воскресенье, 5 января 2014 г.
The exhibit traces the evolution of the hotel from seventeenth-century dak bungalows (government str
The exhibit traces the evolution of the hotel from seventeenth-century dak bungalows (government structures put up for European travellers living and travelling in India) to self-contained miniature cities. The exhibit looks at four main themes surrounding the phenomenon of the hotel: vacation rentals daytona beach florida travel, design, social, vacation rentals daytona beach florida and culture .
The Westin Bonaventure Hotel in downtown LA is a good example of a city within a city—but this hotel city seeks to offer protection to its guests from the other city with its dark, reflective glass and lack of formal entry. You re not sure when you ve officially entered it because the exterior skin folds in on itself, reflecting where you ve come from but not revealing what you re about to step into. With four identical towers, the structure almost intends you to get lost in it. Literary critic Frederic Jameson calls this hotel the quintessential postmodern space or hyperspace , a word he uses to describe a space that mutates so fast that the human body and mind has difficulty keeping up with it.
The mini-city of Portman s Bonaventure ought not to have entrances at all, since the entryway is always the seam that links the building to the rest of the city that surrounds it: for it does not wish to be a part of the city, but rather its equivalent and its replacement or substitute. That is, however, obviously not possible or practical, whence the deliberate downplaying and reduction of the entrance function to its bare minimum.
These next two models are the Waldorf vacation rentals daytona beach florida Astoria vacation rentals daytona beach florida in New York City. The back side (right picture) reveals a cross-section of multiple and diverse scenes recreating a microcosm of the urban life around it—a labyrinth of interweaving vacation rentals daytona beach florida public and private space.
The exhibit stressed the role of the hotel as a liminal space between public and private; individual and collective. As the quotation above says, you ll never know who you may collide with in a hotel. The hotel collects a motley crew of individuals and arranges them into private rooms and communal spaces (lobbies, pools, restaurants) for varied vacation rentals daytona beach florida lengths vacation rentals daytona beach florida of time, a constant motion of inhaling energetic faces while exhaling wearied ones.
When I returned home last week after seeing the exhibit, I began to think of my hotel story. After all, everyone has one, right? Then I realized that as informative and entertaining as the exhibit was, it missed a big part of the hotel experience for Gen Yers like me. It gave space to the hotel and the motel, but what about the hostel? The only time I ve stayed in hotels is when travelling with my family vacation rentals daytona beach florida as a kid. As such, I can think of hostel stories more readily than I can of hotel stories, and I know many of my friends would say the same. In fact, this is the only way we travel as adults—I would say it s even more conducive for generating random but fortuitous collisions, especially collisions with other solo travellers who then become your companions to take on the city. I know the exhibit can t include every configuration of the hotel experience, but this gap stands out to me as a significant one as modern-day hotel culture, especially for young people, includes the hostel.
In any case, the exhibit provided a fascinating overview of the hotel and its place in history, travel (whether by airplane, car, or train), design, and culture (including famous artists who created in hotels and historic moments that happened in their spaces). After walking through the exhibit, there s no denying that hotels have significantly shaped modern life in some form or another.
This entry was posted in Architecture , Space Leisure , Space Society and tagged vacation rentals daytona beach florida Frederic Jameson , Gen Y , Grand Hotel exhibit , hostel , hotel , hotel architecture , Vancouver Art Gallery , Waldorf Astoria , Westin Bonaventure Hotel by Charlene Kwiatkowski . Bookmark the permalink .
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