03.08.12
Mark Lamster | Essays

The Most Beautiful Hostel in the World



One does not typically associate minimalism with designs for the other 99 percent. It is a style, as Thomas de Monchaux wrote a few weekends ago in the Times, that "conjures a life of such intangible ease that the mere creature comforts of visibly abundant stuff are transcended." Or, as Rem Koolhaas put it rather succinctly in last year's Cronocaos exhibition, "Minimalism remains the preferred mode of conspicuous consumption." When a project that is not of the luxury variety is described as "Minimalist," it is typically code meaning cheap, shoddy, and lacking in creativity.

All of which makes the recently opened Antwerp Central Youth Hostel especially rare and admirable. The design is by the local architect Vincent van Duysen, and was supervised by his very capable project director, Kristof Geldmeyer. To simply call it austere is to not do it justice. The facade, with its rhythmic pattern of vertical windows, is proportionally related to its neighbors, and is clad not with concrete (as it may appear in photographs), but familiar Belgian bluestone, an expense the architects justified not only on aesthetic grounds, but for its sustainability. (It will last forever, and requires minimal care.) Most of the windows are deeply inset, to accentuate the building's mass, though large picture windows that shield public spaces are pushed up against the facade. In the evening, 
video works by the artist Michel Francois are projected onto these large glass panels, turning them into screens.

Public spaces have a sleek, Death Star vibe to them—but in a good way—with walls and ceilings painted matte black. The living spaces are above, along double-file corridors in a neutral off white. The rooms themselves are well-planned with customized furnishings, and therefore relatively spacious, if ascetic. A couple can take a double room with a private bath, sheets, and breakfast for a combined 53.60 euros. A single night in a dorm-style room is 22.80. Included is Internet usage and bike storage. There's also a bar (but you'll have to buy your own drinks—I recommend a Bolleke).

The success of the project is attributable to numerous factors, but none more important than the evident care taken by the architects, who typically work on the very high end, that the precision of their design was carried through to the end, and not value-engineered into oblivion. It's a credit to them, and blessing for those who would like to experience one of Europe's design capitals on a tight budget. Whether it is the most beautiful hostel in the world is surely debatable, but there is no doubt it is special. (Feel free to paste alternative favorites in the comments.) A slideshow follows.






Comments [12]

You had me until I viewed the slide show. Then the title of "The Most Beautiful Hostel in the World" seemed larded with sarcasm.

Slide 2: "Recessed windows accentuate mass." Alternate caption: "Impenetrable mass with (seemingly) inoperable windows cannot be breached by a truckload of C4 plastic explosives."

Slide 6: "Dining area with articulated ceiling." Alternate caption: "Space that's neither passageway nor room with ceiling articulated by ghastly fluorescent tubes."

Slide 8: "Lounge space with large window." Alternate caption: "Lounge with very large window provides view to, um, random construction stuff outside." What's with the oddly spaced, surface-mounted, light enclosures that look like beams, or are they beams? In either case, they're wrong.

The there's that gratuitous tree in the sad courtyard. Alternate caption: "Inmates are allowed 20 minutes of supervised fresh-air intake every day."

And yet, I could be wrong. Architectural photography is historically a corrupting and deceptive medium.
SARA HART
03.10.12
12:12

that's just my bad iphone snapshots at work. the windows are operable. the dining room is pleasant--the strip lights work. the plaza was still under construction, not yet landscaped. the inner court not furnished, and it's a young tree that should grow in. so i think your qualms are answered if you see it in person, though yes, it's ascetic. the detailing is generally excellent.

also, take a peek at the super-high approval ranks it gets online--an objective metric from a general public not always inclined to this aesthetic.
Mark Lamster
03.10.12
01:21

You need not waste a moment 'splainin' it to me. I'm a Lamsterite from way back. My comments were tongue-in-cheek and a poke at captioning, that editorial drudgery I've spent decades carelessly and passive-aggressively not perfecting. It was also about the question, "what's in a title?" "Most beautiful" and "in the world" brings out the nit-picking skeptic in everyone. Had it been titled "The Unhappy Hipster's Home Away From (Dwell) Home," I would have read it differently. I'll be in Antwerp in a couple of weeks to see it for myself, although I'm waaay past the age limit for staying anywhere with "youth" in the name. Thanks for indulging me. (People don't comments much on the D.O., do they? How come?)
SARA HART
03.11.12
11:55

the feelings are mutual, ms. hart. i deserved what i got for my somewhat cynical seo title. but check it out for yourself when you're there, and seeing as antwerp is a city i know well, perhaps i can make some recommendations for more luxurious accommodations, not to mention food, drink, sites, shops? let me know.

these comment sections used to be so much more lively. now? is it that people just comment on twitter? does everyone have their own blog? the registration system? are we all too boring? hmmm.
Mark Lamster
03.12.12
09:42

Sara, you forgot to re-caption photo #11: "Roof terrace with view of Renaat Braem's neigbhoring landmark Politei Tower."
Alternate caption: "Roof where hostel guests desperate to escape the unrelenting ascetic austerity can gaze out at a nearby historic building and try to imagine what it might be be like to be there."

Given how austere, even desperately bleak, the hostel looks as a result of the admittedly poor iPhone photos, it seems all the more ironic that the architect lives nearby in a "beautiful neoclassical townhouse." Makes me wonder if he would like the severe austerity enough to actually live even one night in it. And, if not, why expect others to do so?

One of the tenets of good communications design is that words and images should work to support one another (and I'd hope for DO to follow that). Here, word and image are at odds. The photos are really poor and they belie what the words claim. For example, why on earth show us the photo of the prison-like entrance gate? Oh, yes, it is stunning in its simple graphic composition of vertical lines (yawn). But it still looks like a prison gate. And if there is something special about it, the photo fails to convey that.

Surely there must be better photos of this hostel. Why not show them to us? If the detailing is indeed excellent, let's see why that is so. If the rooms really are well planned with custom furnishings, let's see a photo that conveys that idea.
Rob Henning
03.13.12
12:36

rob: i'm sorry you're offended by the photographs. i asked the architects to send along new ones, but they were taking their time so i just went with my own. this isn't architectural digest.

for the record, though the exterior of van duysen's house is neoclassical, the interiors are, in fact, minimal, though it's a private home and not a hostel, so obviously more luxurious. it is unfair to suggest he does not have the courage of his convictions.

as for the gate, is a side entrance, not the primary one. it was not there as a demonstration of my picturesque photo skills, but to show that even the side gate had been designed with care in the spirit of the rest of the project. i guess it looks prisonlike, if you want to see it that way. it is a security gate. enough said.

anyway, i will try to be more judicious about posting comments in the future (as i try to be generally), so as not to render undermine my own enthusiasms.
Mark Lamster
03.13.12
01:56

I'm not offended, I'm just disappointed to not see great images here. I'm further disappointed with the suggestion that, since this is not AD, then I should not even expect good photography! This is a web site about design, after all.
Rob Henning
03.13.12
02:34

i'm disappointed by a lot of things but i think the relative quality of a few pictures of a just-completed project on a design blog would be fairly low on my list.

i try to post decent photography here. sometimes it is my own, when there is no alternative, and it's not always perfect. to the extent that this is about my experience, i don't think that's unreasonable.

but i will say this, we arch critics are often assailed for not reviewing projects in their early stages, and then presenting them ONLY in the stylized photography that is generally paid for by the architects themselves, and otherwise does not present a realistic vision of a building or place. (though, of course, all images are mediated.) so i think it's wrong to expect only professional quality photography, especially here. again, to the extent that the images here undermined the points i was trying to make, that's my bad, but if the argument is that we should only have perfect professional shots, i think you're dead wrong. we should show things how they appear. this is a web site about design, after all.


Mark Lamster
03.13.12
04:39

Yeah, it's low on my list too, except when I'm reading a design blog about beauty and instead see ugly. I'd be disappointed in the same way if my subscription to Martha Stewart Living arrived devoid of its trademark highly stylized photos of people living lifestyles that are, for most people, unrealistic and unreachable. Of course Martha has set me up to expect those photos, and she has consistently rewarded my expectation. But, in the grand scheme of things it is not as much of a disappointment as, say, the fact that the vile Rick Santorum is receiving national attention and winning primaries. That might keep me awake at night, this won't.

Maybe my expectations of photo quality on DO were too high. It makes me wonder this: Does the fact that it is a blog mean that one can get away with lower-quality imagery? If you were publishing a book about this, would you use these images? If I was designing the book for you, I sure would want to try to get better images, and I feel the same about the blog.

Incidentally, I agree: We should certainly see things as they are. The highly stylized photos in AD often seem ridiculous--so unreal. But highly-stylized photography is not necessarily good photography, nor does good photography always have to be highly stylized.
Rob Henning
03.13.12
05:15

i think "get away with" is an unfortunately loaded phrase. this is a blog, not a book. i think there's a space here for all kinds of images, so long as they serve the text, and the point of the post.

Mark Lamster
03.13.12
06:16

Yes, the images should serve the text and the point of the post. I agree wholeheartedly. That's exactly what I was trying to say from the very beginning. Unfortunate choice of loaded phrase aside, I think blogs and books are equally deserving of great images to fulfill the mission of serving the text, etc. Why would it be any different for a blog? Do you have a different standard of writing for a blog than you do for a book?

Also, as an aside, I always thought DO was much more than a blog. I thought it was trying to be a leading outlet for, and proponent of, excellence in design criticism.
Rob Henning
03.13.12
09:22

Wow there are a lot of comments... However, would generally argue in favor of the notion of non-glossy images that are "accessible". Given many buildings are seen through public/Flickr lens of digital media, anyways.

Not sure whether to read this as tongue in cheek or not "i deserved what i got for my somewhat cynical seo title."

Additionally, while maybe not "beautiful" there is a refined dormitory feel going on. I have stayed at uglier/more rustic hostels.
namhenderson
03.30.12
08:04


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