Ransom Riggs
Weird Hotels ’round the World
by Ransom Riggs - August 24, 2009 - 11:09 AM

When it comes to accommodations, there’s good weird and there’s bad weird. I’ve stayed in a few of the latter kind — like an uber-budget flophouse in Paris where the door wouldn’t close all the way and stray cats would sneak into our room while we were sleeping. The hotels below, on the other hand, are trying to make a statement, being weird on purpose in a creative way, and generally look like comfortable places to stay. (Except maybe the oil rig escape pod.) Check ‘em out.

Jules’ Underwater Hotel

If you’re really into diving (and you don’t work on a submarine), this hotel-slash-research lab may be the only opportunity you’ll ever have to stay underwater for days at a time without surfacing. Located 21 feet under the waters off Key Largo, Florida, the only way in is via scuba, and it’s got two bedrooms, a common room, bathrooms and a galley — so it’s really more like an underwater time-share apartment than a hotel. Rooms are around $500/night. Here’s one of them:
Jules

And this is the hotel entrance:
entrance2

The Poseidon, 5-Star Underwater Hotel

If the Jules seems too downmarket and you want to stay in the Four Seasons of underwater hotels, the soon-to-be-completed Poseidon in the Bahamas will be more your speed. The entrance to this hotel is via tunnel (so you don’t have to get wet), and the hotel is equipped with lights and fish-feeders, so there’s always a show out your window. If you’ve got $1500/night to drop on it, make a reservation!

There’s another hotel named the Poseidon planned — this one in Fiji — and they’ve created this virtual tour of the facility.

Oil rig escape pod

Capsule_dog

On the other end of the ocean-themed comfort spectrum, there are the Netherlands’ Capsule Hotels, which are actually 1970s-era oil rig escape pods (to be lowered into the water in case of evacuation). More pictures are here — and actually, it doesn’t look that uncomfortable inside.

A section of used drainpipe

image_1

It’s actually called DAS PARKHOTEL, but I call ‘em like they are. Located in a park alongside the banks of the Danube, these old pipes are outfitted with an unexpectedly comfortable interior – full headroom, double bed, storage, light, power, woolly blanket and light cotton sleeping bag. Bathroom facilities are available in the public bathrooms in the park. If this sounds a lot like camping out, it is — hence the hotels “pay what you wish” policy. Just leave a few Euros behind when you go. [link]

An old wine cask

DeVrouwe_exterior

These four huge casks are actually the Hotel de Vrouwe Van Stavoren in the Netherlands, and at one time they each held approximately 20,000 bottles worth of wine each. Tiny, airtight rooms which are probably still outgassing alcohol vapor — is this a good idea? But it certainly looks cool.
DeVrouwe_interior

Pictures by Paul Rekker.

A 747 in the Costa Rican jungle

Plane_outsidearea
This plane was once operated by South African Airways and Avianca Airlines — now it sits in the Costa Rican jungle, interior repaneled in rich wood, as a two-bedroom hotel suite. (It appears to be owned by a “normal” hotel, located on a beachside bluff nearby.) Pictures by Vincent Costello.

(Via Budgettravel.)

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Comments (12)
  1. That isn’t a 747. Much smaller. Possibly an L1011.

  2. The Costa Verde website refers to the fuselage as a 727, and I’m inclined to believe them since the 747 does not have a tail engine.

  3. That isn’t a 747, it’s a 727. See http://www.airliners.net/photo/Untitled-%28Avianca%29/Boeing-727-44/0095605/&sid=51b8adccecbde103bd16762fde5cb7c4

  4. 747?
    I think not, looks more like a 727 to me…..
    Nice article though….

  5. How about the old silo in Akron Ohio that Quaker Oats turned into a hotel? The silo is painted just like a Quaker Oats box.

  6. There is a hotel in northern California that lets you stay in train cars. I have wanted to take my son there for a long time:

    http://www.rrpark.com/

  7. I thoroughly enjoyed this list. I do have one comment however; please excuse me for seeming presumptuous but I strongly feel your readers deserve to know the truth: the airplane pictured in the Costa Rican jungle is not a 747.

  8. The one in Akron is no longer a hotel, I don’t think. I’m pretty sure the University of Akron owns it now. We were there in October 2007 for a wedding and there were signs everywhere about how it was going to be used by the university. Very interesting building, though, even though Quaker Oats wasn’t even founded in Akron. ;-P

  9. When I look at Hotel de Vrouwe Van Stavoren, my mind screams “HOBBITS HOBBITS HOBBITS HOBBITS.” Excellent.

  10. Apparently Costa Rica loves to transform old planes. There is a restaurant and bar called El Avion in the same part of the Pacific coastal region of Quepos, Manuel Antonio. Here’s a picture:

    http://www.travelpod.com/travel-photo/matt.s.wise/1/1232244000/dscf2156.jpg/tpod.html

  11. You’ve got to consider the IceHotel in Jukkasjarvi, Sweden. Rooms, furnishings and bed made entirely of ice (though fortunately the sleeping bag isn’t). They even serve drinks in ice shot glasses at the ice bar

  12. It isn’t a hotel, but Lizzie Borden’s home was turned into a bed and breakfast several years ago. I stayed there, and it was fantastic- and very creepy and haunted.

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