: Photo: scottroberts/Flickr
Whether your fantasy hotel is a Star Wars-style cave dwelling or a Hobbit hole in New Zealand, specialty accommodations around the world will fulfill your nerdy needs.
Other hotels geek out with crazy gear, from Apple- and Microsoft-themed suites to virtual golf courses. And while WiFi has become a common hotel offering, a high-tech hotel in the Middle East extends internet access all the way to its private beach.
These and other specialty accommodations make Wired.com’s list of top geek hotels.
Hôtel Sidi Driss, Matmata, Tunisia
Left: The Tunisian town of Matmata is riddled with troglodyte dwellings, vertical caves dug out by humans and turned into homes. The Hôtel Sidi Driss is one such desert delight.
Geek factor: Does the cave hotel look strangely familiar? The interior was used as a Star Wars filming location — it’s the Lars’ homestead on Tatooine.
: Photo courtesy Hotel Sax
Hotel Sax, Chicago
Plenty of businesses have gotten into bed with Microsoft. Now you can, too: Chicago’s Hotel Sax has a partnership with the software giant that lets weary travelers relax into “the Microsoft Experience.”
Geek factor: The Studio, Hotel Sax’s
“Entertainment Lounge” available to all guests features Microsoft gear like Xbox 360s and Zunes. Don’t want to share? Book your own private “Entertainment Technology” studio or suite.
: Photo courtesy Hotel 1000
Hotel 1000, Seattle
The operators of this high-tech hotel sank millions of dollars into the latest gear. With luxuries like ubiquitous WiFi, HD TVs and a “fully converged IP infrastructure” that allows for internet-enabled personalization of everything from room temperatures to the art on the walls, Hotel 1000 was a shoe-in for Hospitality Technology magazine’s 2008 award for overall technology innovation.
Geek factor: After playing around on the hotel’s virtual golf course, just flip the electronic “do not disturb” sign to keep hotel staff or annoying co-workers at bay.
: Photo: Mark Darley
Hotel Avante, Mountain View, California
Located in the heart of Silicon Valley, Hotel Avante is making a big play for big players. The 91-room boutique hotel bills itself — and its guests — as “smart, visionary, iconoclastic and artistic.”
Geek factor: To further its “creative clubhouse” atmosphere, each room includes an “executive toy box” with a yo-yo, an Etch A Sketch, a Rubik’s Cube, playing cards and a Slinky.
: Photo: maurizio_mwg/Flickr
Capsule Inn Akihabara, Tokyo
Capsule Inn Akihabara is one of only a few places to stay in “Electric Town,” Tokyo’s anime/otaku hub and the site of the largest electronics market in the world. The tiny capsule rooms look like washing machines from the outside.
Geek factor: The hotel’s sleeping units are “designed in the image of a jet airplane’s cockpit” with every device in the capsule — TV, radio, alarm clock, lighting — designed to be controlled from a sleeping position.
: Photo courtesy The Pod Hotel
The Pod Hotel, New York
With free WiFi, iPod docks, relatively inexpensive rooms (called “pods“) and the opportunity to make new friends in its shared bathrooms, The Pod Hotel in Manhattan’s Midtown East neighborhood is making a play for the Facebook generation. Antisocial guests will be pleased to know that some rooms have private baths.
Geek factor: Nicknamed the “Facebook Hotel,” this place has its own social networking site to help guests find someone for dinner, drinks, shopping or whatever.
: Photo courtesy Tribeca Grand Hotel
Tribeca Grand Hotel, New York
With its plush bar and 98-seat screening room, the Tribeca Grand is definitely swanky. But book an iStudio and you’ll be pampered, Apple-style.
Geek factor: The iStudio rooms. They’re decked out with Apple products, including a Power Mac G5, photo- and video-editing software and an iPod.
: Photo: stephenr/Flickr
Woodlyn Park, New Zealand
Woodlyn Park is home to Billy Black’s Kiwi Culture Show, with sheep shearing and a dancing pig. But the real star of the complex is The Hobbit Motel, two polystyrene-block units with circular doors built into a hillside.
Geek factor: You can pretend you’re a hobbit.
: Photo: Ben Nilsson/Big Ben Productions
Icehotel, Jukkasjärvi, Sweden
The Icehotel says it offers “an experience of a lifetime as well as an encounter with art and design that will surprise your senses.” Since it’s made of ice and snow, that claim sounds perfectly believable. You can book hot or cold accommodations at the Icehotel. Each ice room is designed by an artist, such as the one shown here by Andrea Thomson. Got the shivers? Heat up from the inside out at the Absolut Icebar.
Geek factor: The ice palace in the Bond flick Die Another Day was inspired by this hotel.
: Photo courtesy Emirates Palace Hotel
Emirates Palace Hotel, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
Everything’s superdeluxe at this Middle Eastern resort hotel, and it’s even better if you step up a notch: All suites boast 61-inch plasma TVs (regular rooms have puny 50-inchers). All guest rooms have handheld computers that control switches and outlets — set your language preference for the interactive screens upon check-in.
Geek factor: Free WiFi reaches all poolside areas and even the private beach.
: Photo courtesy Joie de Vivre Hospitality
Hotel Tomo, San Francisco
From anime-inspired wall paintings to glow-in-the-dark desk blotters, Hotel Tomo kicks out the J-pop jams. See Wired.com’s photo gallery on this Japanophile find, “San Francisco’s Hotel Tomo Jacks Into Japanese Culture.”
Geek factor: Deluxe gaming suites come with PlayStation 3, Wii, beanbag chairs and a 6-foot LCD projection screen.




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