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5 iconic hotels in film: Where architecture becomes the star

5 iconic hotels in film: Where architecture becomes the star

Tatler Asia07-05-2025

Above Looking up into the soaring atrium of the Atlanta Marriott Marquis, where architecture evokes futuristic dystopias—a key visual setting for The Hunger Games and Loki (Photo: WikiCommons/Connors)
Above Atlanta Marriott Marquis atrium – Striking futuristic architecture featured as the tributes' quarters in The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (Photo: WikiCommons/Slosh415)
More recently, Marvel's Loki series transformed the same interiors into the Time Variance Authority's headquarters.
That a 1985 building still convincingly represents a futuristic setting is a testament to Portman's vision: dynamic, expressive, and trend-resistant, his architecture continues to lend itself to stories set in worlds yet to come.
See also: 7 iconic cantilever chairs that shaped modern furniture 2. St. Pancras Renaissance Hotel: Gothic Magic Made Manifest
Above St. Pancras Renaissance London Hotel: A Victorian Gothic Revival icon featured in "Harry Potter," renowned for its dramatic spires and ornate brickwork (Photo: WikiCommongs/LepoRello)
Sir George Gilbert Scott's St. Pancras Renaissance Hotel is Gothic Revival at its most theatrical. Opened in 1873 as the Midland Grand Hotel, it remains a showstopper with its red-brick façade, whimsical spires and showstopping staircase—a Victorian triumph of engineering and artistry.
It is no wonder that Harry Potter's filmmakers chose this building to stand in for King's Cross Station. Though not the real station, the hotel's richly detailed façade better captured the magical threshold between the mundane and the mystical. Its use on screen reshaped global perception: for millions, this has become the definitive visual for the gateway to Hogwarts.
Don't miss: Embracing warm minimalism: Beyond austerity in interior design 3. Hotel Cala di Volpe: Mediterranean Poetry in Built Form
Photo 1 of 3 Hotel Cala di Volpe waterfront, Sardinia – Iconic arched facades and lush gardens featured in James Bond's The Spy Who Loved Me (Photo: Marriott)
Photo 2 of 3 Hotel Cala di Volpe exterior, Sardinia – Distinctive architecture and film history as seen in The Spy Who Loved Me (Photo: Marriott)
Photo 3 of 3 Hotel Cala di Volpe entrance, Costa Smeralda, Sardinia – Famous for its Mediterranean architecture and as a filming location in The Spy Who Loved Me (Photo: Marriott)
Designed in the 1960s by French architect Jacques Couëlle, Hotel Cala di Volpe is a vision of Mediterranean storytelling. Rather than pursue monumental luxury, Couëlle—a self-described sculptor of houses—created a dreamlike composition that evokes a timeworn Sardinian village.
With flowing forms, soft arches and whitewashed walls that blend into the coastline, the hotel exemplifies what critics call 'discreet, sophisticated luxury.' Recent renovations have sensitively preserved its original spirit, allowing a new generation to experience its timeless elegance. The hotel starred in The Spy Who Loved Me, offering a more organic take on Bond's typical settings.
Read more: Private islands and wealth: How 6 tech and business leaders built their secluded domains 4. Fontainebleau Miami Beach: Architecture as Social Theatre
Above Aerial view of Fontainebleau Miami Beach – Legendary Miami hotel known for its curving design and film appearances, including Scarface and Goldfinger (Photo: Fontainebleau Miami Beach)
Architect Morris Lapidus' 1954 masterpiece, the Fontainebleau Miami Beach, is unapologetically theatrical. A defining work of Miami Modern (MiMo) style, it was conceived as a stage for glamour, play, and performance.
From its iconic Staircase to Nowhere to the whimsical bow-tie motif in the marble floor, every detail was designed to delight. Lapidus called it an 'architecture of joy'—and his exuberant curves and expansive public spaces still capture the imagination.
Above Fontainebleau Miami Beach poolside view – Iconic luxury hotel with modernist architecture, featured in movies like Goldfinger (Photo: Fontainebleau Miami Beach)
Its cinematic credentials are as storied as the building itself. Goldfinger used the Fontainebleau's poolside for its opening scenes, instantly conjuring 1960s opulence.
Decades later, Scarface captured Tony Montana amid the hotel's glossy, high-octane luxury. In both films, the Fontainebleau's flamboyance became a visual shorthand for excess, aspiration and danger.
See also: Home tour: A tropical modernist Miami home with stunning art deco influences 5. Park Hyatt Tokyo: Isolation in Glass and Light
Above New York Bar at Park Hyatt Tokyo – Iconic skyline views and contemporary design, as seen in Lost in Translation (Photo: Park Hyatt Tokyo )
Currently closed for renovation, Kenzo Tange's Park Hyatt Tokyo remains a cinematic icon. Occupying the top fourteen floors of the Shinjuku Park Tower, the hotel offered a rarefied experience, physically and emotionally removed from the frenetic pace of the city below. Its restrained minimalism and panoramic views made it the ideal stage for emotional disconnection.
In Lost in Translation, Sofia Coppola transformed this architectural quietude into a powerful metaphor. The New York Bar's floor-to-ceiling windows created a space that felt simultaneously intimate and detached—a visual expression of the characters' shared sense of dislocation. Through architecture, the film distilled themes of connection and solitude into a single, unforgettable setting.
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