorous training under her
mother-in-law in the art of serving customers, true Japanese style.
This included preparing all meals, washing the dishes and cleaning all
rooms. The goal was to make sure every need of every customer was
anticipated and met following the age-old inn tradition of providing
the right amount of service at the right time.



Fuji describes the types of things she had to learn. “Sliding a fusuma
door open and shut, greeting guests, bringing them meals on small o-zen
tables... everything has to be done a certain way, following the old
traditions. And I had to learn how to talk with the guests using
polite, formal Japanese. I often wanted to give up and go home to the
United States. But now I love my work here,” she says in a Japanese
publication.



By the time she had a good decade of experience behind her, Fuji had
gained a celebrity okami status that she modestly and reluctantly
dismisses. By 2004, she and her husband hired Tokyo-based celebrity
architect Kengo Kuma to raise the personal service of the inn to even
higher level. Kuma overtook a complete remodelling of the inn that
reopened in July 2006. Kuma is behind many well-known buildings,
including the Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessey headquarters in Tokyo.



The capacity of the thoroughly wooden, three-story Fujiya Inn (http://www.fujiya-ginzan.com/) 
was reduced to only eight rooms with full capacity at 16 persons.
Considering the location of the inn, right in the middle of a
relatively remote rural area known for its hot springs and natural
beauty, the level of luxury in the inn is astonishing. 



Kuma has been able to combine traditional Japanese simplicity with
international tastes and needs, yet avoided the dumbed-down,
westernized version of Japanese style. In fact, Fuji has written an
autobiography on this subject Nipponjin ni wa, Nihon ga Tarinai
(Japanese people are not Japanese enough), in which she emphasizes that
it is important for modern Japanese to recognize and re-claim the value
of their own millennia-old customs and history.

At Fujiya Inn, you feel that you are part of an ancient, authentic and
almost organic history that seems to be seeping through every seam and
screen here. Many aspects contribute to this effect. One is Kuma’s
brilliant use of layers, screens as thin as veils, to both hide and
reveal space. The omnipresent samushiko bamboo screens by craft master
Hideo Nakata (no, he’s not the horror-movie director) and his son
required 1.2 million four-millimetre-wide strips of bamboo. Green
stained-glass panes by Masato Shida and the prolific use of the
handmade, richly textured Echizen Japanese paper add to the feeling of
lightness and transparency. 



The organic, natural quotient of the inn is also boosted by the baths
and the hand-prepared, fresh food. The inn has five beautiful private
hot springs baths including an open-air bath on the top floor. The food
is based on a regular washoku (Japanese cuisine) menu and features many
edible plants and other local ingredients. Fuji’s...</description>
			<pubDate>Wed, 30 Jan 2008 06:40:43 +0100</pubDate>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title> Open For Royalty - Schiphol's Airport New VIP Lounge, Amsterdam</title>
			<link>http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=1175&amp;Itemid=4</link>
			<description>


Opened just a few days ago by Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands, the new
VIP centre at Schiphol Amsterdam Airport could potentially resurrect
your impressions of airline travel as something to look forward to.
However, the centre - also called the Royal Centre - is only open to
Royalty, Ministers and state secretaries, diplomats, trade delegations
and top directors in international business. So, unless you qualify,
you'll need to just suffer the regular airport torture.





The new space has already become the pride and joy of Dutch design.
Overall design of the space is by Amsterdam-based concrete architectural associates (http://www.concreteamsterdam.nl)  bv, known for a huge number cool retail,
hospitality, entertainment and exhibition environments around the world.





Schiphol's new VIP-centre replaces an old, much smaller VIP area. The
new centre contains a separate Royal Lounge for members of the Royal
Family, a press centre, a Company Lounge, plus various reception and
meeting rooms. The Royal Lounge is an enormous living room with lounge
sofas, and Royal Family pictures on the bookshelves. The wall paper in
the room is created from 5,500 mini reproductions of the national coat
of arms. By Tuija Seipell







</description>
			<pubDate>Fri, 18 Jan 2008 08:46:05 +0100</pubDate>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Urbn Hotel, Shanghai</title>
			<link>http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=1153&amp;Itemid=4</link>
			<description>


China’s first carbon-neutral hotel, the hip 26-room URBN Hotel Shanghai (http://www.urbnhotels.com),
will officially open this spring. Conceived by owners Scott Barrack and
Jules Kwan, URBN promises to be the start of a new boutique hotel
empire. 

