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For the longest time, Airport hotels have been treated as nonchalant, transitional places — simply somewhere to rest your head during a layover, en route to your true destination. With their focus on business clientele, airline staff, and people seeking refuge from a canceled flight or missed connection, airport hotels haven’t always provided an experience that guests could relish as destination-worthy.
However, major design overhauls at the Sheraton Amsterdam Airport Hotel and Conference Center and the Sheraton Toronto Gateway Hotel showcase a big leap forward for what airport hotels can offer. By completely reconstructing their interiors to enable a seamless blend of business and leisure, by orienting public spaces around multiple ways to meet and gather, and by infusing the guest experience with genuine ties to local culture, these next-generation airport hotels are charting a new path for travelers who want make the most of every step of their journey.
In this episode, host Hamish Kilburn dives into the re-making of the Sheraton Amsterdam Airport Hotel with local designer Colin Finnegan, of FG Stijl. They reveal the nuanced spatial design choices and deep understanding of a traveler’s perspective that informed Colin’s work to re-imagine that hotel experience — from the first moment a guest looks out the window as their flight descends into Schiphol Airport.
Then Hamish speaks with Lauren Holmes, Interior Design Manager at Marriott International, about how airport hotels are being reimagined writ large — and what she’s learned from transforming the Sheraton Toronto Gateway Hotel into a more inviting space for repeat travelers and locals looking for a better place to spend their workday.
Featured Hotels: Sheraton Amsterdam Airport Hotel and Conference Center and Sheraton Toronto Gateway Hotel
Featured Designer: Colin Finnegan, FG Stijl
Explore more stories about hotel design at Travel by Design
Follow host Hamish Kilburn's hotel design reviews @HotelDesigns
4.8
1313 ratings
For the longest time, Airport hotels have been treated as nonchalant, transitional places — simply somewhere to rest your head during a layover, en route to your true destination. With their focus on business clientele, airline staff, and people seeking refuge from a canceled flight or missed connection, airport hotels haven’t always provided an experience that guests could relish as destination-worthy.
However, major design overhauls at the Sheraton Amsterdam Airport Hotel and Conference Center and the Sheraton Toronto Gateway Hotel showcase a big leap forward for what airport hotels can offer. By completely reconstructing their interiors to enable a seamless blend of business and leisure, by orienting public spaces around multiple ways to meet and gather, and by infusing the guest experience with genuine ties to local culture, these next-generation airport hotels are charting a new path for travelers who want make the most of every step of their journey.
In this episode, host Hamish Kilburn dives into the re-making of the Sheraton Amsterdam Airport Hotel with local designer Colin Finnegan, of FG Stijl. They reveal the nuanced spatial design choices and deep understanding of a traveler’s perspective that informed Colin’s work to re-imagine that hotel experience — from the first moment a guest looks out the window as their flight descends into Schiphol Airport.
Then Hamish speaks with Lauren Holmes, Interior Design Manager at Marriott International, about how airport hotels are being reimagined writ large — and what she’s learned from transforming the Sheraton Toronto Gateway Hotel into a more inviting space for repeat travelers and locals looking for a better place to spend their workday.
Featured Hotels: Sheraton Amsterdam Airport Hotel and Conference Center and Sheraton Toronto Gateway Hotel
Featured Designer: Colin Finnegan, FG Stijl
Explore more stories about hotel design at Travel by Design
Follow host Hamish Kilburn's hotel design reviews @HotelDesigns
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