The Netherlands is a small country compared to its neighbors, Germany and France. This country may be small, but also known for many things such as; the royal family, cheese, windmills, tulips, and many more. The most visited town in The Netherlands is Amsterdam. Besides, it is the capital city of The Netherlands. Amsterdam offers everything from a great shopping place, outstanding architecture, magnificent interior design rooms, and famous museums. Along the canal in Amsterdam, there are traditional Dutch buildings with a facade of brick symbolized by Dutch medieval buildings. This design is focused on the gables and dual entrances give the houses an air of grandeur. Many of them have been converted into museums, hotels, and offices.
Other than traditional buildings architecture, there is also a fantastic building design in Amsterdam called Hotel Jakarta. Jakarta is the capital city of Indonesia also known as the tropical paradise. Even though Hotel Jakarta in Amsterdam is newly built, it has already won an award from the European Interior Landscaping Organization (EILO) for interior landscaping. Not just that, Hotel Jakarta in the Netherlands has already received several awards for Architectural Design, Green Architecture, and Interior Design Building. Let's take a closer look at the design-build architecture and the interior design of this hotel.
The Look of Hotel
We can see the contemporary design building from the outside. Each room has its own balcony with a huge glass window, offering stunning views over the river IJ. The facade of the building is coming together and it is completely windproof. The glass exterior combined with wood makes the hotel look lavish from the outside. The guests can take in the spectacular view without the crowds and sporadically drink champagne to cool off. The position of this contemporary hotel is set against a backdrop of incredible panoramic ocean views of the historical IJ’s river.
Indoor Garden Concept
This hotel has a special interior design room that makes it a landmark, such as its indoor garden concept. When you step inside Hotel Jakarta in Amsterdam, the first thing you might see is the most beautiful subtropical indoor garden. The vibes of Java island strongly fill the atmosphere of this hotel because of the right chosen plants. The garden is watered with collected rain and on the roof, solar energy is saved to use as electricity and it heats the showers in the hotel rooms. An atrium with a subtropical garden is the center of the hotel and each element brings a relaxing atmosphere.
Natural Interior Room Design
The carpet in the rooms presents tropical Indonesian accents with the perfect combination of light brown bamboo wood wallpaper. There is also large transparent window glass where visitors can enjoy the view over the IJ river. Indonesian accents and natural tones of the interior rooms are perfectly present with typical Indonesian furniture. The use of a lot of bamboo wood gives a warm feeling and has a good layout.
The Cafe Jakarta Interior
The hotel has various bars, restaurants, coffee corners, a wellness center, and cultural activities, all built around the central subtropical garden. The natural interior design room is well executed in each space of this hotel. Guests en route to the cafe restaurants wander along tiers of open walkways lined with bamboo wood and all the exotic plants such as palm & a live banana tree. The lighting setup does a good job to create a welcoming space where you can easily eat or have quality time.
Malabar cocktail bar also has a breathtaking view. This place is located on the eighth and ninth floors in the glass-walled tip of the wedge and this is considered the best spot to hunt sunset panorama. The soft-green sofa creates the natural tropical Indonesian atmosphere, here Amsterdam and Indonesian Java merge into a unique vibe, relaxed and temperamental. Hotel Jakarta in Amsterdam has proven the ability to create a combination of the two different cultures focused on natural tropical concepts and interior design rooms in Indonesia and The Netherlands.