No strangers to luxury developments or to China where they have lived
for 10 years, the two plan to open another 20 URBN hotels in China in
the next three years, starting with Beijing, Hangzhou, Dalian and
Suzhou. The hoteliers will go as green as possible by rehabilitating
existing structures, using recycled materials, maximizing green space
and introducing eco-friendly solutions.



Beyond co-founding boutique real estate investment and development company Space Development (http://www.space-development.com/) with Kwan, the California native Barrack has established several property companies in China, including Space International (http://www.space.sh.cn/%3E) specializing in luxury French Concession district properties, and Inn Shangha (http://www.innshanghai.com/%3E),
the city’s first serviced boutique apartment complex. Sydney,
Australia-born and raised Kwan is an alternative media and property
development expert.

The partners have a unique, personal perspective on what works and what
doesn’t for a luxury traveler in China. To give visitors a true
Shanghainese urban experience — something they felt was missing — they
invited international Shanghai-based collaborators with similar
sensibilities to convert a 1970s post office building to the stylish
URBN Hotel Shanghai. The result is an impressive fusion of contemporary
and Chinese design.



URBN’s spatial concept, interior and facade design are by A00 Architectur (http://www.azerozero.com)e (http://www.azerozero.com),
a partnership of three Canadian architects, best known for conversions
of Shanghai’s historic houses into unique residences. The hotel’s
interior designer is Brazil native architect, Tais Cabral, known for
her commercial, cultural, residential and retail work in Paris, as well
as her furniture design. By Tuija Seipell

 
 </description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 14 Jan 2008 00:19:17 +0100</pubDate>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Where Are The World's Coolest Hotel Pools?</title>
			<link>http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=1103&amp;Itemid=4</link>
			<description>



We really do take swimming pools for granted. Lounging poolside at the
hotel, swimming a few laps at the health club, or dipping into the
Jacuzzi at the spa — we are used to pools but we want them fabulous.
Scary-blue tubs with tepid, chlorinated water just don’t do it.




Right now, we are hunting for the best and most amazing hotel swimming
pools in the world and we’d like you to help us. Please let us know
where your favorite, cool pool is. (
  (%20%3Cscript%20language=%27JavaScript%27%20type=%27text/javascript%27%3E%0A%20%3C%21--%0A%20var%20prefix%20=%20%27ma%27%20+%20%27il%27%20+%20%27to%27;%0A%20var%20path%20=%20%27hr%27%20+%20%27ef%27%20+%20%27=%27;%0A%20var%20addy54314%20=%20%27tips%27%20+%20%27@%27;%0A%20addy54314%20=%20addy54314%20+%20%27thecoolhunter%27%20+%20%27.%27%20+%20%27net%27;%0A%20document.write%28%20%27%3Ca%20%27%20+%20path%20+%20%27%5C%27%27%20+%20prefix%20+%20%27:%27%20+%20addy54314%20+%20%27%5C%27%3E%27%20%29;%0A%20document.write%28%20addy54314%20%29;%0A%20document.write%28%20%27%3C%5C/a%3E%27%20%29;%0A%20/--%3E%5Cn%20%3C/script%3E%3Cscript%20language=%27JavaScript%27%20type=%27text/javascript%27%3E%0A%20%3C%21--%0A%20document.write%28%20%27%3Cspan%20style=%5C%27display:%20none;%5C%27%3E%27%20%29;%0A%20/--%3E%0A%20%3C/script%3EThis%20e-mail%20address%20is%20being%20protected%20from%20spam%20bots,%20you%20need%20JavaScript%20enabled%20to%20view%20it%0A%20%3Cscript%20language=%27JavaScript%27%20type=%27text/javascript%27%3E%0A%20%3C%21--%0A%20document.write%28%20%27%3C/%27%20%29;%0A%20document.write%28%20%27span%3E%27%20%29;%0A%20/--%3E%0A%20%3C/script%3E)tips@thecoolhunter.net (mailto:tips@thecoolhunter.net)
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
  )




While you are at it, you might be interested in some history of the
pool. Bathing pools, of course, predate swimming pools, and we have all
heard of the lavish and sophisticated ancient baths. But the swimming
pool has a long history, too, dating back to ancient times. 




