A Clever Hotel Room ‘Loft’ Designed for Longer Stays

In a regular hotel room or studio apartment, the bed always dominates. At Zoku, a big kitchen table serves as focal point.

hotel room loft designed for longer stays zoku loft (2)

 

The 24m2 (258 sq ft) Zoku Loft is designed as a living/working hybrid for ‘global nomads’ who typically seek temporary residence for between five days and several months. The designers add:

 

“In a regular hotel room or studio apartment, the bed always dominates. At Zoku, a big kitchen table serves as focal point. Use it to work across time zones, host dinner parties or gently rest your head after making a deadline. You decide. Then feel free to change your mind. The same goes for swapping the art on your walls, after which you can enjoy the view from your comfy Muuto design furniture.”

 

hotel room loft designed for longer stays zoku loft (1)

 

The loft has space-saving features like a retractable staircase and hide-away storage areas. It also includes a king size bed, dishwasher and commonly used home/office supplies. The first Zoku lofts are set to open in August in the eastern Canal District of Amsterdam. You can find much more information at the links below.

 

 

 

 

hotel room loft designed for longer stays zoku loft (8)

 

hotel room loft designed for longer stays zoku loft (9)

 

hotel room loft designed for longer stays zoku loft (1)

 

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hotel room loft designed for longer stays zoku loft (4)

 

hotel room loft designed for longer stays zoku loft (3)

 

 

 

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Artist Converts Century-old Gas Station into Home

 

Located in the Bayou St. John neighbourhood of New Orleans is an old gas station from 1918. The property served as a furniture-building shop and jewelry-making studio before being put on the market in 2003 for $120,000. An intrepid artist named Robert Guthrie decided to convert the gas station into a 2,000 square foot home that is now available for rent through airbnb.com.

The amazing conversion features a ton of fascinating accents and details such as:

– Original wooden trusses
– Car emblems are used as handles for cabinets and drawers
– Sconces made from old car headlights
– Toilet paper holder is an oil can holder
– Subway tiles in bathroom spanning two floors
– Staircase landing made from original hydraulic lift

Other features include a modern kitchen, rooftop deck and Jacuzzi tub. Pricing starts from $420/night or; $1891/week or; $4202/month. Be sure to check out the original listing on airbnb.com.

For a great story on the conversion process and the construction challenges faced, be sure to read the article by Doug MacCash for the Times-Picayune.

[via Technosphere]

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

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Photograph by Robert Guthrie

 

 

Video Tour with Owner Robert Guthrie

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Coolest. Loft. Ever. [40 pics]


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu
 

It’s a bold statement I know. What constitutes the “Coolest. Ever.”? When you’re talking loft spaces, high ceilings is a must…. 30 ft… check. It also needs something unique, something memorable, so when you tell your friends about the “coolest loft ever” one line is all it takes,

“There’s a basketball court in the living room, right beside the 18-foot Ficus tree”

Yeah that should do. Now come check out the incredible loft at 110 Freelon Street, located in the trendy SoMa (South of Market) neighbourhood of San Francisco, California.

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 

THE COOLEST LOFT EVER – 110 FREELON STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA

 
Built by the owner in the early 2000s with consultation by the Martin Building Company, the 4,400 square foot (408 sq m) live/work space was listed on April 15, 2011 for $3.1 million. Eleven days later, the property was sold for $3.32 million by Rob Levy and Steve Wu.

Featuring multiple levels of mezzanines, the 30-foot ceilings are adorned with multiple skylights, including a gigantic 16 x 20 foot retractable center skylight. That 18-foot Ficus tree is maintained by an automated watering system, and the 9-screen wall panel video system just looks sweet (watching football on Sundays would be epic). More details below…

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 

THE COOLEST LOFT EVER Continued…

 
– NCAA regulation glass backboard
– Music control panels throughout the loft
– Multi-setting custom lighting control system throughout the loft
– Industrial-style fireplace with exposed ceiling flute
– 3-car garage that directly accesses the loft
– Full wood decking on roof-top terrace with 4-person jacuzzi
– laser-optic lit steel tube pathway entrance

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 

SoMA (South of Market) Neighbourhood, San Francisco

 
SoMa borders are Market Street to the north-northwest, the San Francisco Bay to the east, Townsend Street to the south-southeast, and U.S. Route 101 (Central Freeway) to the west-southwest. The northeastern corner (where Market Street meets the bay) is often considered part of the Financial District, while the upper western corner of SOMA between Van Ness Avenue and 5th Street, and between Market and Mission Street is considered part of the “skid row” Tenderloin District. While many San Franciscans refer to the neighborhood by its full name, South of Market, there is a trend to shorten the name to SOMA or SoMa, probably in reference to SoHo (South of Houston) in New York City, and, in turn, Soho in London.

The neighborhood is a vast and diverse stretch of warehouses, auto repair shops, nightclubs, residential hotels, art spaces, loft apartments, furniture showrooms, condominiums, and technology companies. Despite the Dot-Com crash of the early 2000s, major software and technology companies have headquarters here, including Wired, Sega of America Inc., CNET Networks, Twitter, Justin.tv, BitTorrent Inc., Yelp, Rapleaf, and Advent Software among others.

SOMA is home to many of San Francisco’s museums which include the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, the Museum of the African Diaspora, the Cartoon Art Museum, the children’s Zeum, and the Contemporary Jewish Museum are also in the Yerba Buena area. The Center for the Arts, along with Yerba Buena Gardens and the Metreon, is built on top of Moscone North.

Across Howard Street, built on top of Moscone South, is a children’s park featuring a large play area, an ice skating rink, a bowling alley, a restaurant, the Zeum, and the restored merry-go-round from Playland-At-the-Beach. The children’s park and Zeum are joined to Yerba Buena Gardens by a footbridge over Howard Street. The area is also home to the few big box retail stores in San Francisco such as Costco, REI, Nordstrom Rack, and Best Buy. [Source: Wikipedia]

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 

SOURCES

 
– Official listing site: http://www.110freelon.com/
– Consultants: The Martin Building Company
– First spotted on: Homedsgn.com
– SoMa information: Wikipedia
– Listing Agents: Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 


Photograph via Rob Levy & Steve Wu

 

 

 

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