DDD Hotel — Tokyo, Japan
(Image credit: press)

About three years ago Yuta Takeda proposed to his father that they turn their 37-year-old family-run business hotel into a creative hub for both visitors and the residents of the predominantly apparel wholesale area of Bakurocho in East Tokyo. 'I wanted to rethink the role of an urban hotel,' he explains over coffee in the Abno lounge and bar on the first floor of the newly completed hotel.

Called DDD Hotel – which stands for Design, Development, Destination – the property's interiors are the work of detail-equilibrist Koichi Futatsumata who, along with designing the minimal, yet pleasing blueprint for the 122 rooms, also outfited the on-site Parcel gallery, the experimental kitchen/laboratory/restaurant Nôl and the Abno lounge.

Stained moss-green wood panels, wooden blinds and jalousie doors holds the design together throughout with added splashes of colour and textures provided by the lush midnight blue carpeting and bespoke gas-fire in the lounge area and rough black powder coated walls, ceilings and lamps in the Nôl kitchen space. With only eight seats, Nôl is no conventional restaurant. Chef Hajime Koto only plans to pull off 3-4 dinners a month as well as doing out-of-house catering when time allows.

DDD Hotel — Tokyo, Japan

(Image credit: press)

DDD Hotel — Tokyo, Japan

(Image credit: press)

DDD Hotel — Tokyo, Japan

(Image credit: press)

ADDRESS

2-2-1 Nihonbashi
Bakurocho
Chuo-ku
Tokyo

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Originally from Denmark, Jens H. Jensen has been calling Japan his home for almost two decades. Since 2014 he has worked with Wallpaper* as the Japan Editor. His main interests are architecture, crafts and design. Besides writing and editing, he consults numerous business in Japan and beyond and designs and build retail, residential and moving (read: vans) interiors.