Monday, 21 September 2015


‘Haunted’ hotel just became even more horrifying
LIGHTS turning on and off, doors opening and closing, laughter, footsteps and unexplained chills; this hotel is the stuff of legend and is said to be haunted by children.
And the Stanley Hotel is also famous for being the place where Stephen King stayed and was inspired to pen The Shining after a spooky dream.
Employees at the hotel have always been a little disappointed that the movie wasn’t actually filmed there.
But that hasn’t stopped them from trying to capitalise on the book and movie’s success with everything from an in-house psychic to ghost tours to constantly streaming The Shining on hotel televisions.
One thing, though, was always missing: the iconic hedge maze from the end of the film. And finally, the Stanley can say it has one — sort of.
The property’s current owner, John Cullen, took notice of his guests’ disappointment when they noticed a hedge maze didn’t exist at the property. So to celebrate 20 years of his owning the hotel, he held a competition to design and build one.
“People want an experience. They want to reinterpret it and tell all their friends about it.
“And who am I to get in their way?”
The winning architect was Mairim Dallaryan Standing from New York. She was picked from 329 worldwide entries.
“I was up until 1am every day, designing and drawing and sketching and trying to make it work mathematically before I submitted it,” Standing said.
Although her design has been morphed into the hedge maze now standing at the hotel, some guests are disappointed. Cullen decided to use juniper trees that only grow to three feet tall rather than the huge bushes from the movie.
Guests were looking for that scary experience and some aren’t getting it. But the shorter version also has its positive qualities — it’s architecturally beautiful, and no one can get lost in it.

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