..........................................................................
ROOM 1 - The Rationalist Room: Le Corbusier
This suite is a spacious 17 square metres in size (excluding the bathroom area) and comprises a small hall area, a semi-open bathroom and a luminous sleeping area. The modern style bathroom has been purposely divided into 3 specific spaces; the rear area contains the W.C. and bidet and the central compartment contains the washbasin area. Adjacent is the semi-open planned hydro-massage bath with its uniquely designed chaise-longue, tiled and constructed from masonry. The room has been named after this comfortable piece of static furniture, as its design was inspired by Le Corbusier, the influential Swiss architect. The Kingsize bed with its orthopaedic and anti-allergic mattress is very comfortable, ensuring that you get a good night's sleep.
Please note that the hydro-massage bath and overhead shower are open-planned and therefore this room is mostly suitable for couples. Please see the photos for further information.
ROOM FACILITIES:
- bath area with hydro-massage bathtub and overhead shower
- individually controlled air conditioning and central heating
- Kingsize bed with orthopaedic and anti-allergic mattress
- 20" LCD television with satellite/cable
- laptop with free Wi-Fi Internet access
- direct line cordless telephone
- digital safety deposit box
- double glazed windows
- Wengé parquet flooring
- black-out blinds
- in-room music
- hairdryer
- mini bar
OUR SERVICES:
For our guests, we are always happy to book tours, car/bicycle rentals, transfers to and from the major airports or any other services that they may require (all at very competitive rates).
- buffet breakfast served in-room or in the breakfast room
- coffee and tea making facilities
- non-smoking rooms
- lift/elevator
- hotel safe
- fax
For our guests, we are always happy to book tours, car/bicycle rentals, transfers to and from the major airports or any other services that they may require (all at very competitive rates).
Architect's Conception: "Technical abstractness, abstractness of shapes and sociological abstractness" fused together to form a "patient and emotional search", illustrate the constitutive elements of the Corbusier room. The human need to conciliate modern society with one's inner self, the urge to adapt to contemporary life, the ability to maintain one's self in the most intimate moments of one's life, all become materialised in an environment consisting of a simple cuboid volume, which is expressed though a variety of elements. The man-measured object, the chaise-longue, acts as a connection to the constitutive environments. This composition has been created through the construction of circle-forming rings, which reconstruct ergonomic lines, while at the same time contrasting and conciliating the simple and uniform style of the room's surroundings, which is continually on the ceaseless search for harmony and the inner self.