The Wonderful Hotel Amsterdam Pulitzer Amsterdam
Address: Pulitzer Amsterdam, Prinsengracht 323, Amsterdam, Netherlands,
PULITZER AMSTERDAM
AMSTERDAM
A cosy, kooky hotel in the Netherlands' coolest city
Percolating its way through 25 historical buildings – from 17th-century canal-side mansions to artisans’ workshops – this place has soaked up 400 years of stories from previous residents including grand families, a musician and a friend of Rembrandt’s. Inside, a fresh, cheeky re-imagining by Jacu Strauss (Barbecoa and the Mondrian London) weaves in these different elements with smart new Dutch design, and a great deal of quirky charm. Charred furniture by Maarten Baas holds its own alongside voluminous armchairs and gilt-framed paintings against an Old Masters’ palette of deep blues, plums and rich greens. It is a delightful hotchpotch of buildings, with crooked stairways leading around unexpected corners and through a warren of passages littered with bizarre market finds. Bedrooms come in all shapes and sizes, but here the mood is of calm and comfort, with muted pastels, luscious touches of lime and purple, and works from the hotel’s vast private collection of modern art. Downstairs, Jansz restaurant has taken root in the former home of a coppersmith, serving dishes such as miso-glazed cod and lobster risotto, and the Pulitzer’s Bar (a local institution) has a cosy club atmosphere for downing a Dashing Daisy cocktail, with marigold-infused gin and a mandarin shrub. The hotel also has one of the most beautiful salon boats in town: a 1900s teak vessel to glide you through the canals in style. This is an enormously fun place to stay and it far outstrips its rivals by connecting with both the old bones and the vital, contemporary spirit of Amsterdam.
PULITZER AMSTERDAM
AMSTERDAM
A cosy, kooky hotel in the Netherlands' coolest city
Percolating its way through 25 historical buildings – from 17th-century canal-side mansions to artisans’ workshops – this place has soaked up 400 years of stories from previous residents including grand families, a musician and a friend of Rembrandt’s. Inside, a fresh, cheeky re-imagining by Jacu Strauss (Barbecoa and the Mondrian London) weaves in these different elements with smart new Dutch design, and a great deal of quirky charm. Charred furniture by Maarten Baas holds its own alongside voluminous armchairs and gilt-framed paintings against an Old Masters’ palette of deep blues, plums and rich greens. It is a delightful hotchpotch of buildings, with crooked stairways leading around unexpected corners and through a warren of passages littered with bizarre market finds. Bedrooms come in all shapes and sizes, but here the mood is of calm and comfort, with muted pastels, luscious touches of lime and purple, and works from the hotel’s vast private collection of modern art. Downstairs, Jansz restaurant has taken root in the former home of a coppersmith, serving dishes such as miso-glazed cod and lobster risotto, and the Pulitzer’s Bar (a local institution) has a cosy club atmosphere for downing a Dashing Daisy cocktail, with marigold-infused gin and a mandarin shrub. The hotel also has one of the most beautiful salon boats in town: a 1900s teak vessel to glide you through the canals in style. This is an enormously fun place to stay and it far outstrips its rivals by connecting with both the old bones and the vital, contemporary spirit of Amsterdam.
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