Forget #luxury #penthouses#Germany’s #1 hotel for 2026 is a #Bavarian farm! 🐄

The #HolidayCheck Awards are in, and #Moierhof near Lake #Chiemsee has taken the top spot. With its "play barns" and home-grown breakfasts, this family-run gem beat out traditional resorts across the country.

Curious to see which other Bavarian wellness spots made the Top 10? From the #Alps to Franconian Switzerland, we’ve got the full list of the best-rated stays in Germany

#Read More👇👇👇

https://munchen.news/en/bayern-en/bavarias-moierhof-tops-holidaycheck-ranking-of-germanys-best-hotels/

Bavaria’s Moierhof Tops HolidayCheck Ranking of Germany’s Best Hotels - On Duty of Munich

The most popular hotels in Germany have been determined based on guest reviews. According to an analysis of data conducted by the booking portal HolidayCheck for 2026, a vacation farm in Bavaria has claimed the top spot.

On Duty of Munich - The art of news creation
Nieuwe luxe penthouses in Haarlem: SkyPlaza opent inschrijving: Op het voormalige EKP terrein aan de Westergracht in Haarlem worden 21 luxe dakwoningen gerealiseerd onder de naam SkyPlaza. Gelegen op de bovenste verdieping van het gebouw, direct boven winkelcentrum Plaza West, combineren deze exclusieve penthouses comfort, duurzaamheid en een centrale ligging. De voorinschrijving is vanaf nu geopend via www.skyplazahaarlem.nl… https://www.haarlemupdates.nl/2025/10/03/nieuwe-luxe-penthouses-in-haarlem-skyplaza-opent-inschrijving/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=mastodon #Haarlem #inschrijven #penthouses #SkyPlaza

Studio Andrew Trotter designs penthouse and event space inside former Athens warehouse

Raw concrete walls serve as a backdrop to vintage furnishings in this rentable venue and guest suite that Studio Andrew Trotter has created within a converted 1970s industrial building in Athens, Greece.

The six-storey warehouse, now named 10AM Lofts, features a multi-purpose event space spread over its basement and ground floor, which can host anything from exhibitions and dinners to photoshoots.

The event space is spread across the building's ground floor (above) and basement (top image)

The penthouse, which spans the top two floors, can be used as part of these events or booked for private gatherings and longer-term residencies.

Both spaces were designed by Barcelona-based Studio Andrew Trotter with the help of local practice Gavalas Ioannidou Architecture, while a number of other designers have put their personal touch to the four lofts that are spread across the two remaining floors.

A spiralling concrete staircase leads up to the mezzanine

To make room for the event space, the two lowest floors were stripped back to their raw concrete shells.

To lighten up the ground floor, the studio inserted a couple of new windows, inlaid an entire wall with translucent glass bricks and painted surfaces white.

White paint was also used to finish the balustrade fronting the mezzanine-level workroom, which can be accessed via a set of spiralling concrete steps.

Glass bricks let light through to the interior

Guests must descend a twisted Corten-steel staircase to reach the basement, which has a markedly moodier ambience.

Apart from the illumination provided by a handful of pendant lamps, light can only trickle through to the space from the narrow openings left in the ceiling.

Vintage furnishings have been sparingly dotted throughout to soften the harsh industrial look of the space.

Twisted Corten-steel stairs lead down to the basement

The penthouse, which is set over the building's fifth and sixth floors, features surfaces rendered in lime plaster and paint rather than concrete to create what the studio describes as "a feeling of rough luxury".

The fifth floor accommodates a cosy living room, furnished with a plump beige sofa and armchair as well as a weathered sideboard topped with a couple of antique vases and a marble bust.

[

Read:

Studio Andrew Trotter models Villa Cardo on traditional houses in Puglia

](https://www.dezeen.com/2019/07/22/villa-cardo-studio-andrew-trotter-italy-holiday-home/)

Heavy sand-coloured linen curtains bring a sense of warmth to the natural light that filters in through the windows.

Close by lies the kitchen, centred on a wooden dining table and a set of Charlotte Perriand's woven Dordogne chairs.

Antique furniture decorates the penthouse's kitchen and dining area

At this level of the penthouse, there is also a study and a bathroom with a huge blocky tub.

This sits beside expansive sliding glass doors that allow guests to enjoy unspoilt vistas of the Acropolis citadel while they soak.

The bathroom has views over the city of Athens

Sweeping city views can also be enjoyed from the main bedroom up on the sixth floor, which is bookended by glass walls.

"[It's] a haven of peace," explained Studio Andrew Trotter. "In the heart of busy Athens, the space is cool and calm."

The bedroom is bookended by glass walls

The venue's moody interiors stand in stark contrast to Villa Cardo, a bright white holiday home that Studio Andrew Trotter completed in 2019.

