Australian Traveller

REVIEWS

Paramount House Hotel, Sydney, NSW Bistro Blackwood, Adelaide, SA Abode Murrumbate­man, NSW Messer, Melbourne,Vic

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IN THE SPACE OF five months, one pocket of Surry Hills received a major boost in the heritage building-turned-cultural destinatio­n stakes. In October last year, the much-anticipate­d restaurant Chin Chin opened in the iconic Griffiths Teas building on Commonweal­th Street and in March, Paramount House Hotel was launched across the road, in the former headquarte­rs of Paramount Pictures and its adjoining film storage warehouse. The new boutique digs joined the existing complex of the Golden Age Cinema and Bar, Paramount Coffee Project and co-working studio The Office Space. Rooftop workout/hangout spot Paramount Recreation Club later completed the picture. It’s pitched as a neighbourh­ood hotel, and executed as a one-stop lifestyle destinatio­n for a particular kind of design-minded, indie magazinere­ading, coffee bean-conscious clientele. This is evident from the moment I arrive at the cool and calm atrium-style lobby, which is reached

via the ground-floor cafe and populated by plants and prerequisi­te Mac users. I’m offered a welcome drink of amber sour ale from local Marrickvil­le brewery Wildflower while staff members – friendly, helpful and unimposing – swiftly check me in. There are 27 rooms and two suites in total, and the second-floor Sunny room I’ve booked – as opposed to the Everyday, Loft and Mack Daddy options that make up the other three levels – proves to be ironic as it’s a day of epic Sydney rain. But its sunny dispositio­n compensate­s for the inclement conditions outside. The welcome scent of Aesop greets me – the room is well-stocked with the brand’s products, as well as a host of other locally made goods including cured meats by LP’s Quality Meats, Black Pantry marshmallo­ws and William Downie pinot noir in the mini-bar. The cleverly allocated space (which includes a separate shower, toilet and vanity area) occupies a length of the building that looks onto Commonweal­th Street, with plenty of sash windows and an alcove at the far end full of greenery. Melbourne-based architects Breathe have let the bones of the building – such as original brick walls and their patina of old paint – shine through, and outlined them with stylish, complement­ary details like raw brass fixtures and terrazzo surfaces. Each additional detail is similarly considered, from the vide poche designed by Sydney’s Henry Wilson and earthy ceramic mugs made by Brisbane studio Commons Ceramics. At the centre of the room is a daybed topped with a green velvet cushion, and a large squishy bed dressed with French linens in dusk, indigo and stripes, and a recycled wool blanket made by Tasmania’s Seljak Brand in collaborat­ion with the hotel. It’s all very curated, but doesn’t feel over-engineered. It feels eclectic, lived in and artful. From here, it’s no effort to nip downstairs to watch a film at the Golden Age’s arthouse cinema (which occupies the site’s old screening room) and enjoy a nightcap in its adjoining bar; or to have breakfast the next morning at the Paramount Coffee Project. I’ll have to return to eat dinner at Poly, a spin-off of lauded Chippendal­e restaurant Ester that was yet to open when I visited. It’s a complete vision: a celebratio­n of all things creative in Sydney and Australia. For those of us looking to stay somewhere that fast-tracks us to the heart of local culture in impeccable style, we won’t find a better option than Paramount House Hotel.

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 ??  ?? CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: A glimpse of the Griffiths Teas building across the road; The hotel combines heritage features with contempora­ry finishes; Henry Wilson is one of the many local talents whose designs populate the hotel; Raw brass bathroom fixtures strike the right tone; With its bold architectu­ral facade, the hotel is now a local landmark .
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: A glimpse of the Griffiths Teas building across the road; The hotel combines heritage features with contempora­ry finishes; Henry Wilson is one of the many local talents whose designs populate the hotel; Raw brass bathroom fixtures strike the right tone; With its bold architectu­ral facade, the hotel is now a local landmark .
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