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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsPhilippe Starck reveals surrealist hotel topped with 19th-century mansion
https://www.dezeen.com/2025/03/31/maison-heler-philippe-starck-metz-sureal-hotel/


Designer Philippe Starck has unveiled the surreal nine-storey Maison Heler hotel in Metz, France, which is topped with what appears to be a 19th-century mansion. Fully conceived by Starck, the hotel aims to tell the surreal story of Manfred Heler, an imaginary man whose mansion was thrust nine storeys into the air.



"Manfred Heler has inherited his parents' beautiful house," explained Stark. "As an orphan, he finds himself all alone, in this mansion surrounded by a large park. Everything's going well for him, until he starts to get bored." "To cope with this boredom, he tries to invent everything," he continued. "An extraordinarily rigorous and inventive man, he doesn't necessarily succeed in everything he undertakes, but it's always done with intelligence and poetry, guided by a naive desire to create meticulously at all costs."



This mansion, which is entirely clad in metal, now stands on top of a nine-storey monolithic tower. It contains a restaurant, bar and event spaces. In Starck's tale, Heler was in the mansion when it was raised into the air without warning. "It's springtime," said Starck. "He's daydreaming in his armchair. Suddenly, the earth begins to tremble." "He doesn't understand what's happening," he continued. "He looks around and realises, to his aghast, that he's going up in the air, along with his park, his house and his armchair."



"He climbs and climbs and climbs, until the shaking stops," he added. "Then there's silence. Manfred is high above the city. His house has been extruded: as if a cookie-cutter had arrived from below, cut off the Earth's cap and mounted it vertically." The mansion interiors were designed to evoke the 19th-century spaces of Heler's fictional home. Throughout the rooms, "whimsical objects" were placed that were designed by Starck. These include a crystal hammer, plaster anvils, double-ended axes and inverted rocking chairs.
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Philippe Starck reveals surrealist hotel topped with 19th-century mansion (Original Post)
Celerity
Tuesday
OP
Fla Dem
(26,418 posts)1. Well that certainly took some imagination. Excellent!
soldierant
(8,318 posts)2. I love stuff like this.
I love the beauty of artefacts from that time period, and I love the humor displayed and encouraged by the wacky stories.
dai13sy
(541 posts)3. I love this place. It's huge and homey and cozy all at once. I am having fun with all the different shapes