Subscribe to Interior Design
Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

A Tropical Cocktail

With its retro furnishings and riotously patterned mosaic murals, the Hotel Boca Chica looks like it hasn't changed a bit since the jet-set heyday of Acapulco, Mexico. But that's a carefully orchestrated illusion.

Mario Lopez-Cordero -- Interior Design, 6/1/2010 12:00:00 AM

A Tropical Cocktail

View Slideshow

 

firms: frida escobedo and josé rojas
site: acapulco, mexico


With its retro furnishings and riotously patterned mosaic murals, the Hotel Boca Chica looks like it hasn't changed a bit since the jet-set heyday of Acapulco, Mexico. But that's a carefully orchestrated illusion. Spectacularly sited at the mouth of the bay, the 1950's property had faded like the starlets who once paraded through its double-height lobby-finally closing in 2008. "The kitchen was full of cats, and the rooms were dark and creepy," José Rojas recalls.


His namesake firm was one of three involved in the reincarnation. LAR Fernando Romero's namesake director-who also owns the hotel-supervised the construction process but hired Rojas to handle the real design work. And Rojas brought in a friend's firm, Frida Escobedo.

 

All three architects could see that, beneath all the gunk, lay something special. "The building itself was amazing," Escobedo says. "It was just a matter of opening up the rooms and brightening the interiors."

 

Plaster was stripped away to reveal concrete-block screen walls, and bricked-up balconies were reopened and fitted with louvered doors. The 30 standard guest rooms and six suites got a mix of era-appropriate furnishings. For example, black swing-arm lamps inspired by Jean Prouvé coexist with bona fide Prouvé side chairs. Umbrellas are scattered like giant concrete or wooden lollipops across the terrace bar. On the other side of the hourglass-shape pool, the restaurant shelters beneath a huge thatched palapa. "Such structures are everywhere in the tropics," Rojas says. What you certainly don't see everywhere is a renovation that so adroitly straddles decades to create something distinctive, stylish, and new. -Mario López-Cordero

 

Photography by Undine Prohl.

Product Sources

SILVIO CUEVAS: CUSTOM UMBRELLAS (TERRACE).
MUEBLES DE BEJUCO Y MIMBRE: PENDANT FIXTURES (LOBBY).
VITRA: CHAIR (GUEST ROOM).
HOME DEPOT: FAN.
WITH MEXICAN STYLE: HAMMOCK.
PEDRO GARCES: CUSTOM BED LINENS (GUEST ROOM), CUSTOM SHOWER CURTAIN (SUITE).
DURAVIT: SINK (SUITE).
STANZA: SINK FITTINGS.
LA JOSEFINA: CUSTOM TOWELS.
CLAUDIA FERNÁNDEZ: FURNITURE CONSULTANT.
KLINAI: WOODWORK.
Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

Talkback
Related Content
»MORE

Advertisement
More Content
  • Photos

On the Phone

From the Magazine:
Gensler dialed up bright color for Nokia in Silicon Valley--and the IIDA answered with an award.
+ Read the Article

Just for Kids

From the Magazine:
Two schools in the southern German town of Tuttlingen share this student center, one of the few that's both freestanding and purpose-built.
Firm: Heinisch Lembach Huber Architekten
Site: Tuttlingen, Germany
+ Read the Article

A Cinematic Moment

From the Magazine:
In Vila do Conde, Portugal, a mansion from the 1500's now houses the Saint Roch Solar Gallery cultural center, as well as a dormitory for the Superior School of Industrial Studies and Managment.
+ Read the Article

18 days
twitter
about us   |   Site Map   |   contact us   |   Industry Links   |   Subscriber Services   |   editorial calendar & submissions   |   RSS   |   media kit
© 2012 Sandow Media LLC.All rights reserved.
Use of this website is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy