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Icaro Hotel
Gustav Willeit

Icaro Hotel: a wooden colonnade frames the Dolomite mountains, blending art, design and architecture with an alpine heritage landscape

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At the foothills of the Dolomite Mountains and nestled within a web of ski slopes and hiking trails, MoDusArchitects  has revamped Icaro Hotel as a stereometric volume in wood that quietly adds a new fragment to the built heritage of hospitality architecture of this unique protected area.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

Positioned on the Alpe di Siusi (Seiser Alm) plateau at 1.900m above sea level and set within South Tyrol’s Dolomites UNESCO World Heritage site, the hotel’s humble origins date back to a simple 1930s mountain lodge. Granddaughter to the founder of the original Icaro lodge, Angelika Sattler commissioned MoDusArchitects to overhaul the structure and reimagine its identity.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

The various interventions include an underground parking extension, the separate staff quarters, a guest room addition, the reorganization of all of the common spaces including the pool area, and the sweeping, giant order colonnade of wood along the main façade that intercepts the breathtaking mountain views.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

In plan, the new addition mirrors the existing west wing along the axis of the original lodge to forge a symmetry of parts to the whole relationship. On the outside, the thickened saw-toothed larch-wood skin, together with the large pitched wooden roof and the timber columns, constitute an ordering system that subsumes the myriad of past modifications into a cohesive architectural body.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

The 13 branching wood columns 7.5 meters high that march down the 55m length of the south-facing facade and span over the two upper floors are structural elements that tie the roof into place and serve as a middle-ground frame through which guests measure themselves up against the architecture and the landscape.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

The first floor terrace draws a straight line across the two far corners of the building to define an airy, double-height loggia that extends the interior spaces of the guest rooms outwards.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

At the ground level, down the length of the building, a clearly defined throughway unravels a succession of common areas: entry, reception, shop, lounge, bar and dining hall all participate in the colorful exchange between guests, visitors, outdoor enthusiasts and the Sattler family. The eclectic convergence of materials, textures and fixed furniture elements string the programs together and rescripts the collective memory of traditional alpine interior spaces

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

While the wood lined dining alcoves with banquette seating conjure up the hospitality of long-established lodge interiors, the monolithic, cloudy-grey marble of the buffet table and bar counter anchor the defining moments of gastronomical delight at the center of this spatial continuum. Similarly, the characteristic coffering of the alpine wood stube (the traditional, stove heated farmhouse living room) is revisited with an all-enveloping surface of acoustic-felt panels partitioned by notched, intersecting yellow moulding profile. In tandem with the overhead paneling, the braided texture of the oak planked flooring weaves together the mirrored angles of the hotel’s footprint in a subtle tête-à-tête between old and new.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

Embedded within the interiors of the hotel lie stories, family heirlooms, and a celebration of contemporary artistic endeavors and artisanal know-how. The reception, shop and lounge area are designed as a full-height, thickened wainscoting of oak panels and deep blue recesses that collect a disparate range of subjects much like a cabinet of curiosities.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

The juxtaposition of people, animals, books, art, objects and hospitality accoutrements explore the folkloric otherness of the local culture. In this ethos of collection and display, and in occasion of the re-opening, Icaro Hotel has launched a new exhibition series curated by the artist Hubert Kostner (whose house-atelier has also been designed by MoDusArchitects) whereby authors are invited to present their work to the international guests.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

From the main staircase at the circulation core of the hotel, visitors access the guest rooms, including the four new rooms distributed on each of the two upper levels of the East wing. As evidenced by their names, the Monocular and Telescope rooms are viewing devices that inextricably link the intimacy of the rooms to the expanse of the landscape beyond; the rooms are shaped by angled cabinetry elmwood walls that contain wardrobes, upholstered niches, powder rooms and hidden shower rooms.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

At either ends of these two rooms lie the Lux and Grandangolo whose wider scope settings accommodate up to four guests and feature custom made beds facing the floor to ceiling windows overlooking Alpe di Siusi. Several suites on the second level were adapted to accommodate the new roof while a new massage area with a sheltered yoga terrace was added to this level.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

At the lower level, the swimming pool area makes the most of the change in grade and is entirely reconfigured to accommodate a new pool in direct connection with the outdoor spaces. The numerous, existing structural supports found at this level are regimented into a robust procession of tiled columns that transform a formerly compromised space into one of tranquility.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

