Source: Reuters UK (Original Article)
By Brian Rohan
BERLIN, Nov 18 (Reuters Life!) – The days of rent-free living in the shadow of the Berlin Wall may be long past, but for those seeking an upscale version of the German capital’s once-vibrant squat life, look no further.
Opened in former factory offices near one of the last remaining stretches of the wall, Michelberger Hotel’s mix of chic and shabby is a shrine to the city’s industrial edginess and enduring culture of shared living arrangements.
Beds atop mezzanines reminiscent of New York lofts, sharp design gravitating around voyeuristic glass cube showers, common areas with the feel of a boutique hotel – it’s hard to imagine it started on the fly.
“We didn’t even have all the permits when we started ripping up the old flooring,” says Tom Michelberger, owner and one-time business student who drew inspiration from California’s dot-com boom and Berlin’s once endless supply of vacant space.
“You can do a lot with a little in this town.”
Rooms go for 65 euros to 140 euros (58 pounds to 125 pounds) a night, with “The Big One” – sleeping up to nine – negotiable. “We didn’t want to price anyone out,” says Michelberger.
Reception may be wearing waist-long dreadlocks, and the black-tiled bar is staffed by aspiring actors, but small-town origins peek out from a wall of cuckoo clocks, one of which, outflanked by names of metropolises like Tokyo and Rio de Janeiro, marks time from a rural corner of Germany.
In another nod to the heartland, the restaurant serves at least one German dish for each sitting – albeit alongside light international fare and a soundtrack of minimal breakbeat or rare groove funk music.
The clientele, ranging from artists to businessmen and assorted freelancers in between, testifies to a location near the German airfares headquarters of Universal Music and MTV, pegs …continue reading
