‘Midnight in Paris’ at Omaha’s Cottonwood Hotel

The interior demolition of what’s now the Kimpton Cottonwood Hotel in Omaha, Neb. yielded a treasure trove of early 19th-century finishes.

The hotel started out as the Blackstone Hotel in 1916 what’s now known as Omaha’s Blackstone District.

It would be converted to offices in the 1980s. When that happened, the interiors weren’t gutted – just covered over.

So in 2017, when Green Slate Developers began a demo to return the E-shaped structure to its original intent as a hotel, they were pleasantly surprised.

“They found the original architecture covered by drywall for the office building, and all of it was usable, including the original floors and detailing that was hand-done,” says Kristen Kordecki, Commercial Projects Director at LS Group. “The lobby was marble, and covered with drywall, and the floor is all original.”

LS Group is a lighting company that specializes in residential and commercial work. Kordecki is in the company’s Denver office, focusing on hospitality projects. For the Cottonwood, she worked hand-in-glove with interior designers from the DLR group on decorative lighting, as well as the team from USAI lighting on architectural lighting – and with architects from Leo A Daly on the overall look and feel of the lighting.

Her clients, big fans of the film “Midnight in Paris,” sought lighting that mimicked the movie. “The client loved being transported back in time with the lighting of that movie, and the transition to that super-warm, vintage, fireside feeling in Paris,” she says. “That was the key inspiration for creating a narrative for the project.”

The architects too were playing off the color palette from the film, and Kordecki obliged them. “We specified different color temperatures, depending on how the owner wanted the space to feel. It’s warmer in the steakhouse – amber, for nostalgia,” she says. “On the eighth-floor ballroom, there’s modern-day lighting, and the meeting rooms’ lighting are the coolest.”

In the bar for the Cottonwood Room, she worked from a black and white, vintage photograph from 1916, with some technological updates. “We’re projecting a lot of light onto the wall, with images that change and modernize it,” she says.

Still, it’s got an authentic 1920s vibe going on – in a place where Hemingway, Dali, Man Ray and Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald would feel right at home, martini in hand.

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