Curious tourists and the young at heart flocked this summer to the small southern Dutch city of Oss to spend a night in a specially-built room deep inside the massive sculpture made entirely of sand.
Constructed from tonnes of sand trucked in and reinforced with wood, the room gives those spending the night the unique experience of sleeping in a real-life sandcastle, and comes complete with sand-carved sculptures.
“I wanted to do something special and it’s a bit of a childhood dream of mine to sleep in a sandcastle,” Erwin, who declined to give his surname exclaimed.
Sand versus ice hotel
“The idea came from the ice hotels in Finland and Sweden,” says hotel manager Maud van Leeuwen, referring to the popular Scandinavian resorts that spring up in winter, featuring ice beds and room temperatures of around minus eight degrees Celsius (17.6 degrees Fahrenheit).
“We have many artists who work with both sand and ice and suddenly we thought — why not build a sand hotel?” Van Leeuwen confessed.
Conditions are less harsh at the sand hotel, with guests being welcomed by a comfortably turned-down bed and fully-equipped bathroom for an overnight stay costing 150 euros ($167).
But like the Scandinavian ice hotels, the sand hotel is built as an ephemeral artwork and will be broken down at the end of summer.
In Oss, hotel guests can marvel at a collection of life-sized sand-sculpted dinosaurs, medieval explorers and robots while a “trip through Asia” is the theme in Sneek.
Guests need not worry about getting sand in their beds — the hotel offers a luxurious overnight stay in a ‘regular’ bed and the floor is lined with a plush grey carpet.