Already in 2500 B.C., Egyptians knew swimming as an organized activity
and depictions of swimming from India are equally old. Ancient Romans
constructed artificial pools for athletic training, nautical games and
military exercises. Swimming was also part of boys’ education.




Extravagant swimming pools with live fish entertained Roman emperors,
and gave the pool its Latin name piscina. Ancient Greeks did not
include swimming in their early Olympic games but they did practice the
sport and built swimming pools as part of their baths. The first heated
swimming pool was built in Rome in the first century BC.




England’s first indoor swimming pool, the 40-foot-long Bagnio in Lemon
Street, Goodman's Fields in London, opened in 1742. King Ludwig II of
Bavaria built the first-ever wave pool with electrically heated water
and light, in his Linderhof castle in 1879.




In the U.S. the earliest public swimming pools were small indoor pools
built with the intention of encouraging better hygiene among the poor.
By the 1920s, the American public pool had become a large public place
of amusement and recreation for thousands at a time. Home swimming
pools became popular in the U.S. after WWII and Hollywood films made
the backyard pool an important status symbol.




All of this historical stuff is really rather exhausting when all we
really want is serious pleasure – superior amenities, spectacular
views, impeccable details, breath-taking eye candy. Let us know where
such pools are, so that we can let the rest of the world know, too. By
Tuija Seipell


