{"id":239445,"date":"2024-11-01T17:40:41","date_gmt":"2024-11-01T21:40:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/?post_type=canvasflow&p=239445"},"modified":"2025-01-28T15:08:35","modified_gmt":"2025-01-28T20:08:35","slug":"step-into-the-60s-at-the-moxy-banff","status":"publish","type":"id_project","link":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/projects\/step-into-the-60s-at-the-moxy-banff\/","title":{"rendered":"Step Into The \u201860s At This Retro-Chic Canadian Hotel"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
November 1, 2024<\/p>\n\n\n
Text: <\/span>Jane Margolies<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n Photography: <\/span>Younes Bounhar\/Doublespace<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n When the Voyager Inn was built in the Canadian ski town of Banff in 1964, road tripping was all the rage and motor lodges were opening in vacation destinations to cater to the traveling public. By the time Canalta Hotels bought the property in 2016, however, the Voyager\u2014or the Voy, as locals called it\u2014was seriously rundown, best known for its dive bar, liquor store, and budget accommodations for group bus tours. But its handsome, low-slung bones were still very much intact. Now, after a $30 million overhaul helmed by Workshop\/APD and Metafor, it has been reinvented as the Moxy Banff, combining the cheeky personality of the Moxy hotel brand and the outdoorsy spirit of Banff with the building\u2019s own mid-century roots.<\/p>\n\n\n\n \u201cYou take those three things and put them in a narrative pot and stir,\u201d starts Matt Berman, cofounding principal with Andrew Kotchen of New York-based Workshop\/APD, which handled the hotel\u2019s interiors. \u201cAs designers, we\u2019re always trying to tell a clear story for a hospitality project.\u201d The story of the Voy\u2019s rebirth began when Canalta, a Canadian hospitality company, hired the Calgary-based architecture firm Metafor soon after it purchased the property. Together they assessed the building and explored renovation possibilities.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The Voy had always been something of an outlier, beginning with its location on the eastern edge of the town of Banff, which itself is in Banff National Park. Then there was its architecture, which stood in contrast to the prevailing chalet-style aesthetic of the area. Both Canalta and Metafor thought the very things that had always made the property a little bit different could work to its advantage.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Although Canalta had never operated a Moxy<\/a>\u2014a Marriott Bonvoy brand introduced a decade ago that now has more than 135 idiosyncratic worldwide properties, each reflecting their locales\u2014it convinced Marriott the Voy would make a good one. W\/APD<\/a> was on the list of firms that Marriott provided to Canalta, and soon after Berman and associate principal Andrew Kline took off for Banff to meet with the Voy\u2019s new owners and see the property, it was asked to join the renovation team. Moxy advisors weighed in at key points in the design process.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Metafor focused on updating the exterior of the 58,000-square-foot building, replacing windows, repointing original Rundle stone walls, and swapping out painted-wood railings for ones made of Douglas fir with a transparent stain. To make the hotel as welcoming to cyclists and pedestrians as it had always been to motorists, the area in front of the building where drivers had parked while checking in was trimmed, freeing up space for a welcoming staircase and terraces that step down to the street, beckoning passersby. \u201cIt\u2019s a new opportunity for gathering,\u201d Metafor principal Chris Sparrow says.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The layout of the three-story building\u2014public spaces at the center, guest wings over parking garages on either side\u2014already suited the Moxy brand, which emphasizes communal areas. But a second-floor ballroom was turned into more guest rooms, increasing the total from 88 to 109.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Interior walls at the center of the ground level were removed, opening space for an expansive lobby lounge with a pill-shaped bar that doubles as a check-in desk, a Moxy trademark. Instead of having liquor bottles on tiered shelves\u2014the usual arrangement\u2014Berman and Kline created bottle racks that resemble ski gondolas and hung them from the ceiling (yet still within a bartender\u2019s easy reach). Entering the lobby, visitors now see clear to and through the back of the building, where a courtyard has been reinvented as an outdoor lounge with a hot tub, pool, firepits, and ample seating.<\/p>\n\n\n\nStep Into The \u201860s At This Retro-Chic Canadian Hotel<\/h1>\n\n\n