HOTEL HOME DESIGN
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You'd think you wouldn't want your place to look like a hotel room. But when the sleepover spot in question is a stylish operation furnished with some of the best new design out there, copycatting can be a good thing. These destinations let you take home a lot more than mini-toiletries. Monica Khemsurov

Courtesy of The Viceroy
1. Viceroy Hotels
On the website for the Kelly Wearstler-designed Viceroy hotels in Santa Monica and Palm Springs, California, you can order neoclassical pieces like ornate plaster wall adornments ($90) and nickel drawer pulls ($60 each).
1819 Ocean Avenue, Santa Monica, and 415 South Belardo Road, Palm Springs; 800-439-3719

Courtesy of Dream Hotel
2. Dream Hotel
From the relaxation-driven Dream Hotel (or its website), you can get a bed ($1,100) or a desk ($2,000) that emits a soothing blue glow. There are also less New Age-y items like white leather lounge chairs ($690) and aluminum Artemide lamps ($220 to $410).
210 West 55th Street, New York, 866-437-3266

Courtesy of Keating Hotel
3. The Keating Hotel
At the first hotel crafted by Pinin-farina, the company behind cars for Ferrari, Alfa Romeo, and Maserati, luxe Italian design is applied to espresso machines ($700), chaise longues ($4,500), and glass-and-steel end tables ($450).
432 F Street, San Diego, 877-753-2846

Courtesy of Claska
4. Claska Hotel
This spring, Tokyo's original bou-tique hotel got a makeover that involved the work of up-and-coming Japanese artisans; some of it, like Shimizu pottery teapots ($45), spare wooden tissue boxes ($20), and Noguchi lamps ($68), is for sale in its Do shop and online.
1-3-18 Chuo-Cho, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, Japan; 011-81-3-3719-8121










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