Skip to Main Content
Advertisement

A Trip to Studio Munge’s Lavish Loos at Bisha Hotel

Advertisement

In making Bisha Hotel, Studio Munge first imagined the globe-trotting guest, and then designed the suites.

In the home, bathrooms can be tailored to a user’s lifestyle or personal tastes. But how does the designer of a hotel accommodate the diverse people, personalities and comfort levels at play in a widely used space? That’s what Alessandro Munge, founder and principal of Toronto-based Studio Munge, contended with while contemplating the interiors for Bisha Hotel & Residences, a luxury development that opened last September in his home city’s downtown core.

“Guests have very high expectations for the bathroom; it should always be an upgrade from their own home,” he notes. A residential bathroom, in other words, is very much connected to daily routine and should be highly functional. But with a bathroom for an upscale hotel, says Munge, “I can be much more conceptual and expressive with materiality. Although the room must stand the test of time, from a trends and operations perspective I can push boundaries and be more playful.”

But before that creative liberty is explored, a character must be developed. Divining who the guest will be is a skill Studio Munge has honed through 17 completed and current hotel projects for such brands as Rosewood, Shangri-La and Nobu. For Bisha, a development where every square inch oozes rock-star glamour, Munge evolved a focused guest profile: “a well-travelled culture-seeker with effortless style and quiet confidence.” Someone who Munge dubbed “The Discerning Vanguard.”

The idea of this globe-trotting sophisticate is expressed throughout the hotel; the suite bathroom, for example, draws on a lavish palette of brushed nickel, polished black chrome and Nero Marquina marble, a black stone with “brilliant and expressive” white veining. Custom vanities with fluted wood fronts in a high-gloss midnight blue complement the gleaming metal and stone. The end result has all the allure (and romance) guests expect from a luxury hotel. Even Toronto’s own discerning vanguard is checking in.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Town and country converge at this ultra-stylish country inn

Many city dwellers talk about moving to the country to start a B&B, or some other pastoral dream, but few actually do. During the pandemic, Michael von Teichman and Alex Portman did just that, chasing their dreams to The Eddie—an 1860s Loyalist manor house turned hotel set on 78 acres in prime Prince Edward County. Only a 2.5 hour drive from downtown Toronto, it’s a destination that’s easy to say yes to.

Advertisement

Newsletter

Your Weekly Dose of Modern Design

Sign up for the Designlines weekly newsletter to keep up with the latest design news, trends and inspiring projects from across Toronto. Join our community and never miss a beat!

Please fill out your email address.

The Magazine

Get the Latest Issue

From a sprawling family home in Oakville to a coastal-inspired retreat north of the city, we present spaces created by architects and interior designers that redefine the contemporary.

Designlines 2024 Issue