On the road at the Placid Hotel in Zurich

Building design
View over Zurich. Photo: Placid Hotel

View over Zurich. Photo: Placid Hotel

Spend the night with a panoramic view over the city: the Placid Hotel offers light-flooded, comfortable rooms, not in the city center, but in the middle of an urban district in transition, with a colorful mix of interim uses and new construction projects. Hotels outside the tourist epicenters often offer good value for money. Especially if they are well designed and accessible, the […]

Spend the night with a panoramic view over the city: the Placid Hotel offers light-flooded, comfortable rooms, not in the city center, but in the middle of an urban district in transition, with a colorful mix of interim uses and new construction projects.

Hotels outside the tourist epicenters often offer good value for money. Especially if they are well designed and accessible, the trip to the outskirts is definitely worthwhile. The Placid in Zurich’s west is one such hotel. And much more besides. Twenty minutes by streetcar from the main station, it is located in the lively, heterogeneous district of Altstetten. Between new residential buildings, large-volume office buildings, a warehouse and a circus quarter, you are heading towards a slender, twelve-storey block. At first glance, with its regular exposed concrete façade and large windows, it could just as easily be an elegant administrative building.

The cool, neutral entrance area of the Placid with its reception also looks more like the foyer of an office building. This impression is reinforced by the letterboxes next to the lobby and the numerous company names on the elevator display. The solution to the riddle is that the building is planned as a functional hybrid. In other words, the floors are flexibly designed as column-free, use-neutral spaces that can accommodate offices of different layouts as well as co-working spaces, conference rooms and a daycare center.

But above all, Placid is a great place to spend the night: The hotel rooms, which occupy the upper floors, offer a wonderful view over Zurich. With its fully glazed façade, the room opens up almost framelessly to the city. The standard rooms – “Urban Design Rooms” – are not too large, but are unconventionally zoned and efficiently furnished, giving them an airy feel. The bathroom is located in an elongated wall niche, tiled with vivid blue tiles, and the shower is shielded by a floor-to-ceiling glass panel. The bed is also oriented towards the view – a distant view instead of television.

There is a sufficiently wide niche for luggage between the headboard and the room door. A black tray serves as a bedside table, which can be rotated just like the reading lamp. In front of the Placid’s windows, an oak board serves as a balustrade, desk and shelf, with plenty of space for travel reading, a laptop and coffee machine. To the side of it, you discover a push button in the exposed concrete wall with the inscription “Window” – and the supposedly fixed glass panoramic window actually moves to the side by around one meter after the air-assisted sealing system has given a clearly audible “Pfffft” as a start signal. When closing, on the other hand, you can hear a pumping noise for a few minutes.

Building and interior by E2A Architekten

The interior is purist and architecturally inspired, with oak cladding, fabric-covered walls and a light-proof curtain in almost Scandinavian shades of blue, green and gray contrasting with the cool exposed concrete. Both the building and the interior were designed by E2A Architekten, whose office is also located in the building. Anyone exploring the Placid will pass by the small roof terraces, lounge and fitness room as well as the Buckhuser restaurant on the first floor. And the hotel’s own bicycles and e-scooters invite you to explore this lesser-known part of the city. What’s more, there is always something new for architects to discover throughout Zurich.

Placid Hotel Zurich
Buckhauserstrasse 36,
Zurich-Altstetten

www.placid.ch/de

Too hectic? Lake idyll can be found at the hotel “Das Tegernsee”.

POTREBBE INTERESSARTI ANCHE

Fossa Carolina

Building design

Munich

On Open Monument Day, 7,500 monuments across Germany opened their doors – 750 in Bavaria alone. The gate of the Old Mint in Munich was also wide open, with the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments inviting visitors to view the exhibition in the Hall of Columns. Accompanied by guided tours and lectures, the exhibition “Großbaustelle 793” ran until October 10 […]

On Open Monument Day, 7,500 monuments across Germany opened their doors – 750 in Bavaria alone. The gate of the Old Mint in Munich was also wide open, with the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments inviting visitors to view the exhibition in the Hall of Columns. Accompanied by guided tours and lectures, the exhibition “Großbaustelle 793” ran until October 10, 2014.

Under the title “Construction site 793: Charlemagne’s canal project between the Rhine and Danube”, the exhibition presents the latest results of research into Charlemagne’s moat, the “Fossa Carolina”, as a contribution to the 1200th anniversary of his death. Charlemagne’s moat was intended to connect the Altmühl and Rezat rivers – thus the Rhine and Danube – and thus overcome the European watershed. The text walls are mounted on steel grids and probably refer to the short duration of the exhibition, but at the same time to the large-scale archaeological construction site that is still ongoing. The confirmation of written, contemporary sources on the Karlsgraben using archaeological methods is remarkable. Sharpened oak planks, lateral boundaries of the approximately six-metre-wide moat, were excavated and can be seen in the exhibition in their original form as well as reconstructed in a “walk-in moat”. Franz Herzig carried out their dendrochronological examination in Thierhaupten – and confirmed the dates given in the imperial annals for the years 791 to 793, which report on the construction of the moat in 793.

