| |
Take a look outside the window at Nyhavn and there’s no doubt that you’re in the heart of the city. 71 Nyhavn is one of a series of high-end waterfront warehouse hotels, and the designers have taken care to preserve the original architecture without sacrificing ultra-modern amenities. Located just minutes from the Royal Theatre and Kongens Nytorv along the city’s most famous harbour Nyhavn.
|
A classic example of raw 19th century architecture transformed into 21st century minimalism. The Admiral is housed in an old 18th century warehouse which was revamped into an ultra-modern hotel. Scenically located along the waterfront, the Admiral offers in-house sauna and tanning facilities, a restaurant (Salt) designed by Jasper Conran and the in-house basement nightclub Nautilus.
|
Opened with great fanfare in 2005, Copenhagen’s Hotel Fox is a modern art hotel (sponsored by those clever clogs at Volkswagen to promote their new Fox car). Every room is entirely unique and created by the creme de la creme of emerging international design. The vibe is very much that of a student art project and there’s a certain sacrifice of traditional functionality—although all rooms come equipped with flat-screen TVs and custom-made mini-bar bags, eg Hangover Bag, Movie Bag and Lovers’ Bag.
|
This hotel offers cutting-edge design in the heart of Copenhagen’s university district, owing much of its panache to Danish artist Per Arnoldi, who designed the interior. The ultra-modern five-star boasts top-of-the-line service and an unbeatable location. Amenities including a fitness/yoga suite and the popular nightspot Bar Rouge lounge make it a favourite with well-heeled travellers.
|
From the outside, it looks like an arsenal, but step inside and you’ll see that this ultra-modern hotel, designed top-totoe in 1960 by legendary architect Arne Jacobsen, is a textbook example of Danish functionalist design. Located just 500 metres from the Town Hall Square, the Radisson SAS is centrally located for business, pleasure and public transport.
|
| |
|