Strasbourg is an elegant, expensive city. The unfortunate German past has been overcome and it is now easier to communicate in Alsace in English than in German. In this European environment, Les Haras has a clear French accent.
Strasbourg is an elegant, expensive city. The unfortunate German past has been overcome and it is now easier to communicate in Alsace in English than in German. In this European environment, Les Haras has a clear French accent.
The satnav had sent us through desolate suburbs, followed by a few oversized administrative buildings and then a dilapidated hospital. We should be there soon. In fact, after a bend in the road, the clay-colored walls of the former stud farm appeared, which has been home to an elegant hotel since last fall without any external pomp. From here, it really is only a few steps to Petite France, where the old town begins.
The hotel itself leaves no doubt as to its category and proudly presents its French character. Here in France, we would rely on the obligatory standards of historical architecture, on sharp incisions of glass, steel, concrete and, apart from the material colors, on strong contrasts. Here, architect Sanjit Manku and designer Patrick Jouin were inspired by the building’s former use as stables. In the foyer, horses cast their shadows like giant silhouettes. The room doors have been given sturdy wooden reveals, rough brown leather frames the beds and lies like a saddle over the heavy stool blocks.
The bar, which is also the breakfast room, is lined with oak planks, black enamel pendulums send dispassionate beams of light across the tables. Other details will be classified as bourgeois: the thick sand-colored carpets that run through the corridors and up the stairs and mark the room doors with the heraldic lily motif of the Bourbons. The discreet golden sheen on the fittings, mirrors and toilet brushes also acclimatizes nouveau riche guests rather than true nobility. A separate toilet offers comfort, but without a hand basin, you don’t want to know how many handles and switches the last guest touched on the way to the bathroom (toilets still have a makeshift quality in French restaurants).
Fortunately, however, the architecture at Les Haras has always been able to prevail over the design. For example, the many necessary staircases are designed as angular or curved works of spatial art. The highlight is the inviting spiral staircase in the restaurant (run by Marc Haeberlin!). It looks like a domesticated version of Behnisch’s staircase in the Bundestag in Bonn.
It is magical to end the day with a last glass in the hotel’s courtyard square. The former riding arena with a mighty Sophora Japonica is lined on three sides by the old stables, while a new wing of red bricks closes off the fourth. Without jointing, they form a rough industrial façade in which all openings are framed with brown sheet metal (unfortunately only painted, no Corten steel).
If you are looking for other architectural destinations, you should visit the church of St. Pierre-le-Jeune, the restored rooms in the Aubette (van Doesburg, Arp, Taeuber-Arp) and the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art by Adrien Fainsilber. It’s hard to imagine it without the colorful foil façade by Daniel Buren (until January 4, 2015).
Address
Les Haras
23 Rue de Glacières
6700 Strasbourg
003 3 90 20 50 00
info@les-haras-hotel.com
www.les-haras-hotel.com