The secret to creating a great hotel is "one plus one equals three" says Ian Schrager

In this movie, New York hotelier Ian Schrager says the success of his hotel Public lies in creating a guest experience that is greater than the sum of its parts.

In this movie, New York hotelier Ian Schrager says the success of his hotel Public lies in creating a guest experience that is greater than the sum of its parts.



Located at 215 Chrystie Street in New York's Bowery district, Public is a new hotel designed by Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron.

Schrager chose to dispense with many of the services normally associated with high-end hotels – including porters and room service – to offer guests what he describes as a pared-down luxury experience.

"It's a kind of reduced service, which is trying to give people only they want and not what they don't," Schrager says in the movie, which Dezeen filmed in New York for the AHEAD Americas awards, for which Public is nominated in four categories.



"It's going into a space and making luxury available to everybody and anybody that wants it. Luxury before was only for rich people. I don't think that’s the case anymore, because luxury is changing, and every hotel and every other company that is in the luxury business has to adapt and respond to what people today want."

There are 367 guest rooms at Public, which Schrager describes as "like a cabin on a yacht". But, as the hotel's name suggests, the main emphasis is on social activity.

The hotel features two restaurants, three bars, a rooftop terrace and a multimedia performance space that can be configured for a wide range of different uses.



"The public spaces are designed for every mood that a person might have," Schrager explains.

"So the idea is you would come to the hotel, you might go up to Diego and have a cocktail or you might go sit in the lobby and chat, meet with people and socialise. Then you would go downstairs to the Public Kitchen to eat."

Schrager describes bringing all these different facilities together under one roof as a kind of "alchemy", which he says enables Public to offer a unique experience to guests.



"I just went to a Bruce Springsteen concert and he said that the most important equation in life is one plus one equals three," Schrager says.

"You need that for love, you need that to make music and you need that to make a great hotel. You put all the details together and you wind up with something that is more than the sum of the individual parts."

Schrager, who helped to reinvent the hotel lobby as a glamorous social space with iconic hotels such as the Hudson in New York and the Delano in Miami Beach, previously spoke to Dezeen about how he believes the hotel industry is in denial about the threat posed by companies such as Airbnb.



He says the focus on the public spaces at his new hotel is a direct attempt to counter that threat.

"One of the advantages that a hotel has is that it can offer various places all under one roof," he explains.

"When you're upstairs in your room and you want to go to the best bar or restaurant in town, it just makes sense to go right downstairs and get it. It is the only way to meet head on with people that would aspire to be a disrupter, such as Airbnb, because they can't do that."

He adds: "If we try to compete with them only with the rooms, we're not going to win. But if we compete with them on the entertainment factor and the magic we can create with public spaces then we can win."

Public is one of the most-nominated hotels for the upcoming 2018 AHEAD Americas hospitality awards, which take place in Miami next week.

It is up for prizes in the Event Spaces, Guestroom, Lobby and Public Spaces, and Urban Hotel – New Build categories.

"I don't see how there's any contest," Schrager says. "As far as I'm concerned, we should win all four!"

Newsletter

Coimbatore's GT Holidays executes an exotic honeymoon for star couple Nayantara and Vignesh Sivan in Spain

Vignesh Shivan and Nayanthara have taken the internet by storm with their pictures from the honeymoon to Spain from exot...

Slender pine slats enclose Evans Tree House in Arkansas by Modus Studio

American firm Modus Studio has used steel and heat-treated pine to build an "alive and mysterious" treehouse i...

Newly built townhouses in Melbourne channel art deco architecture

Cera Stribley Architects teamed with interior design studio The Stella Collective on a series of eight, three-storey tow...

World Book Day 2019: History, theme, and significance

World Book Day 2019: Books are known to be the bridge between the past and the present, and play an important role in co...

Reflect on the best mirrored buildings from around the world via our Pinterest board

We've updated our Pinterest board dedicated to mirrored buildings, including a mirrored toilet on one of Norway&#03...

Tracing the history of Kashmiri art painters

What is the link between Kashmir and Buddhism? History traces the link to seventh century, when Chinese Buddhist monk Xu...