We're accustomed to glamour in London SE26: Kelly Brook and Jason Statham used to live above the dentist. But when Anouska Hempel's heels hit the cracked cement of the parking space outside my flat, it's hard not to think of those Picture Post photographs of royalty visiting bombed-out families during the second world war. Her mission in my modest tract of suburbia is, however, about more than offering sympathy. Hempel—the woman who invented the boutique hotel before it bore any such proprietary name—has come to give me information for which, judging by the spreads in interiors magazines and anxious postings on online DIY forums, half the property-owners in the Western world seem desperate: how to give an ordinary home the look and the vibe of a five-star, £750-a-night hotel suite. To Hempelise, in this case, a modest conversion flat formed from the middle slice of a three-storey Victorian semi.
"You could do it," she says, casting an eye around my kitchen. "Anyone could do it. Absolutely no reason why not. But there has to be continuity between the rooms. A single idea must be followed through." She looks out wistfully over the fire escape. "And you'd have to buy the house next door, of course." That's a joke. I think.
...
It's worth pausing, though, to consider the oddness of this impulse. The hotel room is an amnesiac space. We would be troubled if it bore any sign of a previous occupant, particularly as many of us go to hotels in order to do things we would not do at home. We expect a hotel room to be cleaned as thoroughly as if a corpse had just been hauled from the bed. (In some cases, this will actually have happened.) The domestic interior embodies the opposite idea: it is a repository of memories. The story of its inhabitants ought to be there in the photos on the mantelpiece, the pictures on the wall, the books on the shelves. If hotel rooms were people, they would be smiling lobotomy patients or plausible psychopaths. | 我们习惯了伦敦SE26那种迷人的韵味,牙医诊所上方的楼层中,凯莉·布鲁克和杰森·斯坦森曾栖居于此。不过,在公寓外停车位裂开的泥板上,出现安诺斯佳•亨佩尔(Anouska Hempel)的身影时,不由得另人想起Picture Post上的一些照片——二战期间,英国皇室成员慰问那些因遭受轰炸而无家可归的家庭的场景。当然,对于我所在的这片伦敦郊区的古老土地,她的任务并不只是表达自己的怜悯之心。在出现精品酒店的各种衍生专称前,亨佩尔正是精品酒店的实际缔造者;通过对室内设计杂志和DIY在线论坛急待帮助的帖子上大量的信息所做的判断,她使我意识到,在西方,有半数的业主似乎都极度渴望,能够赋予普通家庭五星级酒店套房的观感和氛围,而且还是一宿750英镑的那种。在亨佩尔看来,这一切只需从这些维多利亚时代半独立式的三层公寓的中间部分进行适当的调整变换,即可实现。 “您可以做到”,她看了看我厨房的周围说道。“任何人都可以,这毫无疑问。不过,有一点,房间之间一定要连通。这至关重要。”沉思中,她俯瞰着太平梯。“当然,您必须要买下隔壁的房子。”我想,这是个玩笑。 ... 不过,考虑到这种动机的奇妙之处,酒店房间确实是值得逗留的地方。它就是一个失忆空间。如果身在其间却感觉到之前有人住过,我们就难免会有些懊恼,对于我们中的许多人,如果去酒店的目的是为了做一些不会在家中做的事情,这种感觉就会更加强烈。我们希望酒店房间是一个完全洁净的地方,有如尸体刚刚从床上拖走,有些时候,这也是实际会发生的事情。与之相反,家里则不同,它就像一个记忆库。炉壁台上摆放的照片、墙上挂的画、书架上的书籍,所有这些都在诉说着居住者的故事。如果将酒店房间比做人的话,他们就是切除脑叶后微笑的患者或看似正常的精神病人。 |