Famous for:
AtmosphereQuiet
StyleCutting-Edge

Hotel description

For a couple of years now, Peter Lute’s restaurant has been luring foodies from Amsterdam out to the suburb of Ouderkerk aan de Amstel. Now there’s another attraction: a row of seven old cottages alongside the river has been converted into a sort of minimally serviced apartment-hotel, each cottage a separate unit.

This is more than just a place for Lute diners to lay their heads. This is one of the first forays into architecture for the famed Dutch product designer Marcel Wanders, whose beautifully strange objects (his famous Knotted Chairs, made from resin-soaked rope, among them) fill his artfully renovated spaces, making Lute Suites not just a gourmet’s crash pad but something of a live-in Wanders exhibition as well.

It’s distinctly un-hotel-like — there’s no lobby or public space to speak of, and each cottage has its own front door. Inside, each one of the suites is completely different in style, but all are outfitted in a sort of minimal luxury; hotel amenities like minibars are conspicuously absent, but creature comforts abound, including lavish modern bathrooms and kitchenettes. Breakfast comes from the Lute restaurant, which is, after all, the reason there’s a hotel here at all. It’s a design statement unto itself, a renovated 18th-century gunpowder factory. But don’t let your eye distract you — here the focus, always, is on the food.

Contact & location

Amsteldijk Zuid 54-58, Amsterdam

+31.20.472.2462

Be the first one to add a review

Already have an account? Log In
Will never be displayed

The photos displayed on this page are the property of one of the following authors:

Lute Suites

This travel guide also includes text from Wikitravel articles, all available at WikitravelView full credits

This travel guide also includes text from Wikipedia articles, all available at WikipediaView full credits

Share this:

My lists

Going to Lute Suites?
... and need recommendations

Ask your friends on Facebook

Ask on Twitter