Now Now NoHo’s ‘Sleeper Cabins’ Put a Spin on Solo Travel

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Now Now NoHo’s ‘Sleeper Cabins’ Put a Spin on Solo Travel

Throughout COVID-19, countless were the days I daydreamed of a thoroughly equipped, indulgent hotel suite. I wasn’t the only one, I am sure. But as I look back at those uncannily monotonous months, where most weeks blended in with the previous one, and the one before that, I realize why that was the case: for nearly two years, my whole life had been reduced to the four walls of my shared rental in London. What I was after, then, wasn’t — forgive the overused expression — a ‘home away from home’, but a place that felt nothing like it; a fantasy world, with never-ending beds, crisply fresh linens, soothing sunken baths, and evocative decor, along with an extravagant breakfast buffet to rejoice at and pick from.

Five years fast-forward and a few trips down the line, and travelers are back demanding a cozy, familiar, and relatable setting from their holiday stays, seeking destinations that nail the balance between laid-back comfort and sophistication. But what if I told you that one of the best New York design hotels, and one of the most recently inaugurated ones, too, Now Now NoHo, manages to score high on all of the above (and beyond) while welcoming travelers in 32-sqft ‘sleeper cabin’-style rooms?

To habitués of The Mark Hotel and its namesake 10,000-sqft and 15-room penthouse, one of the Big Apple’s most expansive vacation homes, this will sound ludicrous. For Islyn Studio’s Ashley Wilkins, on the other hand, the interior designer who brought Now Now NoHo to completion, “the spatial constraints became an opportunity for intimacy and immersion”.

A quirky-cool hotel lobby overlooking a sunny lobby features self-serve check-in screens, placed atop burnt red, cylindrical podiums, arched walls covered in a stripy motifs, tiled floors with geometric detailing, and sculptural contemporary furniture throughout.

From the moment you step into Now Now NoHo, you’ll be surrounded by whimsical, inspiring design.

(Image credit: Matt Kisiday. Design: Islyn Studio)

“Designing cabins that are that small demanded creative problem-solving on every level, but that challenge was also the most exciting part of the project,” she tells me in an email exchange. Rather than preventing the studio from expressing themselves as they would in larger environments, “it forced us to innovate, distill, and choreograph movement and flow with surgical precision,” the founder adds.

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