Between the existing sauna and the new pool, a portion of the relaxation zone is redesigned to afford a higher level of privacy with a cast in place concrete wall clad in the recognizable frames of wooden profiles that feature insertions of “crying”, melted wax—an artistic installation by Hubert Kostner in an interpretation of the mythological story of Icarus.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

The lower level is a labyrinthine plan of service functions that support the workings of the hotel above but with the addition of the underground garage, this level also becomes a new point of entry. MoDusArchitects worked to carve out a clear circulation route from the parking to the vertical circulation core with the requested programs of ski room and e-bike charging stations along the way.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

The new garage not only makes for a car free arrival area for the hotel, but also mitigates the visual impact of the hotel within the landscape. Lastly at this basement level, MoDusArchitects has drawn up a whole new 2-story volume for the staff accommodations that takes on the tones of the main house, in continuity with the gray plastered facade of the original ground floor elevation.

photo_credit Gustav Willeit
Gustav Willeit

An eclectic and lively place, Icaro Hotel is an alchemy of contemporary architecture, design, hospitality, tradition, art, craftsmanship and heritage. Each space is framed to bring forth all of the goodness and imagination that comes out of travel and to bolster the sense of discovery and freedom that alpine landscapes emote.

photo_credit MoDus Architects
MoDus Architects
photo_credit MoDus Architects
MoDus Architects

Team:
ARCHITECT: MoDus Architects (Sandy Attia, Matteo Scagnol)
PROJECT TEAM: Sandy Attia, Matteo Scagnol, Filippo Pesavento 
CLIENT: Angelika Sattler 
STRUCTURAL ENGINEER: Ing. Ulrich Kauer (KS Engineering)
MECHANICAL ENGINEER: Ing. Kurt Tröbinger (KTB Engineering)
ELECTRICAL ENGINEER: Ing. Mirko Beikircher (KTB Engineering)
SAFETY ENGINEER: Ing. Ulrich Kauer (KS Engineering)
Lighting Consultant: Lichtstudio Eisenkeil 
Cost And Contract Management: HGV - Unternehmensberatung 
Hotel Visual Identity: Camuffolab, Venezia 
HOTEL COMMUNICATION STRATEGY : Anna Quinz and Kunigunde Weissenegger franzLAB, Bolzano 
General Contractor: Mahlknechtbau AB GmbH 
Site Work And Excavation: Kritzinger Srl 
Mechanical And Plumbing Installation: Mulser Karl
Electrical Installation: Elektro Nicolussi KG

photo_credit MoDus Architects
MoDus Architects
photo_credit MoDus Architects
MoDus Architects
photo_credit MoDus Architects
MoDus Architects

Suppliers

Sheet metal work and cladding: Spenglerei Messner KG

Metalsmith: Frener Paul Stahlbau

Resin flooring (kitchen): Debowa KG

Drywall and paint works: Maler Kritzinger GmbH

Resin finish work (guest bathrooms) and specialized interior finishes: Moling Srl

Wood flooring: Simonazzi GmbH

Stone works: Nikolaus Bagnara Spa

Tiles flooring : Fliesenservice KG

Linoleum/Carpet flooring: Simonazzi GmbH

Wooden Windows: Tip Top Fenster GmbH

Metal windows: Metek GmbH

Automated doors: Metek GmbH

Inner doors: Rubner Türen

Wooden carpentry: Ludwig Rabanser SAS & CO

Custom-built furniture: Tischlerei Malfertheiner OHG

Custom-built furniture (guest rooms): Tischlerei Malfertheiner OHG - Poltrona Frau Spa

Standard Furnishings: Trias OHG – Firma Sedis GmbH

Upholstery and window coverings:  Firma Sedis GmbH

Kitchen and bar equipment: Winkler Gastro Solution

Audio-video equipment: Elektro Nicolussi KG

Lighting solutions: XAL Lights (lower level), Lichtstudio Eisenkeil GmbH

Furniture: See image captions and product spec sheet

PHOTOGRAPHER ©Gustav Willeit

PHOTO STYLIST Anna Quinz

Project credits

Architects
Hotel Visual Identity
Electrical Installation
Photographers
Cost and Contract Management
Site Work and Excavation

Product spec sheet

Side table
Pelleossa Sergia Iola Pezzo Émile Botera Chap coffee table Diverge by Miniforms
Furniture - Roll side table
Furniture
Ceiling lights
Lighting

Project data

Project Year
2021
Category
Hotels
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