Nestled in an olive grove in Puglia, Italy, the four-bedroom residence is designed to resemble the region's traditional cubic dwellings.

The photography is bySalva Lopez.

The post Studio Andrew Trotter designs penthouse and event space inside former Athens warehouse appeared first on Dezeen.

#all #interiors #apartments #concrete #athens #greece #culturalbuildings #warehouses #penthouses #mixeduse #studioandrewtrotter

Studio Andrew Trotter designs penthouse and event space inside former Athens warehouse

Raw concrete walls serve as a backdrop to vintage furnishings in this rentable venue and guest suite that Studio Andrew Trotter has created within a converted 1970s industrial building in Athens, Greece.

Dezeen

Neri Oxman and Bill Ackman told to alter Norman Foster design for their New York penthouse

Architect and designer Neri Oxman and her husband, the hedge fund manager Bill Ackman, have been told to modify plans drawn up by Norman Foster for a glass penthouse on a 1920s building in New York.

Oxman and Ackman want to demolish the existing one-storey, pink stucco penthouse on the roof of the Upper West Side block and replace it with a two-storey modernist structure.

The glass-and-steel, stacked-box design was produced for the couple by British architect Foster, founder of the UK's largest architecture firm Foster + Partners.

The proposed penthouse would overlook Central Park

After three hours of discussion at a meeting last month, in which Oxman, Ackman and Foster all participated, New York City's Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) asked for the height of the proposed new penthouse to be reduced.

Concluding the hearing, LPC chair Sarah Carroll said the proposed penthouse's "materials and design do not detract from the building below by virtue of its simplistic and carefully designed nature" but noted concerns about its visibility.

"I would suggest that we take no action today and ask the applicants to continue to study this project," she said.

"I think we have a lot of support and I think you're in the right direction and this is just a matter of continuing that process, thinking about how you can really fulfil the design intent [...] of this glass house on the roof by sinking it down, lowering it, maintaining a more sort of horizontal quality."

Some in the hearing expressed concerns about the structure's visibility from below

The site is next to the New York Historical Society and close to Central Park, forming part of the Upper West Side-Central Park West Historic District, over which the LPC has jurisdiction.

Appointed by the New York City mayor, the LPC is responsible for regulating sites and buildings it deems to have architectural, historical or cultural significance and is the largest municipal preservation agency in the United States.

Among concerns raised at the meeting by local residents and commissioners was the visibility of the new glass penthouse from surrounding areas.

Addressing the meeting, Foster argued the design was "very respectful, it's very gentle, but it is of its age".

The project would involve demolishing an existing pink stucco penthouse, which itself has been altered over the years

Describing his studio's approach to the project, he added: "History of any building of architecture is the layering of history, and each period makes its own imprint and the quality of that imprint, the way in which it defers to the original building, is important and that's regardless of the scale."

Speaking later on in the Zoom call, Oxman claimed that "there is an incredible amount of value in the environmental, structural and indeed social implications for this project".

She called upon those in the meeting – many of whom were residents of the building who had expressed opposition to the project – "to separate between issues that relate to preservation in its purest form, and issues that relate to personal, or perception of, personal wealth associated with an individual who so cares for the city and the world, and who brought me into his life and for which I'm so, so grateful".

"This has been more than a committee hearing for me, this is a lesson that I will take with me for the rest of my life," she added.

The applicants were told to go away and make the penthouse lower

Belle Horwitz, a long-time resident of the apartment block, implored the commission to reject the "unprecedented, deliberately discordant project whose sole objective is in effect to draw attention to itself".

Another, Mary Breasted, said it "looks like a Malibu beach house that got blown onto our roof".

However, others who spoke at the meeting were far more complimentary, with one Upper Park West resident saying he thought the design was "phenomenally beautiful".

[

Read:

RAMSA to expand New-York Historical Society for LGBTQ+ museum

](https://www.dezeen.com/2021/07/13/ramsa-new-york-historical-society-expansion-american-lgbtq-museum/)

Ackman told the hearing that around 85 per cent of the building's 90 inhabitants are supportive of the project.

"Many people in my industry have decamped to Miami and Palm Beach and Austin, Texas, and other places because of the tax burden of the city and here we are replanting roots on the Upper West Side in a beautiful, 3,000-square-foot glass box that Norman Foster has designed, which I think is a great asset for the city and if LPC disagrees I respect the decision and I guess we pack our bags," he said.

The businessman admitted to having made a "major commitment" to the neighbouring New York Historical Society, but dismissed suggestions he had used his wealth to try to push through the project as "offensive and absurd".

The meeting was shown a floorplan of the proposed glass box

The apartment block itself, 6-16 West 77th Street, stands at 16 storeys with a tan brick facade, having been designed by Nathan Korn and completed in 1928.

