STYLE MANTRA
Style Mantra - Luxury Travel Magazine
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Style Mantra | |||||
| By: Prue Rushton, Issue 32 – Spring 2007 | |||||
| (Dehli – India) | |||||
| FIRMLY GROUNDED IN ITS OWN MIX OF SPACE-AGE-GLAMOUR-MEETS-TRADITIONAL-INDIAN, THE PARK HOTEL IS LEADING A DESIGN REVOLUTION IN DELHI. | |||||
| Shuttling in from the airport almost goes too smoothly. In no time we have passed along unrecognisable highways and are at the edge of Connaught Place in the city centre. We blink at each other. Not so very long ago Delhi choked on fumes, it had urgent signs about the evils of plastic bags, you had to travel far and wide to get a drink, shopping was saris and pashminas in street stalls - it had a stomach sickness named after it. Delhi made travellers nervous. Today, deeply implanted in a clean and green revolution, Delhi is almost sparkling. The transformation in such a short space of time is staggering: you breathe fresh air, enclaves full of designer shops are sprouting, there’s a slick subway system that makes New York’s so last century. Yes, you still shouldn’t drink the water (not even when brushing your teeth), and hand wipes are wonderful if you’re eating out and about, but Delhi keeps readying itself for hosting the 2010 Commonwealth Games. And in this age of climate change, its shift from pollution almost provokes a mantra: if Delhi can do it, any major city can do it. Yet for all that’s new in New Delhi, perhaps one of the greatest surprises is The Park Hotel. Stepping into the space age style of a lobby that would easily sit in the Paris boutique hotel set is vaguely disorienting at first. In this largely white modular zone, globular amoebic shapes are cut out of curved walls. In the ceiling the recessed hemispheres are edged in neon lighting. Groups of clear tubular ‘chandeliers’ dangle dreamily. A clear-beaded curtain snakes its way sensually around chat zones which are inhabited by long, low, curved pink velvet sofas and oval rugs. Only the use of pink, an Indian colour of celebration, and beads are loose reminders that you are in Delhi. Shooting up in the lift to The Residence – two private floors of executive style – you begin to see just how cleverly UK interior designers Conran and Partners have brought old style India into the 21st Century. The Hindu elemental theme of Vaastu Shastra throughout the hotel is continued here as ‘earth’. You see it in the carpet – bold, irregular width stripes in greens and burnt brown and oranges. You see it on the walls with the Hindi word symbol for earth that has been graphically stamped into the plaster. In the rooms, fired oak wall panels treated with lime demarcate areas. The bed-head is a cushioned panel of neutral leather occasionally stamped with a gerbera pattern, as if by an old Indian rice stamp. Skinny troughs of live wheat grass, signalling a green Delhi, grow across the backs of desks. In the bathrooms, the style heads further east with the smooth curve of a Japanese tub and the square panel of a super large rain shower. It is the technology that utterly throws us. Delhi has always been known for its riot of wiring – great tangles that loom in the air – and its electricity blackouts. Here, there is broadband, a docking station for your iPod and large LCD TVs. We don’t need to try the 24-hour instant service, but we’re sure - like everything here – it works. The Residence Lounge area floats above Delhi like your own private viewing platform. Through one large window you look out across the angled terracotta beauty of Jantar Mantar, the 18th century observatory. Others reveal a vision of the ever-changing Connaught Place, which, it seems, now opens designer shops by the minute. The view is echoed in a map of Luytens Delhi, with Connaught at its centre, that’s stamped into the alabaster plaster on the walls. The Lounge has patterned screens dividing off private eating zones as well as a large square table for shared dining. Here you can eat a complimentary breakfast, and a la carte lunch and dinner. Down in the lobby level Fire restaurant, Chef Dean’s food has been awarded Best Indian Restaurant two years in a row. Try the Chaat platter – a row of delicious Indian street temptations laid out like Japanese sushi. At this level too, the designer power of the award-winning Agni bar and Aqua poolside bar and dining can be experienced. Order a Satan’s Whiskers cocktail and enjoy the dark, devil’s lair atmosphere of Agni. At Aqua choose between a cane and canvas covered love seat, or a sheer-draped pavilion and turn up your own heat. You can undo any partying damage on the outdoor yoga deck with morning and evening classes, or slip into luxury at Aura Spa. Here a mix of all-natural ingredients and a menu that runs from ‘Stress Busters’ to traditional ‘Siddha Marma Massage’ defies any of the former chaos of urban Delhi. We blink again. | |||||
| Details: | |||||
| Park Hotel, Connaught Place Delhi, India. Details, +91 11 2373 3737, www.parkhotel.com | |||||
| STYLE SECTORS | |||||
| Where to shop for luxury - Connaught Place. A range of style – for both him and her – can be found here just a few steps away. Best explored on foot, turn left at the end of the hotel drive and make your way around the Connaught ring roads, which are constantly opening new luxury label stores. - Khan Market, South of India Gate. Anglo-Indian style takes off in clothing and homewares with Anokhi, Manon, Fab India and Ogaan. - Sunder Nager Market, Off Mathura Road, near the zoo. This discreet and deceptively humble sector is where Royals such as Princess Michael of Kent and celebrities come to shop for jewels. There is also a good selection of Indian antiques. | |||||
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