Innenarchitekt Tirol
Innenarchitekt Tirol
Moderner Spa mit Holzsitzbänken, Vorhängen und warmem Licht.
Innenarchitekt Tirol

OLENA Innenarchitektur

Interior Architect for Hotels and SPA

Engineering Office for Interior Architecture

Consulting, planning, and interior design for hotel and SPA projects, as well as historical and listed buildings.

Hotel

CONSULTING

CONSULTING

Hotel

PLANNING

PLANNING

Hotel

INTERIOR DESIGN

INTERIOR DESIGN

SPA & Wellness

PLANNING

PLANNING

Project

TENDERING

TENDERING

3D

VISUALIZATION

VISUALIZATION

Quality

CONTROL

CONTROL

Hotels under

HERITAGE PROTECTION

HERITAGE PROTECTION

NEW CONSTRUCTION | EXTENSION | REDESIGN | MODERNIZATION | RENOVATION | CONVERSION | RESTORATION

Services

Interior architecture office with a comprehensive approach to the development of your project in the hotel and tourism sector

HOTEL and SPA Projects

Creativity, professionalism, and high-quality execution are paramount for my interior architecture office in the planning and development of your unique hotel and SPA project. Special attention is also given to projects of high regional and cultural value, as well as historical and listed buildings.

Hotel Ruhpoldinger Hof, Bavaria

Sporthotel Olymp 4*
Hochgurgl, Tyrol, Austria

SPA | alpine | Panorama

A SPA interior design project by OLENA Interior Design – for the Sporthotel Olymp 4* in Hochgurgl, with direct slope access in one of the most beautiful regions of Sölden. The hotel’s new SPA area is a comprehensive facility that offers everything for discerning guests. The project includes the conversion and expansion of the existing SPA area. Several comfortable and atmospheric relaxation rooms, a panoramic pool area, and exceptionally high-quality SPA equipment – such as the new Finnish sauna with mountain views, the modern steam bath, and experience showers – complement the offerings.

Planned and visualized Spa pool at Sporthotel Olymp by OLENA Interior Design.
Planned and visualized spa steam bath at Sporthotel Olymp by OLENA Innenarchitektur.
Planned and visualized Spa relaxation room at Sporthotel Olymp by OLENA Interior Design – modern concept with wood, fire, and elegance.
Planned and visualized spa sauna at Sporthotel Olymp by OLENA Innenarchitektur.
Planned and visualized Spa pool at Sporthotel Olymp by OLENA Interior Design.
Planned and visualized spa sauna at Sporthotel Olymp by OLENA Innenarchitektur.

SPA Planning & Wellness Interior Design

SPA planning is one of the particularly strong points of my qualification as an interior designer. With extensive experience in this sector, my interior design office specializes in designing spaces that retain their relevance and attractiveness over the years and contribute to the success of your project.

SPA-V1

Planning

From design to detailed plans

SPA-V9

Development

Creative solutions for exceptional experiences

SPA-V10

Interior Architecture

Specialized expertise in the SPA sector

Hotels under Heritage Protection – Interior Design for Historical Buildings

Careful and professional interior design solutions for historical and listed buildings, including hotels, guesthouses, and restaurants, are a special competence of “OLENA Interior Design”.

Special approach to the heritage authority for your hotel project

No, the heritage authority is there to help you achieve the best possible outcome in planning your hotel conversion or renovation. While they are strict, this is necessary to ensure the preservation of cultural heritage in the areas of building architecture and interior design, especially when these are intended for public use such as hotels, guesthouses, or restaurants.

If you listen carefully and understand why certain measures are necessary for hotel restoration, preservation, and design, then half the battle for your unique listed hotel is already won. It is not easy to develop and plan historical hotel projects, but it is worth it. History cannot be bought, and if your hotel already possesses cultural value, you can consider yourself fortunate.

Yes, if you follow point 2 in the project development of your hotel. It can happen that some solutions from the heritage authority are costly or impair the functionality of rooms, so they do not meet your original expectations. However, if you largely follow the instructions, compromises can be made or optimized solutions proposed. And as an interior designer, I will implement this thoughtfully for your hotel project.

That is not entirely correct. The structural substance of your hotel, guesthouse, or restaurant, or rather, building under heritage protection, should largely be preserved. However, not all components in such a building necessarily have historical value. The heritage authority, in cooperation with art historians and restorers, can, after a detailed analysis, define what in your hotel must be preserved or restored and what may be changed. It may turn out that some elements were added in later periods, which is not immediately apparent, and these elements may then be removed if the interior design concept provides for it. In this process, for example, floor coverings, wall claddings, windows and doors, and similar components of the historical hotel must in any case be coordinated with the heritage authority, involving the interior designer.

The heritage authority does not really influence movable furnishings such as furniture, fabrics, and lighting fixtures in an interior design hotel concept. Does that mean that as an interior designer, I can furnish completely freely? No, of course not! This is where knowledge of history, art, regionality, and traditions comes into play. This knowledge must be used in the hotel planning of historical buildings to honor their own history and the work of the heritage authority, as well as to convey the right message and emotion to guests. The fabrics or furniture used in the renovated hotel area should reflect the regional and historical characteristics, but in a more modern implementation. It is easy to ruin and misinterpret something when it comes to values and traditions that have been built up over centuries.

You might be surprised, but one of the fundamental rules for listed buildings is to clearly separate new constructive elements from old ones and to make this evident in the hotel’s interior design. This means that sometimes modern elements such as glass partitions or black sheet metal doors are actually installed in hotel areas. It is not permitted to imitate or falsify new elements. Restoration is, of course, allowed, as is reconstruction if a part has been lost. Otherwise, you have many opportunities to modernize the historical rooms in your hotel without damaging cultural values. With my qualification as an interior designer, I will help you develop a modern interior design hotel project with historical and unique charm.

Olena Georgieva

Managing Director | Company Owner
PhD in Art | Master’s Degree in Interior Design

I have been involved with interior design for almost 25 years. Of this, I dedicated 10 years to extensive professional training and research in the fields of interior architecture. Another 15 years comprise my practical professional experience, of which I have been active in Tyrol in the hotel and SPA sector for 12 years.

OLENA Innenarchitektur