New Zealand Commercial Design Trends Series NZ Commercial Design Trends Vol. 34/02C | Page 96

comes back to the ergonomics. So people are not having to re-learn a hotel each time they check in. Then creating something that’s different and unique comes back to that sense of place. There’s nothing worse than getting on a plane and travelling for 12 hours and then checking into a hotel that looks exactly the same as the one in the city you’ve just left. So creating a sense of place is one of the things we really focus on – understanding culture, under- standing the arts, understanding the location in which the hotel is being placed. For M Social, I knew this hotel building from my search | save | share at growing up here in Auckland, so it was about trying to create a reference back to the 1970s, to the house I grew up in. The selection of the woods, for example, some of the chairs and furniture – that’s one part of it. Also the fact that it’s on the waterfront meant there had to be a nautical aspect to it, there had to be a reference to the City of Sails. And then there are certain elements in the design, that depending how you look at them, can look like little kiwi feet or they can look like the masts and the rigging you see around here. We leave that up to the guest to interpret what they see. Above:Even more traditional five star hotels such as The Langham, Shenzhen are re-thinking the way guest rooms are planned. As business and leisure travel merges, there’s no longer a need for a dedicated work desk – a dining table with handy power points can easily double as a workstation too.