Henning Larsen Architects To Design A Cave-Like Hotel In Faroe Islands

Danish architecture firm Henning Larsen Architects has designed a new hotel that features a cave-like foyer situated within a historic town of Tórshavn, the capital city of the Faroe Islands.

The firm won a competition with the Hotel Tórshavn with its distinguished form and welcoming space designed on the ground level that will be accessible to the public and be sen from outside.

Henning Larsen Architects to design a cave-like hotel in Faroe Islands

Inspired by coastal sea caves for the iconic grand foyer, the hotel will be a new incubator of pedestrian life in central Tórshavn. Henning Larsen Architects' design seeks to balance public function and private amenities, the 4,500-square-metre hotel establishes a new destination for international visitors while connecting channels of activity in the city center.

"As the Faroe Islands capture global attention as a tourist destination, a question lingers: How do the islands open to new visitors without losing a sense of local identity?," said the firm. 

Henning Larsen Architects to design a cave-like hotel in Faroe Islands

The hotel introduces a public grand foyer and broad staircase that connect two of the busiest pedestrian streets, making the lobby a new conduit for urban life in Tórshavn. Considering local identity in a different manner, the hotel provides a mesmerizing view to the Faroese landscape to create a new landmark grounded in Faroese nature.

"Over thousands of years, distinctive sea caves have formed where the Faroese basalt cliffs meet the North Atlantic," added the firm. 

"Long a draw for coastal explorers and curious kayakers, these caves emerge in new form through Hotel Tórshavn’s grand foyer, designed as a gesture of public accessibility and a celebration of local roots."

Henning Larsen Architects to design a cave-like hotel in Faroe Islands

This characteristic foyer will serve Hotel Tórshavn’s function as a community asset. The hotel stands in the heart of Tórshavn, a stone’s throw away from the city’s cultural venues, waterfront and pedestrian shopping district. 

Establishing an alluring public foyer in this context circulates and amplifies public life in the city center; a new commons for locals and a home for future visitors.

Henning Larsen Architects to design a cave-like hotel in Faroe Islands

"We’re going back to the original idea of a grand foyer as a way to create street-level identity, and as a passageway for new connections in the city," explained Ósbjørn Jacobsen, Partner and Design Director at Henning Larsen’s Faroese studio.

"In our search for a symbol of an open, active venue for the foyer, we took inspiration from the sea caves along the Faroese coast. In a way, you could say our design represents the bedrock of the Faroe Islands, with the city life carving its way into the lower levels of the hotel."

Henning Larsen Architects to design a cave-like hotel in Faroe Islands

Following the Faroese tourist board’s 2012 commitment to double the country’s number of overnight stays and annual tourism revenue by 2020, the islands’ air- and seaports have routinely broken standing records in tourist traffic. 

Henning Larsen's vision for Hotel Tórshavn answers a growing trend in national tourism, rising from the Faroese landscape to deliver function both local and global.

Henning Larsen Architects currently revealed plans for a new community model with green public gardens in Sweden. The firm is currently working on the transformation of the Opéra Bastille in Paris. 

All images courtesy of Henning Larsen Architects

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