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Philippe Starck

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What do you get when you mix a quaint 19th-century French home with a towering glass monolith? A fever dream? A time-traveling airship?

Nope—Maison Heler, the delightfully bizarre brainchild of design icon Philippe Starck.

Hovering 45 meters above Metz, France, this surreal hotel stacks a postcard-perfect Alsatian house atop a shimmering tower like it’s the world’s most elegant Jenga game. Shutters, pitched roof, a little garden—it’s all there. Just… floating.

Starck calls it “an imaginary building from a dream,” and honestly, that tracks. It feels like something a very chic ghost would build. Or a Wes Anderson character with a generous budget and access to cranes.

The new construction comes to life with a juxtaposition of materials, and the addition of hanging plantings, which give a sense of age and grace.

Maison Heler was born of a surreal, poetic tale I imagined. It is a hotel conceived as a habitable work of art, a literary principle crystallized in matter.”
-Philippe Starck

Inside, it’s modern luxury with Starck’s signature weird-but-wonderful flourishes. But it’s the silhouette—storybook charm meets space-age stilts—that steals the show.

The hotel, the Maison Heler, is part of the Curio Collection by Hilton. Rates start at 161€ per night. Learn more and book now on the Hilton website.

The hotel’s interior has unique touches that let guests know they’re not in just any hotel. There’s a sense of surrealism that abounds.

We love projects like this that fly in the face of ordinary, and prove that creativity and a bit of bizarre in the world of architecture is a good thing.

Images © Copyright Philippe Starck and Curio by Hilton.

We’ve always loved Phillippe Starck’s approach to design, and the unconventional forms that his work creates.

Mortlach, a single malt Scotch whisky, employed the famous designer to enhance their liquor bottles. They named him Creative Director for the brand, and just recently released

Using a sophisticated 3D printed metal form, Starck took the existing squared-off bottle, and wrapped it in a complex, organic form that feels fully new and unexpected.  It’s a big dichotomy, the traditional glass form paired with the organic metal ‘frame’.

The sinewy form of the metal creates a cage, both metaphorically and physically, to protect the whisky inside. Created in a number of metal finishes, the forms are inspired by the gyrus, the circumvolution of the brain.

This special edition Mortlach X Starck whisky is available from fine liquor distributors.

Read more on Dezeen:

 

“The form of the cage comes from the gyrus, the circumvolution of the brain. It is human intelligence creating human intelligence, to reveal the subconscious of the whisky”

-Phillippe Starck

starck-eyes-1-moss-and-fog

Philippe Starck is a famous designer who has worked on everything from furniture to architecture to watches and homewares. For a new line of eyeglasses, advertisements showcase the Biolink flexibility of the frames by warping human faces into flat canvasses. Strange yet captivating, the ads seem to work for me, I want to know more. Via GBH London:

starck-eyes-2-moss-and-fog starck-eyes-3-moss-and-fog

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