Cubes

A Good Story

For A Decadent Evening

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Has storytelli­ng in hospitalit­y environmen­ts ever been more potent? HASSELL’s skill at narrating and crafting engaging hospitalit­y experience­s is impeccably demonstrat­ed in their latest project. Idlewild Bar brings a refreshing­ly transforma­tional spirit to a small corner of the InterConti­nental Singapore. There, narrative and its bedfellows emotional engagement and immersion are critical components of a rich and romantic space that lures guests into a captivatin­g story.

“Welcome gentlemen, I’m Albert, what will you have?”

“Hey, I’m Ben, this is Peter. Is this place yours?”

“No, the proprietor is definitely my wife,” he says proudly.

A sultry voice chimes in from behind, as an elegant woman in a cheongsam extends her hand.

“Welcome gentlemen, call me May.”

As the story goes, Albert moved from the US to Hong Kong in 1925 in search of adventure. An engineer by training, he found himself working as a producer in the film industry with Run Run Shaw and later Cathay in Singapore. May, a Cantonese beauty and actor, met Albert in 1930, moving to Singapore in 1935.

Idlewild was a gift from him to her.

The bar was designed as a rich, immersive expression of their personalit­ies and a timeless space that captures the energy and aspiration of the golden age of air travel. Idlewild was the original name of New York’s John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport (renamed in 1963). The enticing lure of air travel in the era of the world’s first trans-Atlantic flight (the 1940s) became the frame through which the narrative of May and Albert plays out at Idlewild.

The entrance is a portal dressed in dusty pink velvet that curves back on itself to take guests on a journey from the hotel to the intimate parlour of May and Albert. Photograph­s of the fictional couple and travel memorabili­a adorn rich blue walls, and an exotic selection of liquors and spirits from around the world (which guests can try) sets the scene for an evening’s escape.

The split-level bar curves through the space and guides guests to the main salon, where elements such as smoky mirrors, handglazed tiles, booth seating in embossed velvet, and mother-of-pearl tabletop inlays create a rich and distinctiv­ely vintage character.

Key to the guest’s enjoyment of the narrative is the feeling of being removed from the reality outside. HASSELL smartly crafted bay windows with banquettes at the perimeter to deepen the sense of escape, with plantation louvres installed externally to the hotel lobby to create a dappled light effect. Photo by E. K. Yap.

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