</description>
			<pubDate>Wed, 31 Oct 2007 07:31:18 +0100</pubDate>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title> Lux 11 Hotel/Apartments - Berlin</title>
			<link>http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=1061&amp;Itemid=4</link>
			<description>Berlin is one of only three UNESCO Creative Cities (http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en/ev.php-URL_ID=26386 URL_DO=DO_TOPIC URL_SECTION=201.html) and it has a distinctive and strong creative subculture (http://www.create-berlin.de/Profil_en.html).
But it takes a while for the cool aspects to become apparent because
Berlin is not a city with instant sex appeal like Paris or Rome. And
don’t try to do anything before 11am - the place is dead till then.Luckily,
we knew where the action is. In Berlin, it is in the Mitte district (German
for middle or center), a historic district formerly part of East
Berlin. Now, it is somewhat edgier than SOHO but also similar with its
refurbished buildings, one-of-a-kind designer fashion shops, cafes,
bakeries, restaurants, bars, art galleries, studios and an overall
creative vibe that attracts the city’s designers, architects,
photographers and artists. Mitte is also the historical heart of Berlin
with most of the main sights and many media companies within its
borders.In Mitte, we stayed at Lux 11 (http://www.lux11.com).
Lux 11’s name gives a nod to Rosa Luxemburg, the German champion of
socialist causes, after whom the street is also named. The hotel name
also refers to luxury and light (lux is light in Latin).Lux 11
is a chic 72-room apartment hotel opened in 2005 in a renovated
building that started as a stately residences in the late 19th century.
It was later converted to an office building from which the KGB was
apparently in direct contact with Moscow during the Cold War. We don’t
know if this is true but we like the story.The hotel concept and interior are by London-based architects Giuliana Salmaso and Claudio Silvestrin (http://www.salmasosilvestrin.com/pc/index1.htm).
They‘ve managed to create an environment that combines a clean,
minimalist and practical style with an abundance of tactile and sensual
details, white walls, natural wood, concrete in China green, curtains
in leather, upholstery in rough canvas.We liked the simplicity – no
frilly things to annoy you, no boring sets of matching bedding and
window treatments. We also liked the little kitchen (the hotel buffet
breakfast did not appeal) which we stocked at Bio Organic Supermarket a
block away on Dircksenstrasse. We found the best coffee at Buscaglione
on Rochstrasse (1 Block away) and the best soup at Kultur (http://www.soupkultu.de)  (opposite hotel). What You'll Love: Location, location, location. Mitte is where its all at.What You Wont: No air conditioning, lifeless pillows. Expensive internet access (12 Euro for 5 hrs)Alternative Hotel - Hotel De Rome (http://www.hotelderome.com/) </description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 20 Aug 2007 06:57:40 +0100</pubDate>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Hotel Particulier De Montmarte, Paris</title>
			<link>http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=1050&amp;Itemid=4</link>
			<description>The most fabulous example of a hotel combining drama, surprise, luxury and comfort is hiding in the heart of the historical, artistic and night-club haven of Montmartre in Paris. Opened in June 2007, the restored aristocratic mansion The Hotel Particulier de Montmartre  (http://hotel-particulier-montmartre.com/)has definitely decided to grow up. The two masterminds behind the project are Morgane Rousseau and Frédéric Comtet who with the help of Mathieu Paillard have managed to mix art and comfort brilliantly in their unusual hotel.The owners commissioned well known artists, designers, sculptors and architects to create an intimate five-room enclave of exceptional atmosphere and charm.One of the distinctive rooms is the “vegetable room” designed by New York-born, Paris-based contemporary artist Martine Aballéa. With her interpretation, she wishes to evoke hanging gardens, trees and the play of sunlight and shadow. The other artists involved in creating one of the compact private suites are photo artist Natacha Lesueur (room theme: Curtain of hair), painter Philippe Mayaux (Window), fashion and textile curator Olivier Saillard (Poems and hats) and illustrator and creative director Pierre Fichefeux (Tree with ears).Finland-born Mats Haglund of Chanel, Colette and Paul   Joe boutique fame, created the private living room. He used the personality of the proprietors as his starting point and furnished the salon with originals of classics by Arne Jacobsen, Mies van der Rohe and Alvar Aalto. From every window, residents can view the luscious and intimate garden created by Louis Bénech, one of the landscape designers responsible for revitalizing the world-renown Tuileries Gardens.With that much artistic and design cache, The Hotel Particulier de Montmartre will not have difficulty attracting a clientele. But to get there, you must leave the nightclubs of Montmartre, start thinking like former Montmartre residents Salvador Dalí, Claude Monet, Pablo Picasso and Vincent van Gogh, and locate the secret alleyway between l’avenue Junot and la rue Lepic. Continue to the Sorcerer’s Stone and pray that the iron gates will open for you. By Tuija Seipell </description>
			<pubDate>Thu, 26 Jul 2007 10:52:38 +0100</pubDate>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Ikies - Santorini, Greece</title>
			<link>http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=1044&amp;Itemid=4</link>
			<description>Unlike the tourist-tainted landscapes of neighbouring of Cancun and other Caribbean resorts; Santorini, Greece provides a seemingly untouched backdrop of white hills, red beaches and blue seas.A gem of Santorini, the Ikies Traditional Houses (http://www.ikies.com/), sits high atop the archipelago of islands in the village of Oia (pronounced E-ah). Ikies houses are divided into studios (one bedroom), maisonettes (loft bedroom), and suites. Each lodging has its own intriguing name – presumably derived from local occupations – such as artisan, boatman, collector and antiquarian.The eleven luxury dwellings are carved out of pumice and designed to blend in with the surrounding architecture – hence “traditional houses”. The theme of bright white with a highlight of blue windows, roofs and shutters create a mesmerizing effect when pared with the Aegean’s cerulean waters and red clay cliffs.Ikies makes brilliant use of their surroundings by perching their apartments on these cliffs, and expanding the space even further with private patios, Jacuzzis and pools, all of which are carefully crafted for viewing of Oia’s famous sunsets.Beyond the intricately detailed infrastructure, Ikies has become renowned for its obsession with service. One satisfied review read, “Their staff lives for nothing more than to refill your cocktail.” Continental breakfast, light fare and cocktails are all served to your room (or terrace or pool area). For the romantically-inclined, Ikies also offers a full service honeymoon package, with champagne breakfasts, flowers, satin sheets and the works.With its full-service amentities and incomparable landscape, Ikies is a prime example of what this region has to offer. Stay tuned to Coolhunter to learn the ins and outs of the best places to vacation in Santorini, Mykonos, and Athens as we will be reporting live in September. By L. Harper</description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 16 Jul 2007 21:28:28 +0100</pubDate>
		</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
