The Morpheus Hotel by Zaha Hadid Architects: The World?s First High Rise Exoskeleton
This hotel in Macau is so intricate and complex that the photographs look like renderings rather than completed architecture.
Zaha Hadid Architects has a way of designing buildings so intricate and complex that the photographs look like renderings rather than completed architecture. Their latest unveiling is Morpheus, the flagship hotel for the City of Dreams resort in Macau.
While the sculptural design of Morpheus was inspired by China?s centuries-old tradition of jade carving, the structure of the hotel hardly resembles any structure or building we see today. Zaha Hadid Architects describes it as “world?s first free-form high-rise exoskeleton.”
ZHA?s project director Viviana Muscettola explains:
Morpheus combines its optimal arrangement with structural integrity and sculptural form. The design is intriguing as it makes no reference to traditional architectural typologies.
The structure of the 40-story building consists of two internal vertical cores that connect at the top, bottom and mid levels. From the outside, the building abstractly resembles a figure 8, an auspicious and lucky number in Chinese numerology.
The hotel houses 770 rooms which include a variety of standard guest rooms, suites and ?sky villas? (nine exclusive, two-floor duplex villas that clock in at approximately $11,138 USD per night). While Morpheus is definitively the crowning glory of the City of Dreams, the resort also includes a casino, two theaters, a shopping district,...
Zaha Hadid Architects has a way of designing buildings so intricate and complex that the photographs look like renderings rather than completed architecture. Their latest unveiling is Morpheus, the flagship hotel for the City of Dreams resort in Macau.
While the sculptural design of Morpheus was inspired by China?s centuries-old tradition of jade carving, the structure of the hotel hardly resembles any structure or building we see today. Zaha Hadid Architects describes it as “world?s first free-form high-rise exoskeleton.”
ZHA?s project director Viviana Muscettola explains:
Morpheus combines its optimal arrangement with structural integrity and sculptural form. The design is intriguing as it makes no reference to traditional architectural typologies.
The structure of the 40-story building consists of two internal vertical cores that connect at the top, bottom and mid levels. From the outside, the building abstractly resembles a figure 8, an auspicious and lucky number in Chinese numerology.
The hotel houses 770 rooms which include a variety of standard guest rooms, suites and ?sky villas? (nine exclusive, two-floor duplex villas that clock in at approximately $11,138 USD per night). While Morpheus is definitively the crowning glory of the City of Dreams, the resort also includes a casino, two theaters, a shopping district,...
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