On Lake St. Clair, the deepest in Australia, the hotel is open to true wildlife lovers. Hotel Pumphouse Point is an unusual project. The architects of the Australian bureau Cumulus Studio reconstructed the old pumping station and warehouse, turning them into a hotel for a wild holiday.
Pumphouse Point. Common hall overlooking the lake. The walls are lined with coarse cut. Chairs - typical examples of Scandinavian design.Both buildings of the 1940s were built as part of the general hydro and power system of the state of Tasmania. In the list of cultural monuments of the country, they appear as monuments of Art Deco style and for twenty years were abandoned.
Now, 12 guest rooms are located in the former water tower, six more rooms, a common lounge and a dining area are in stock. Severe simplicity and not too refined comfort reign in all rooms. The rooms used copper faucets, pipes for heating and sewage, wood fireplaces. Chic interiors in large windows that give the feeling of complete fusion with the surrounding landscape.
In the local forests roam echidnas and brushtail couscous. Concrete pier is issued at a distance of 250 m from the shoreline.