Breaking News

Matteo Thun Embeds BASIN Glacial Waters into Lake Louise Landscape

Along the shores of Lake Louise––some 5,000 above sea level where the Victoria Glacier feeds directly into a new bathing facility––Matteo Thun has designed BASIN Glacial Waters to function as both architectural frame and sensory mediator, a space where the physiological effects of thermotherapy meet the raw power of protected wilderness. With an opening last September at Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise, this marks the first thermal bathing facility in North America to fully integrate European sweat culture traditions with glacial-fed hydrotherapy at this scale.

A modern hallway features wood paneling, a curved ceiling, and recessed lighting, with a narrow water feature running alongside the right wall.

Raised in the Dolomites and experienced in alpine architecture across the Alps, Thun understands how light behaves at elevation and how thermal contrast intensifies in thin mountain air. The facility appears embedded into the landscape rather than imposed upon it. Dramatic arched windows mirror the original 1920s hotel architecture flooding interior spaces with shifting natural light, which creates dynamic shadows throughout the day.

Indoor spa area with wooden slats, warm lighting, and a small circular pool with metal handrails at the center.

Indoor pool area with wooden slat walls, a narrow rectangular pool, metal handrails, and a stone border along one side. Natural light filters through the ceiling.

Sustainably-sourced, Canadian-wood beams span the ceiling, their mass calibrated to balance acoustic absorption with visual warmth. The wood will patina under exposure to steam and temperature fluctuations, gradually, baking the aging process into design and specification. Material transformation is intrinsic to the spatial narrative.

Minimalist bathroom with beige walls, built-in bench, towel, handheld shower, and soft ambient lighting.

“BASIN sets a new worldwide standard for thermal spa luxury and will be a flagship for Fairmont’s new wellbeing platform,” says Emlyn Brown, Senior Vice President of Wellbeing, Strategy, Design & Development at Accor. “We’re confident that this is the most exciting wellness opening of 2025, representing a groundbreaking shift to the meaning of wellness within the breathtaking Canadian Rockies.”

Curved hallway with arched openings on the left and a textured wall with a narrow water feature on the right, softly lit by recessed lighting.

Traditional Finnish and Bio Saunas offer varying humidity levels within nearly identical formal envelopes, revealing how invisible atmospheric shifts can fundamentally alter spatial experience. Beyond them, the outdoor Aufguss Sauna reframes ritual as architecture in motion: an Aufgussmeister circulates oil-infused steam in slow, deliberate choreography, transforming a static enclosure into a dynamic sensory chamber.

A person swims alone in an indoor pool with large arched windows and wood-paneled walls illuminated by soft wall lights.

Within the steam rooms, humidity reaches 100 percent, rendering the air tactile—almost liquid—as if immersion begins before the water is ever touched. Nearby, the circular reflexology pool and Kneipp Walk use calibrated shifts in depth and temperature as a form of spatial guidance. Here, movement is directed by sensation rather than signage; the body becomes both compass and participant.

A modern lounge area with wicker chairs and round ottomans, light gray cushions with patterned pillows, and wood slat wall paneling in warm natural light.

A Himalayan salt wall anchors the Silent Salt Relax lounge, subtly ionizing the air while radiating a gentle, enveloping warmth that establishes a microclimate distinct from adjoining rooms. In the Hot Stone Room, heated slab beds store and release thermal mass directly into the body, allowing material warmth—not ambient air—to serve as the primary heating strategy.

Several lounge chairs face a large window with a mountain view at sunset, inside a modern room with warm lighting and a brick feature wall.

A person in a robe stands indoors by large glass windows, overlooking a patio, a lake, and mountains surrounded by trees.

Outdoors, a wood-paneled terrace extends the experience into open air. Benches are positioned with quiet precision, aligning seating plane, deck surface, and sightline so that nothing interrupts the visual dialogue between occupant and glacier. It is a final calibration—architecture dissolving into atmosphere, body into landscape.

A fire pit on a patio with mountains in the background.

Woman sitting in an outdoor infinity pool at a large hotel resort during sunset, with lounge chairs and landscaped gardens visible.

To learn more about the convergence of design and wellness, visit thebasin.com.

Photography courtesy of Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise.

Leo Lei translates his passion for minimalism into his daily-updated blog Leibal. In addition, you can find uniquely designed minimalist objects and furniture at the Leibal Store.

Adblock test (Why?)



from Design MilkInterior Design Ideas for Your Modern Home | Design Milk https://ift.tt/sr9MuWN
via Design Milk

No comments