The Arrow Private Hotel banner

Against the backdrop of the Arrow River this contemporary hotel emerges from the schist slopes to accompany the existing historic stone cottage and stone walls that border the verdant site. Concrete walls that were formed against a mould of timber shingles provide a play on the existing materials in the area and sets the contemporary tone of the new accommodation units. Slick aluminum frames support large windows that afford a scenic expanse to each room of the surrounding beech covered hills. The units are sited to afford privacy and a unique experience of the stunning site.

The suites feature clever and efficient use of space, with the various functions borrowing both light and space from each other. A glass screen can shield or reveal the bath from the bed and living space, while a cupboard by the front door can be externally accessed by the host to provide provisions with the utmost privacy and delight.

The 5 completed suites are a part of a larger scheme for the site, centered about the existing stone cottage as a showcase of and springboard to the wider region.

AWARDS

The Arrow Private Hotel won the only award for Commercial Architecture in the New Zealand Institute of Architects Southern Awards in 2012. The judges provided the following citation for the project:

“These delicately detailed ‘boxes’ materialise as jewels nestled into the tree-lined hillside. Positioned so as not to be obtrusive, the boxes provide private yet open spaces which are both generous and appropriately scaled to context. While the building diverges from vernacular norms, its form relates well to local building traditions. The choice of materials and textures sympathetic to the changing seasons and local light further enhances the quality of the design.”

The jury was convened by Dunedin architect Niko Young, and comprised fellow Dunedin architect Regan Hall, Auckland architect Nicola Herbst, and University of Otago design for technology department fellow Michale Findlay.

Assembly Architects
Arrowtown, Otago
The Arrow Private Hotel
The Arrow Private Hotel
The Arrow Private Hotel
The Arrow Private Hotel
The Arrow Private Hotel
The Arrow Private Hotel
The Arrow Private Hotel
The Arrow Private Hotel
The Arrow Private Hotel
The Arrow Private Hotel
The Arrow Private Hotel
The Arrow Private Hotel

Professionals used in
The Arrow Private Hotel

About the
Professional

Assembly is an Arrowtown based architecture practice delivering exceptional architecture with personality, connection to landscape and considered construction.

We design homes and special projects in the Queenstown Lakes district, Wanaka and Central Otago. Current projects include heritage sensitive homes in Arrowtown, a rammed earth home in Wanaka, and distinctive new homes at Mount Cardrona Station, the Crown Terrace, Ben Lomond and Lowburn Mt Pisa.

Our homes are decidedly personal and individual, strongly connected to landscape, and expressed with detailed materiality. Design communication is huge to us. We utilise design tools that visually communicate the design in an engaging, interactive and visually realistic method.

Registered Architects Louise Wright and Justin Wright established Assembly in Wellington in 2005, and moved to Arrowtown in 2012.  Our Arrowtown studio is situated on Arrow Lane in the heart of Arrowtown’s historic town centre.

The studio comprises a tight knit and talented team – Emma Schmitz, Marcus Kirk, Simon Khouri, Catarina Peeters and Matt Connolly, who together with Justin and Louise work in small teams to bring your design to life 

In 2019 Assembly was a founding signatory to the NZ Architect’s Declare Climate & Biodiversity Emergency.

Assembly is a New Zealand Institute of Architects practice.

At ArchiPro we recognise and acknowledge the existing, original and ancient connection Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have to the lands and waterways across the Australian continent. We pay our respects to the elders past and present. We commit to working together to build a prosperous and inclusive Australia.