Chapter 473: How Many Ideas
First of all, living in a prison is not a good thing in this world, but there is really a hotel in this world called a prison hotel.
The inn was once a military prison for Austria-Hungary and Yugoslavia until 1991, when Slovenia became independent, when it was converted into a hotel called Selica (meaning cell).
The 20 rooms are about a dozen square meters of cells remodeled as they are, the bulky iron doors and gates are all preserved from the past, all rooms have different themes, and the spacing is also unique, some bumping and some with oversized frescoes......
It is said that the most popular is room 116, what are the characteristics of this room...... Only those who have stayed there know about it.
Huaguo Mountain Water Curtain Cave is the hometown of Sun Wukong.
But in this world, there is really a water curtain cave hotel......
At the Magic Mountain Hotel in Chile, the rooms are just below a waterfall, and guests get in and out by a suspension bridge, as if they were staying in a water curtain cave.
The surroundings are dense forests, with eagles flying through the air, leopards galloping through the forests, and walking on suspension bridges is very close to nature. Each of the 13 rooms has its own bathroom. In addition, there are 11 cabins, each of which can accommodate 4~6 people.
In addition to the Water Curtain Cave Hotel, in this world, there are also cement tube hotels.
On the banks of the Danube River in Austria, three drainage pipes have been converted into mini-hotels called "Das park hotel", each weighing 10 tons and measuring 6.5 feet in diameter, and the space is so small that the whole house is only big enough for luggage and a power supply. But there was a small amount of furniture inside for basic needs, a lamp, a mattress, a couple of sleeping bags, and a door that could be locked.
If you exclude fashion and character, this kind of cramped inn probably doesn't everyone like to stay, right?
There is an underwater hotel at the bottom of Lake Mälaren in Sweden.
To stay at the hotel, guests must take a rubber boat to the middle of the lake, a kilometre offshore, where guests enter a hut that floats on the surface of the lake and then sink to a depth of more than 3 meters below the surface of the water, where they are accommodated in the only room.
It's a standard "aquarium" with fish swimming through glass windows on all sides, and the hotel has all the basic amenities for recreation, including swimming and fishing, but there is no restaurant.
In addition to bringing their own meals, passengers can also request special meal delivery services.
The vampire-style hotel where the coffin sleeps was mentioned above, but that's not the weirdest of all.
In the endless salt pans of western Bolivia, there is the only hotel in the world made entirely of salt.
That's right, it's a salt inn, a hotel made of salt.
In this peculiar salt inn, not only the surrounding walls, but also the roof, beds, tables, chairs, and floors are made of salt. Inside the Salt Lodge there are rooms, a restaurant, a bar and a ballroom.
But be careful......
Travelers are not allowed to lick the walls with their tongues, as even the wall tiles are made of salt.
Licking and licking, it's possible for the hotel to collapse, and it's dangerous enough to live in this kind of hotel...... I don't know what kind of enjoyment it will be to live in it and smell the saltiness...... Oh, yes...... Feel?
There was a foreigner who wrote a book called "Creative Hotel".
This book contains some of the most exotic and wonderful hotels in the world.
For some, they're tired of regular hotels, trying to minimize the cost of accommodation and hoping for more people in the room.
As a result, these creative hotels, crafted by some of today's most disruptive architects, are a breath of fresh air that will leave people feeling the lights up.
Many of the hotels featured in the book Creative Hotels are located in scenic locations, from Japan to Patagonia, from Lapland to South Africa. Each hotel is truly original, with a focus on comfort and maximum uniqueness, showcasing the ubiquitous detailing.
Finally, Creative Hotels also introduces some hotels that are definitely not to be missed. For example, the Brumau Hundertwasser Hotel & Spa, with its distinctive golden dome, showcases a beauty from a fairy tale.
Worth mentioning is the Propeller Island City Hotel in Berlin, designed by Lars Ströchin, which is a quirky and absurd hotel interior design that can be called the most aesthetic hotel in the world.
Some of the works in Creative Hotel are inspired by some of the most modern designers who are dynamic, colorful, forward-thinking and inspiring.
Each project is accompanied by detailed designer text notes, sketches, floor plans, and beautiful full-color images, showing a calm, clean design trend, providing a variety of ideas for space design, and the charm is endless!
Ye Chao remembers that the author of the book "Creative Hotel" is Dimiris Cartes of Spain.
Ye Chao, who has lived in the ice, also patronized Mariehamn.
That's right, the people of Åland are proud of their ancient seafaring traditions.
The four-masted sail moored at the west pier of Mariehamn in the capital city of Mariehamn is a symbol of Åland and a testament to the voyage of Åland's ocean-going fleet, and is now a museum for visitors to visit.
The Maritime Museum on the Isle of Åland is one of the best in the world, and at the dockyard east of Mariehamn, Ye Chao can also see the process of traditional ship construction.
Åland, a large island between Finland and Sweden, has been ruled by Sweden for hundreds of years, and almost all of its inhabitants speak Swedish, and its economy is largely dependent on seafaring and tourism.
Åland's economy is largely dependent on seafaring transport and tourism.
In 1999, with a per capita income of 100,000 Finnish marks (about 120,000 yuan), the island's residents paid as much as 5% less than the mainland residents of Finland in terms of income tax.
With Finland's accession to the European Union, all aircraft and vessels travelling between Finland and Sweden will be exempted from tax exemption, with the exception of aircraft and ships passing through Åland.
As a result, even in the winter when the tourist season is off-season, there is a steady stream of tourists who travel to Finland and Sweden but pass through Åland, because the tax money saved by buying tobacco and alcohol is enough to pay for the ferry ticket.
Looking down from the plane, the carpet-like islands are dotted with small islands, and even on the tiny island, which is only half the size of a basketball court, the clever Åland people have built holiday villas and delicate little docks, and the red houses hidden in the greenery reflect a rich folk style.
Walking through this land of lush green grass and flowers makes you feel like you're in a paradise.
Dotted with small islands, huge reefs, valleys with lush wildflowers and dense forests make this archipelago unique.
In 1854, due to the outbreak of the Crimean War, the huge plan to build a fortress was put on hold, and the half-built fortress was attacked by the Anglo-French forces from both the sea and land, and the British and French forces captured the fortress and blew it up.
Åland has a pleasant summer climate, where visitors can rent bicycles and get a map and guidebook, there are many campsites, resorts and homestays along the way, and there is a 36-hole golf course where you can play golf, fish by the sea, and take a boat trip to hunt.