
And so I am inside. Again it looks like somebody has started renovations. Or then it looks like leaking pipes.

I would probably go for the leaking pipes after seeing this.

This area looks like a storage for furniture. And apart from the mattresses and TV the furniture seems original.

The rooms have names. This must be the former conference area.

Yes, I definitely think so. It’s been a while since the previous conference, though.

Now, this is brutalism at its finest.

The beauty of the style definitely is not on the outside. It’s on the inside, and it’s made by the use of light.

There was a corridor at the top of the stairs.

And it led to a lobby.

A look to the other direction. I believe this to be the old, original part of the hotel, and the following photos from the 1980 annex.

The reason to my belief? There are balconies here, as you can see from the door.

A better view from the same room shows a lot of stuff stored in there.

A classic in hotels.

The corridor on the new side had a different color than the old one. Still, it’s pretty vintage. A lamp has found its way here somehow.

Another room, this time facing the lake. They’re all pretty identical.

And I’ll just repeat what I said in the previous post.

Welcome to the next room. Although a lot of stuff has been stored here, the layout is again identical to the previous one.

Another standard room with a balcony. Here the floor has been changed from wall to wall carpet to laminate as was the case with one of the previous rooms I visited.

The wall materials were original here.

Another lakeside room. This one seems to be in its original configuration.

They want their room cleaned.
Although hotels, especially this one, are big catches, they are rather dull to photograph because of the standardized layout, where every room is the same. In the next post I’ll move on to the original part of the building. And I promise, that it will be more interesting.