The Club - Cathay Pacific Marco Polo Club
September 2004
A Serendipitous Stay
Sri Lanka's small hotels combine culture and
style with elegance, eccentricity and a hint of nostalgia By Edward
Peters
It is impossible to stand on Taprobane - Sri Lanka's most exotically
romantic pied-à-terre - and not be whirled away by a vortex
of emotion. Within wading distance of the shore, this tiny island
is capped by a sprawling five-bedroom, neo-Palladian mansion, the
last habitation before the South Pole.
Built in the 1920s by Count de Mauny-Talvande, a French gentleman
of leisure, its halls, anterooms, terraces and corridors have played
host to a cornucopia of aristocrats, royalty and famous names over
the years. After de Mauny died, the American writer Paul Bowles
moved in, settling down to write his novel The Spider's House before
his wife insisted on returning to Morocco. In the 1970s wild parties
rocked Taprobane as the dissolute son of Count Balthasar Klossowski
de Rola - better known as the erotic figurative painter Balthus
- used it as his Asian base.
A period of disrepair followed, until Taprobane was renovated and
restored to its former glory, providing a most unusual home away
from home for the fortunate few who rent it each year. Some come
on honeymoon, others simply to celebrate with a bunch of friends,
revelling until the small hours, lazing in the pool and gardens,
splashing ashore at low tide to explore, each and every one of
them glorying in Taprobane's unique qualities, and relishing the
memory long afterwards.
Capricious, eccentric, distinctive - Sri Lanka's alternative villas
and hotels have sprung up in their dozens over the past few years.
Not all have Taprobane's amazing history of course, but they do
reflect the island's culture and ethnic mix as well as Sri Lankan's
inherent affinity for quality rather than quantity.
Nowhere is this more evident than at Helga's Folly (helgafolly.com),
a 40-room hotel in the hills above Kandy, whose owner Mrs de Silva
Blow Peters, says she prefers not to be full with too many guests
as "it spoils the family feeling". Nothing is remotely
conventional here: every room is decorated differently, and the
Folly contains a mixture of Buddhist paintings, centuries-old Dutch
chests, furniture from the 1960s and a bevy of relatives' photographs
amid a riot of colour. There is nothing so pedestrian as a television,
far less a mini bar, and the chef shudders at the word "buffet".
Everything in the kitchen is cooked to order.
The star attraction is, of course, Helga herself, who grew up here
and may be induced to talk about her spell as a fashion model,
her talented progeny or her dealings with some of the better known
personalities who have graced the hotel - for example Peter Finch
and Vivian Leigh, who embarked on a torrid romance while he was
filming the classic drama Elephant Walk. Variously described as
outrageous, extraordinary, flamboyant, eclectic - and by one awestruck
guest as "Alice in Wonderland meets the Marquis De Sade" - Helga's
Folly is certainly one of a kind.
At the opposite end of the scale, Galapita, near Buttala in the
depths of rural Sri Lanka, is more "take a walk on the wild
side".
In fact, you need to walk over a precarious rope bridge to reach
the resort, which consists of four pavilions built atop a large
rock. Open-sided with clay floors and contoured driftwood for furniture,
Galapita is "chez eco Robinson Crusoe", with "room
temperature"
showers and simple but delicious local food.
The surrounding forest is full of wildlife, and the rock pool just
below the resort teems with fish. A short walk up river leads to
a 1,500-year-old shrine; while slightly further afield is the holy
city of Kataragama, a place of pilgrimage since prehistoric times.
Yala, the island's largest nature reserve, abounds with elephant,
bear, leopard, deer and sambhur, and makes a good overnight excursion.
Closer to home, the Menik Ganga, or "River of Gems",
flows past Galapita, and guests are welcome to try their luck at
panning.
An 18-carat cornflower blue sapphire is the best find to date,
and, of course, the river provides its own brand of hydrotherapy
- as invigorating but a lot less expensive than any designer-label
spa.
Sri Lanka's boutique accommodation is by no means confined to the
countryside. In the capital's swish Cinnamon gardens residential
district, the 100-year-old Colombo House boasts a mere three guestrooms
but bundles of charm. The two upstairs bedrooms share a private
lounge with an open veranda, making them ideal for families. The
whole place feels not so much like a hotel, but the well-appointed
abode of a friend of a friend who has been kind enough to lend
it to you for a few days.
