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New W hotel takes a leap in its interior design

Hotel Facilities

New W hotel takes a leap in its interior design

The brand’s focus will incorporate aspects of its properties’ surrounding communities.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | August 14, 2017
A common area in the W Hotel in Bellevue, Wash.

The “living room,” a common meeting place within the W Bellevue in Washington State, takes its cue from local long house design. Image: Marriott International

The W Hotels Worldwide recently opened its first new hotel in North America in seven years, a 275,000-sf, 450-ft-tall, 245-key facility along Lake Washington in Bellevue, Wash.

W Hotels, a brand of Marriott International, sees this HKS-designed property as “the next iteration of the next generation of W design,” according to Greg Stobbs, Senior Director of Global Design Strategies. Last week, Stobbs and Matt Van Der Peet, W Bellevue’s general manager, conducted a web tour of the hotel’s interiors, which take their inspiration from local lakefront culture.

The walls of the hotel’s entrance are brightened by murals that represent different aspects of Bellevue: sealife, strawberries, and grunge music. That staircase leads to a futuristic reception area with welcome “pods.”

The hotel’s striking common area, known as the “living room,” takes its form from the so-called long house concept. Van Der Peet called the design “The Lake House, deconstructed.” Adjacent spaces feature a small library and an outdoor area called The Porch. The building also has a 10,000-sf meeting room.

W Bellevue has several meeting spaces, including outdoor “The Porch.” Image: Marriott International

 

The web tour provided glimpses of guestrooms that are distinguished by glassed-in showers located in the middle of the room, and doorless wardrobes. The hotel has 25 suites (one charging $5,000 per night) that Van Der Peet described as being “almost like event spaces.” One of the suites shown has a foosball table and a swing lounge suspended from the ceiling. The Presidential Suite comes complete with a turntable and supply of vinyl records, as well as a hot tub.

The shower is in the middle of the guestrooms at W Bellevue. Image: Marriott International

 

The hotel has entered into a partnership with James Beard Award-winning chef Jason Wilson on two venues within the building: The Lake House, a farm-to-fork concept restaurant; and Civility & Unrest, a speakeasy/bar.

Stobbs tells BD+C that consistent design has long been one of the W brand’s trademarks. Until recently, however, the hotelier has focused on building new in international markets and renovating existing properties in the U.S. The W Bellevue, he says, “has given us the opportunity to put our research and locally centered design philosophy into practice in every element of the hotel: from the architecture to the art. This is the first time we are showing off our newfound approach here in the U.S.”

W Bellevue is located about 10 miles from Seattle, where W Hotels operates another hotel. W Bellevue takes up the first 13 floors of a 41-story residential tower that sits atop a 180,000-sf retail podium. The hotel, which opened in mid June, is part of Kemper Development’s $1.2 billion expansion of Bellevue Square and Lincoln Square. Aside from HKS, the building team on this project includes GLY Construction (GC), and Cary Kopczynski & Co. (SE). 

Civility & Unrest, a speakeasy/bar, is one of two venues within W Bellevue that the hotel developed with chef Jason Wilson. Image: Marriott International

The hotel, which sits on top of a retail podium, is part of a $1.2 billion redevelopment of two squares in Bellevue, Wash. Image: HKS

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