Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer


Rembrandt was born here. The city of Leiden in South Holland is also famous for its university, the oldest in the Netherlands, and its hilltop 11th century castle. There’s now a new talk of the town: a carriage house within view of the castle has recently debuted as Hotel Rumour.

The creative reuse project is the work of Studio Modijefsky, an Amsterdam interior architecture group that transformed the 1657 structure into, in their words: “a vibrant social hub that can host everything from lively dinners to intimate drinks, private gatherings and dance nights—anything, in fact, apart from a sleepover.”

We admire the inventive use of space, both wide-open and confined, in the non-hotel, and see design ideas worth applying at home. Join us for a look—you just might decide to turn your own attic into a dining hideaway or something else entirely unexpected.

Photography by Maarten Willemstein, courtesy of Studio Modijefsky (@studiomodijefsky).

the building&#8\2\17;s high ceilings, grand arches, and wooden beams were a 17
Above: The building’s high ceilings, grand arches, and wooden beams were all preserved. A lineup of custom-designed stools stand at the bar, which has a terrazzo counter along with a base that the designers describe as “funky-patterned veneered wood and brass panels with dark green terrazzo blocks at the foot.”
the room is anchored by wall mounted wooden benches upholstered in blue gray le 18
Above: The room is anchored by wall-mounted wooden benches upholstered in blue-gray leather. Studio Modijefsky notes that bench design was “inspired by the carriages once housed in this building, blending linear and geometric shapes to create a visual dialogue between past and present.” The modernist hanging lights were custom made to fill the space with a warm glow.





Source link