The Day of the Open Monument in Bavaria was opened the day before at Thierhaupten Monastery. Read more about this in RESTAURO 7/2014.

Hermes – More than the messenger of the gods

Building design
Hermes is often depicted in the guise of Hermes Kriophoros (Aries bearer). Photo: CC BY-SA 3.0, via: Wikimedia Commons
Hermes is often depicted in the guise of Hermes Kriophoros (Aries bearer). Photo: CC BY-SA 3.0, via: Wikimedia Commons

Hermes appears in ancient mythology as a figure who organizes transitions and productively links opposites. As a divine mediator between gods and humans, between movement and order as well as between life and death, he embodies central cultural ideas of the Greek world. The mythological figure is particularly suitable for investigating interactions between cult, art and systems of meaning in the ancient world.

The Greek world of gods is characterized by clearly defined responsibilities, but not all deities can be clearly defined. It is precisely those figures that combine several functional areas that open up a differentiated view of ancient worlds of thought and life. In archaic times, Hermes developed into a central figure of such transitional zones, whose effectiveness manifested itself in everyday religious life, in narrative myths and in visual culture. His significance is not explained by a single field of activity, but by his ability to symbolically bundle movement, exchange and mediation – from travel and trade to the guidance of souls. This makes it a key to understanding the cultural logics that shaped the Greek polis.

Mythological roles and cultic anchoring

In the Homeric hymns, Hermes appears as an early autonomously acting deity whose characteristics are already programmatically developed in the myth. The famous theft of Apollo’s cattle is to be read less as a moral transgression than as a narrative demonstration of intelligence, agility, knowledge of rules and rhetorical skill. These characteristics point to a deity who does not negate orders, but shifts and readjusts them according to the situation. In addition to his function as a messenger of the gods, Hermes clearly emerges in Greek religion as a psychopompos who guides souls on their way to Hades after death. This accompanying function connects the sphere of the living with the underworld and makes Hermes a mediator at one of the most radical boundaries of human existence.
This role found a concrete counterpart in cult practice: herms – cuboid pillars with the head of the god and often a phallic relief – were erected at crossroads, property boundaries, doorsteps and city gates, offering protection, orientation and legal markings at the same time. Such objects combined religious worship with social order, marked borders and paths, protected travelers and traders and made crossings visible and controllable. The cult of Hermes was particularly widespread in Arcadia and Attica in the Archaic and Classical periods; Mount Kyllene in Arcadia was considered the time-honored birthplace, from where its worship spread to other regions. The importance of the herms for the functioning of the polis is dramatically demonstrated by the famous desecration of the herms in Athens in 415 BC, when numerous public herms were mutilated in one night and a political-religious scandal arose that shook confidence in the order, omens and security of the city. The violent reaction of the Athenians – including trials, exile and political purges – illustrates how closely religious symbols, public space and polis-communal identity were linked.

Pictorial representation and artistic concepts

A comparatively stable iconographic repertoire developed in the visual arts of antiquity. Hermes was often depicted as a youthful, athletic body, equipped with winged sandals, a traveling hat (petasos) and the herald’s staff (kerykeion) as a sign of mediation. These attributes refer to speed, communication, trade and protection, but at the same time to a controlled, idealized physicality. Classical sculptures in particular, such as the “Hermes with the Dionysus Boy” from Olympia, which has been attributed to Praxiteles since antiquity, show Hermes as a resting figure with latent potential for movement, emphasizing the balance between dynamism and order. Attic vase painting from the 6th and 5th centuries BC also takes up these pictorial formulas, for example in scenes of soul guidance, errands between gods and humans or the accompaniment of other deities. In funerary iconography, Hermes Psychopompos appears as a discreet but present figure who frames the moment of farewell and structures the transition to the sphere beyond; his travel attributes no longer merely mark profane movement, but emphasize his ability to move safely between different worlds.

Transformations and cultural repercussions

In Roman antiquity, Hermes merged with Mercury, whereby the focus of his responsibilities shifted more towards trade, transportation, economic exchange and the urban economy, without completely displacing older functions such as the role of messenger and psychopompos. This adaptation illustrates how mythological figures remained adaptable to new social, political and economic contexts. In the European Renaissance, the ancient deity – now mostly under the name of Mercury – was received as an allegory of eloquence, learned mediation, inspiration and rapid intelligence. Humanist pictorial programmes drew on him to symbolize intellectual agility, diplomatic skill and rhetorical competence, for example in emblem books, ceiling paintings or courtly allegories. The figure thus became part of a long-term traditional context in which ancient systems of meaning were repeatedly reinterpreted, recoded and functionalized.
Even today, Hermes – often conveyed through the figure of Mercury – stands for mobility, communication, trade and the productive handling of borders, which is why his symbolism remains understandable even in modern cultural contexts. In art and cultural history, the figure proves to be a connecting element between religious practice, visual design and social order. Its enduring presence shows that ancient myths are less to be understood as rigid traditions than as flexible interpretations that can be adapted to changing cultural issues and constantly updated.