Master of Ceremonies is the brilliantly Jeeves-like Sunil who,
with his wife Kumudu, cooks, cleans, provides a fair dose of local
information and generally keeps Colombo House running. Browse around
the library-cum-music room, put your feet up in the garden in the
shade of the frangipani trees (there's also a picturesque pavilion
where you may dine if you wish) or snuggle up on the outsize double
bed in your room with a DVD - whatever you do, the pace rarely
rises above the utterly relaxed.
Anyone who has ever stayed at The Dutch House, or Doornberg, on
the hill overlooking the old fort and city of Galle, will have
happy memories of evening cocktails. The drinks cabinet, which
occupies almost all of one wall in the drawing room, is more like
a wardrobe, and when its doors are thrown open a battalion of bottles
glows seductively from within. There are only three double rooms
in this 17th-century former Dutch sea captain's home, but if staying
alone, you may peruse the extensive and catholic bookshelves and
settle down with something to read or, because the Dutch House
tends to attract guests who are as well informed and well-to-do
as they are well heeled, it is an easy matter to fall into conversation.
Set around a croquet lawn, fringed by an infinity pool that seems
to be suspended in the jungle. Doornberg has a timeless quality
that is reflected in its bedrooms, where mosquito nets shourd the
beds, and easy chairs and tubs just made for wallowing impart a
true sense of luxury. The hotel's transport fleet consists of a
single vehicle - a beautifully restored 1934 Rover drop-head coupe
- which all guests should ride in at least once for the sheer fun
of it.
The one thing that the Dutch House doesn't do is dinner, but help
is at hand in the shape of its sister property. The Sun House,
a six-room boutique hotel across the road. In the great tradition
of all really good restaurants, there is no set menu; the chefs
simply choose whatever is freshest in the market and conjure it into
something amazing, taking their inspiration from the cuisines of
Thailand, Provence and, of course, Sri Lanka. Think bamboo shoot
salad, smoky aubergines in lime sauce, chilli-roasted mahi-mahi
fillet in lemongrass sauce and Cajun shark steaks with mango salsa.
Guests can eat wherever they fancy, be it in the dining room, on
one of the verandas or in the garden under the spreading branches
of a stately mango tree.
The Sun House was built in the 1860s by a Scottish spice merchant
who wanted to have a good view of the comings and goings in the
harbour, and has gone from being a family home to a bank to its
present incarnation. Like all of Sri Lanka's best boutique accommodation,
it fuses great taste with comfort and that signature magic that
can only be described as serendipitous.
Best of the rest
It would be quite possible to spend several months in Sri Lanka
and never go anywhere near a regular hotel. Tucked away in delightful
locations, whether urban home-stay or eco getaway, the island's
boutique properties are distinctively individual and almost as
varied as its flora and fauna. Here are half a dozen more bed and
breakfasts where you can rest and relax:
Havelock Place Bungalow, Colombo
Six bedrooms and a pleasant garden with a plunge pool located down
a secluded cul-de-sac: Havelock doubles as a gallery for work by
local artists.
The Privilege, Wadduwa
Consists of up luxury villas whose balconies are cooled by ocean
breezes; the smart set's weekend retreat from the metropolis, www.lanka.net/privilege/index2.html
Club Villa, Bentota
Surely, one of the few hotels in the world with a working railway
line passing through its grounds, the Club - designed as a private
home by the celebrated Sri Lankan architect Geoffrey Bawa - is
one of Sri Lanka's more idiosyncratic accommodation offerings.
Ulpotha, Embogama Village
The ultimate natural resort. Not luxurious in the accepted sense
of the word, but a back-to-nature retreat that is amazingly sociable
as well as healthy.
Taru Villas Taprobana, Bentota
Owned by one of the country's leading fashion designers, this beachside,
nine-room, Mediterranean-influenced mini-hotel is a sheer delight
from start to finish.
Apa Villa Thalpe, Galle
Run by Nikki and Bob Harrison, this is a welcoming cross between
a private villa and a boutique. Regular guests rave about the dining
room.
For more information and bookings contact www.asiahotels.com/hl/Sri_Lanka.asp
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