Ackman bought the apartment at the top of the building, including the existing pink penthouse, which is part of the original design, for $22.5 million in 2018.

Expected to take 18 months to build, if the project goes ahead it will be the first time Foster has designed a private residence in New York.

The design consists of a glass box with a smaller one stacked on top of it

Ackman runs hedge fund Pershing Square Capital Management. Oxman is a former professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology known for her pioneering work in the field of Material Ecology. She currently runs her own lab called Oxman in Manhattan.

She was a contributor to Dezeen's recent Dezeen 15 series marking our 15th anniversary.

The images are by Foster + Partners.

The post Neri Oxman and Bill Ackman told to alter Norman Foster design for their New York penthouse appeared first on Dezeen.

#residential #all #architecture #news #usa #fosterpartners #normanfoster #nerioxman #penthouses #modernism #glasshouses #upperwestside #newyork

Neri Oxman and husband told to alter Norman Foster design for their New York penthouse

Architect and designer Neri Oxman and her husband, the hedge fund manager Bill Ackman, have been told to modify plans drawn up by Norman Foster for a glass penthouse on a 1920s building in New York.

Dezeen

Leckie Studio designs penthouse inside BIG's Vancouver skyscraper

A rainforest-style atrium with a cedar tree lies within a two-storey unit designed by Leckie Studio, located inside the new Vancouver House tower.

The penthouse is found within the sculptural, 59-storey tower that rises up from a triangular site in downtown Vancouver, near Granville Bridge. The building was designed by architecture firm BIG and was completed last year.

A rainforest-style atrium sits at the heart of the penthouse

The two-level apartment is on the northwest side of the skyscraper, where it is afforded views of English Bay and the North Shore Mountains.

The unit's owner desired an inviting atmosphere and spaces to accommodate natural artefacts and artwork from her travels. She turned to local firm Leckie Studio to oversee the design.

The apartment has views far-reaching views of Vancouver and beyond

The team set out to create a layered environment that looked both inward and outward, and was infused with organic elements.

"Through an iterative design process, the studio and client arrived at a highly bespoke, biophilic design that is attuned to the passage of time," the team said.

A kitchen on the lower level features a giant island

The unit is divided into public and private areas. On the bottom level, one finds a living room, dining area, kitchen and an office. A half-turn stair leads to the upper level, which holds two bedrooms.

There also is a 167-square-metre roof deck that is accessed via a private elevator.

"The experience of the penthouse is quite varied, depending on the time of day and which space is being occupied," said architect Michael Leckie.

The unit's focal point is a tall, glazed atrium filled with lush vegetation.

The atrium runs alongside the stairwell leading to bedrooms

Acting as the "spine" for the penthouse, the atrium runs alongside the stairwell and extends from the unit's bottom level all the way to its roof terrace. At the top, it is open to the sky.

"Conceived as a microcosm of the Pacific Northwest rainforest, its centrepiece is a full-size, red cedar tree that lends a contemplative and grounding element to the onlooking interiors," the team said.

Finishes and fixtures are kept minimal in the bathroom

"The ecosystem surrounding this tree will be sustained long term by a 'nurse' log, which replenishes the space with nutrients from decay."

Beyond the atrium, earthy elements are found throughout the dwelling and form a rich backdrop for the client's belongings.

Marble lines the walls of the powder room

American black walnut makes up the woodwork in the living room, kitchen and bathing areas. The high-quality wood was also used for the stair treads.

Travertine was used for flooring and custom-milled bathroom sinks. Smokey grey marble lines the walls in a powder room.

Blackened-steel accents can be found throughout the apartment

Blackened-steel accents run throughout the unit and act as a counterpoint to the natural materials.

The penthouse's sparse furnishings include an oak-topped dining table with a cast-bronze base, and a low-lying, multidirectional sofa that support various postures and orientations.

A lighting installation from Bocci illuminates the stairwell

Floating in the stairwell is a lighting installation from Bocci that evokes a cluster of sparkling fireflies. The piece is made of copper and 122 glass luminaires.

The rooftop terrace is meant to serve as an extension of the living space. It is fitted with a stainless-steel jacuzzi, an outdoor shower, a kitchenette and plenty of seating.

The lighting installation is made from copper and glass

Founded by Michael Leckie in 2015, Leckie Studio has designed a number of residential projects, including mirrored cabins that blend into the forest. The firm also designed Slack's Vancouver office, located within a repurposed industrial building.

Photography is byConrad Brown.

The post Leckie Studio designs penthouse inside BIG's Vancouver skyscraper appeared first on Dezeen.

#all #interiors #residential #instagram #apartments #big #canada #vancouver #penthouses #leckiestudio