We're accustomed to glamour in London SE26: Kelly Brook and Jason Statham used to live above the dentist. But when Anouska Hempel's heels hit the cracked cement of the parking space outside my flat, it's hard not to think of those Picture Post photographs of royalty visiting bombed-out families during the second world war. Her mission in my modest tract of suburbia is, however, about more than offering sympathy. Hempel—the woman who invented the boutique hotel before it bore any such proprietary name—has come to give me information for which, judging by the spreads in interiors magazines and anxious postings on online DIY forums, half the property-owners in the Western world seem desperate: how to give an ordinary home the look and the vibe of a five-star, £750-a-night hotel suite. To Hempelise, in this case, a modest conversion flat formed from the middle slice of a three-storey Victorian semi.
"You could do it," she says, casting an eye around my kitchen. "Anyone could do it. Absolutely no reason why not. But there has to be continuity between the rooms. A single idea must be followed through." She looks out wistfully over the fire escape. "And you'd have to buy the house next door, of course." That's a joke. I think.
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It's worth pausing, though, to consider the oddness of this impulse. The hotel room is an amnesiac space. We would be troubled if it bore any sign of a previous occupant, particularly as many of us go to hotels in order to do things we would not do at home. We expect a hotel room to be cleaned as thoroughly as if a corpse had just been hauled from the bed. (In some cases, this will actually have happened.) The domestic interior embodies the opposite idea: it is a repository of memories. The story of its inhabitants ought to be there in the photos on the mantelpiece, the pictures on the wall, the books on the shelves. If hotel rooms were people, they would be smiling lobotomy patients or plausible psychopaths. | 精品旅館帶回家 作者 經濟學人雜誌 M. 斯威特 我們對倫敦SE26區的浪漫色彩已習以為常:凱莉‧布魯克和傑森‧斯坦森以前就住在那位牙醫生的樓上。然而,當阿努斯卡‧韓貝爾的鞋跟踩在我公寓外停車位上的龜裂水泥地時,很難不讓人聯想到畫報刊物裡,英國皇室在二次大戰造訪家毀人亡的受難者照片。不過,她來到這個位於郊區、毫不起眼的寒舍,目的不僅是施予憐憫而已。精品旅館是韓貝爾的創意,當時精品旅館尚未成為潮流,她來訪的目的是提供資訊給我。以室內設計雜誌掀起的風潮和網上DIY論壇踴躍的貼文來看,西方世界半數以上的屋主對這些資訊求之若渴:如何讓一般住家具備五星級旅館和一晚750英磅套房的外觀與氛圍。以本人住家為例,就是要將這棟三層樓高維多利亞式半獨立住宅中層改裝成的樸素公寓改觀為韓貝爾風格。 她說「你必然達成」,一面放眼環視我的廚房。「任何人都做得到,沒有任何理由做不到。不過,房與房之間必須能夠連貫,呈現出一種整體概念」,她面帶愁容地望著逃生口,「而且,你當然得把鄰居的房子買下來。」我想她是在說笑吧。 不過,這確實應該踩住煞車來三思這股莫名的衝動。旅館房間是一種失憶狀態的空間。如果它留著前任房客的任何痕跡,我們會深受其擾,尤其大多數人入住旅館就是為了做他們不會在家做的事。他們期望旅館房間經過徹底清理,就宛如一具屍骨剛從床上拖離後,不留半點痕跡般的徹底。(在某些情況下,這樣的情節可能發生過。)至於私宅內,上演的正是截然相反的劇情:它是記憶的儲存庫。房屋主人的故事應該從壁爐上的照片、牆上掛的畫、書架上的書當中覓得蹤跡。如果把旅館房間比喻成一個人,他們應該是做過前腦葉白質切除手術後,痴痴傻笑的病患,或是如假包換的神經病。
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