Don’t Call It a Comeback

Art Deco has been back in fashion before, most recently in the 1980s, but its latest return to visibility is quite different from its last.

Modernist design has been all the rage for so long now — we’ve certainly done our part to champion it — that it all but dwarfs the relatively minor Art Deco revival of the 1980s, when everything suddenly sported a neon-tinged, metal-smooth, South Beach sheen. But while the Eighties’ renaissance carried with it too much of that decade’s baggage to survive for very long into the next one, Art Deco’s latest comeback brings a conscious restraint to the proceedings.

Art Deco can be heavy, monumental, sometimes overwhelming, and hotels have learned that it’s better to use it sparingly, marrying the look with other trends. Instead of trying to recreate the style at its bold Roaring Twenties peak, they’ve trained a spotlight on Art Deco’s quieter, more delicate sensibilities.

The hotels below are fine examples of that dynamic at work, each to their own extent.

Singer Palace Hotel

Rome, Italy

Singer Palace Hotel - boutique hotel in Rome

For shopaholics, the heart of Rome is the Via del Corso, with its boutiques and luxury-brand flagships. This was also the heart of Rome for the Singer sewing-machine company, which built the Singer Palace here at the height of its powers nearly a century ago. Those days are gone, but this Art Deco palazzo remains, transformed by a local architect and a Milanese interior designer into a small luxury hotel in the contemporary Roman style.

 

Hotel Clark

Budapest, Hungary

Hotel Clark - boutique hotel in Budapest

Hotel Clark is a contemporary luxury boutique hotel right in the heart of classic Budapest. Surrounded by stately 19th-century buildings, its modern, understated façade belies the excitement found inside. It all starts with the postmodern whimsy of the lobby and public spaces, while the rooms playfully incorporate a touch of Art Deco and some contemporary graphic elements. Many rooms feature views of the Danube, which is hard to improve upon.

 

Noelle Hotel

Nashville, Tennessee

Noelle Hotel - boutique hotel in Nashville

The boutique-hotel revolution might be a relatively recent arrival in Nashville, but on the evidence of this 1929-vintage Art Deco beauty, there’s plenty of hotel history in this town. Noelle’s story doesn’t quite stretch uninterrupted back to the Twenties — it reopened in its current incarnation in early 2018 — but it’s a backstory that offers plenty of depth to what is, underneath it all, a thoroughly contemporary luxury boutique hotel.

 

The Robey

Chicago, Illinois

The Robey - boutique hotel in Chicago

The Robey is the latest occupant of North Tower, a 1929 Art Deco skyscraper in Chicago’s Wicker Park. The building’s old office space has been reshaped into 89 guest rooms and a handful of cafés and lounges, including a striking indoor-outdoor bar on the 13th floor. The look is cool and industrial with a vintage twist, the rooms simply outfitted in wood, chrome, and frosted glass, with charming Revo clock radios and proper writing desks.

 

Palihotel Culver City

Los Angeles, California

Palihotel Culver City - boutique hotel in Los Angeles

When we first launched Tablet the idea of a boutique hotel in Culver City would have been a shocking one. But today’s Culver City is suddenly hip, with great restaurants and nightlife as well as plentiful lifestyle and apparel shopping. And now it’s joined by an outpost of the local hip hoteliers Palihotel, who’ve adapted the 1920s-vintage West End Hotel into the modern-classic (and still Art Deco–influenced) Palihotel Culver City.

 

The Excelsior

Yangon, Myanmar

The Excelsior - boutique hotel in Yangon

Yangon Excelsior was the colonial-era headquarters of a Scottish-owned firm with interests in rice, wood, and oil exporting. But in the course of its evolution its architects did more than simply restore it to its early 20th-century condition. Throughout the hotel the historical references are treated as the backdrop to a contemporary romance rather than a strictly correct recreation of the building’s Art Deco heritage.

 

Hotel Molitor

Paris, France

Hotel Molitor - boutique hotel in Paris

Piscine Molitor was, from the Twenties through the Eighties, a unique Paris landmark, an indoor and outdoor swimming pool complex which, in its Art Deco splendor, resembled nothing so much as an inside-out cruise ship. And after a quarter-century of disuse, during which time it became a canvas for a burgeoning Parisian street-art scene, it’s found a second life as an Art Deco–influenced bathing complex — but this time around it’s also a luxury hotel.

 

Kimpton Cardinal Hotel

Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Kimpton Cardinal Hotel - boutique hotel in Winston-Salem

Who knew the old R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company headquarters in Winston-Salem, North Carolina was the original inspiration for the Empire State Building? A hotelier could hardly ask for a more architecturally distinguished starting point than this 1929 Art Deco skyscraper. Kimpton, true to form, adapts their accessible, light-hearted boutique-hotel style to its surroundings, and the result is a delightful throwback to an era that’s frankly more fantasy than reality.

 

Hotel Deco

Omaha, Nebraska

Hotel Deco - boutique hotel in Omaha

Hotel Deco XV is, first of all, exactly what it sounds like: a rather monumental 1930s Art Deco building at Harney and South 15th Street — hence the XV — in downtown Omaha, Nebraska. But while the structure dates back nearly 90 years, what’s inside is hardly a period piece. It was converted into a hotel in the 1980s and it’s only by virtue of a fairly recent renovation that it is what it is today: Omaha’s first luxury boutique hotel.

 

Claridge’s

London, England

Claridge's - boutique hotel in the London

We needed to include one bona fide, wall-to-wall Art Deco hotel on this list. And what better than Claridge’s, London’s poshest hotel. Even today, this Mayfair landmark — where the crowned heads of Europe came to wait out the Second World War — remains splendidly and timelessly Art Deco. Stroll past the black awning into an entry foyer with Lalique vases, gilded columns, a sweeping staircase ornamented with brass banister that is polished daily. The elevators are manually operated — and each contains a sofa for lounging.