“minimalist opulence”, as the Armani literature puts it. For one thing,
Wright of WS Atkins in 1999), where 22-karat-gold leaf is the default
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In relation to the gimme-gilt syndrome, the cerebrally elegant Armani
Hotel Dubai, a joint project with Emaar
Properties, the Burj‟s developer,
appears amazingly discreet.
Stepping into the hotel through one of the three glass pavilions nestled
between the lobes of the tower, the visitor enters a cool, shadowy lobby
dominated by a tubular arch construction, rather like an abstracted
version of a spider sculpture by Louise Bourgeois. The hotel‟s materials
contrast textures
– such as Eramosa limestone floors with the sheen of
fabric wall coverings. Its color scheme is Full Armani Jacket, veering
confidently from beige to tan to gray to charcoal. The public spaces and
160 guest rooms and suites are located mostly on the first eight floors of
the tower, plus floors 38 and 39, with 144 Armani-designed short-stay
apartments on floors 9 through 16. Elsewhere in the Burj, residences
designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merill (SOM)
– for Armani – fill out
floors 19 to 39, with more SOM-designed condos on 43 to 72, and luxury
ones on floors 76 to 108
– not to mention the offices on floors 112 to
154. In addition, Adam Tihany is designing a restaurant appropriately
named Atmosphere on the 122nd floor, slated to open at the end of the
year.
The halls of the Armani Hotel‟s guest-room floors, paneled in
zebrawood and trimmed with LED cove lighting at the base and
fluorescent lighting at the ceiling, impart the sleek look of a sci-fi catwalk
to a calmer world. They lead to solemnly lush guest rooms where Armani
partitioned spaces with serpentine walls to echo the curves of the tower‟s
exterior. Since most of the furnishings and fabrics belong to the
designer‟s home furnishings line, Armani Casa, the
gesamtkunstwerk
idea never stops. The rooms‟ plush look is calming and soothing. For a
bit of oomph, many rooms overlook the Dubai Fountain‟s Busby-
Berkeley-goes-to-Arabia floor show designed by WET in the lake next to
the Dubai Mall.
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Restaurants, cafés, and lounges in the hotel religiously adhere to the
Armani aesthetic, along with boutiques, a nightclub, and a spa. The
Italian-
oriented Ristotante most serenely imparts the soigné Armani
imprimatur, where tan, curvilinear banquettes and floor lamps arcing over
circular tables echo the tower‟s formal thematic. The Japanese
restaurant, Hashi, presents a coolly casual look (with disco music
thumping in the background), but Peck, a gourmet deli with Milanese-
Viennese early Modern overtones, might appeal more to architects: It
looks as if Adolf Loos were hovering over the hand of the designer. An
Indian restaurant, Amal, on the other hand, comes out looking anorexic,
owing to the bleak lighting and attenuated scale of the fittings (more
arches!). Oddly, this seems to be the only place where touches of color
made it through the door, but that alone
simply doesn‟t provide the heat.
Fortunately, these drawbacks can be fixed.
Although Giorgio Armani meticulously supervised the entire design of
the hotel, down to the room controls and the soap, he was backed up by
Wilson Associates, the interior design firm headquartered in Dallas.
Because of its past experience in designing hotels and resorts, including
the Ritz-Carlton, Four Seasons, Kempinksi, Disney, and Emaar
Properties, it stands to reason that Wilson‟s advice would be useful. But
make no mistake about the person at the controls: as Bernard Himel,
managing director of Wilson Associates sa
ys, “Giorgio Armani had the
vision and intense attention to detail
– he was personally involved in
almost every decision”. Not surprisingly, you sense that when you go
there. It will be interesting to watch how the company, Armani Hotels &
Resorts, formed in 2005 with Emaar Properties, retains this aesthetic for
the series of hotels it is planning in the years to come.
From ―Architectural Record‖ ( August 2010)
by Suzanne Stephens.