At Arken, Eriksberg Hotel & Nature Reserve’s latest addition, wildlife is part of every guest experience
Eriksberg Hotel & Nature Reserve in Sweden introduces Arken, featuring close-to-nature suites and outstanding savannah views
The very mention of a safari invariably conjures images of the African continent with its vast savannahs bristling with the entire cast of The Lion King. Savvy insiders, though, have long known that equally compelling vistas and fauna are to be found in Scandinavia, with the 925-hectare Eriksberg Hotel & Nature Reserve in south-east Sweden’s Blekinge seizing the high ground with the Nordic region’s largest safari park.
The Ark at Eriksberg Hotel & Nature Reserve, Trensum
The recent addition of a 23-room hotel, Arken – appropriately, the Ark, in English – just in time for the start of the summer season will be welcomed by safari enthusiasts wanting to stay on property after the day-trippers have left. Here, local architect Oskar Årevall has lifted over the land a cantilevered, three-storey building sheathed in low-maintenance timber and polished steel, and capped with a reed roof, a metaphor for a boat intentionally marooned on land. The reflective properties of the cladding also ‘create the illusion of a dissolving house which disappears in nature.’
Inside, interior designers Bernadotte & Kylberg have followed their brief – bringing guests as close to nature as possible, inside – with admirable fidelity. In particular, the three suites, located on different floors of Arken, are themed after a primeral mountain, forest and sky, with the interior design gently tweaked to match, whether a rough-hewn rock that doubles as a stool, rugs inspired by clouds and moss, or water-lily wallpaper designed by pattern designer Martin Bergström to reflect the flora on the property’s Lake Färsksjön.
One of the suites even features a ceiling light made of a massive, two-metre-wide tree root alongside a glass panel in the floor, the better to spot grazing wildlife below from the comfort of the sofa. Chances are, though, that most guests will drawn out onto their south-facing terraces, which open to a panoramic sweep of the savannah and oak woodlands – the better to catch passing wisents, or European bison, Père David’s deer, wild boar and sea eagles.
Eriksberg Hotel & Nature Reserve is located at Guöviksvägen 353, 374 96 Trensum, Sweden, eriksberg.se
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Daven Wu is the Singapore Editor at Wallpaper*. A former corporate lawyer, he has been covering Singapore and the neighbouring South-East Asian region since 1999, writing extensively about architecture, design, and travel for both the magazine and website. He is also the City Editor for the Phaidon Wallpaper* City Guide to Singapore.
-
Bali welcomes Tri Hita Karana Tower, a hybrid sound and vision centrepiece
Tri Hita Karana Tower is launching at Bali's Nuanu City; designed by Arthur Mamou-Mani, it’s a new hybrid art-AI architectural landmark for the island
By Ellie Stathaki Published
-
Lego opens its first Superpower Studios at Paris’ La Gaîté Lyrique
In collaboration with Lego’s new Global Play Ambassadors, artists Aurélia Durand, Chen Fenwan and Ekow Nimako, and overseen by Colette co-founder Sarah Andelman, Paris is the site of the first Lego Superpower Studios
By Jonathan Bell Published
-
‘If kids grew up going to London Design Festival they would learn so much’: architect Shawn Adams
In the first of our interviews with key figures lighting up the London Design Festival 2024, Shawn Adams, founder of POoR Collective, discusses the power of such events to encourage social change
By Ali Morris Published
-
Landet Stay is a holistic cabin retreat on the Stockholm archipelago
Landet Stay offers a serene haven designed by Andreas Martin-Löf and Tobias Vernon in Sweden
By Sophie Axon Published
-
TypeO designs a B&B for the ‘new normal’ of travel — Ystad, Sweden
By Melina Keays Last updated
-
Arctic Bath — Lapland, Sweden
By Mary Lussiana Last updated
-
Blique by Nobis — Stockholm, Sweden
By Paul Sephton Last updated
-
Grow Hotel — Stockholm, Sweden
By Daven Wu Last updated
-
Gina Tricot — Stockholm, Sweden
By Daven Wu Last updated
-
Strand Hotel — Stockholm, Sweden
By Lauren Ho Last updated
-
Nordic Light Hotel — Stockholm, Sweden
By Jonna Dagliden Hunt Last updated