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  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • The hotel built inside a dockside CRANE ... where guests can enjoy a picnic in the top cabin<br />
<br />
This thrilling hotel in Harlingen, Netherlands, will provide a novel sleeping experience for guests if they have the head for heights to stay there.<br />
<br />
It is the second crane hotel to open in Holland, with guests bungee jumping off the top of its twin, the Faralda Crane Hotel in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
A genuine dockside crane is converted here into a surprisingly luxurious getaway, or rather getup, with the old machine room transformed into a striking bedroom for two. <br />
<br />
They said it couldn’t be done. And there were many hurdles that nearly prevented this mad concept from getting off the ground, but against the odds it succeeded. This then is a property of uncompromising character; a design hotel that pushed the boundaries of engineering to its limits.<br />
<br />
A spokesperson for the hotel said: 'This is a genuine dockside crane which has been the recipient of intelligent engineering and dedicated devotion rarely seen in a private home - let alone in a hotel property'.<br />
<br />
'It is an out of this world property - staying here guarantees you stories to tell your friends'.<br />
<br />
The crane’s flashy exterior – painted red, yellow and blue – is anything but subtle, but inside it’s fascinatingly functional. There’s no reception room or lounge and the lack of communal space means there are few opportunities for aesthetic assertions; the rickety lifts certainly aren’t canvases for creative touches, but the suites they deliver you to are another story.<br />
<br />
All suites are equipped with the usual mod cons - coffee machines, kettles, minibars, televisions and music streaming devices - while wetrooms boast rainforest showers and porthole windows, which allow you to admire Amsterdam while conditioning your hair.<br />
<br />
Every room has spectacular views and because the crane moves in the wind guests often wake up with different vistas to the ones they had at bedtime. Suites from €435 (£371) per night, excluding b
    ExPix_Hotel_built_inside_a_dockside_...jpg
  • Feb. 5, 2016 - New York City, NY, USA - <br />
General views of a crane collapse which killed one and injured several others on Worth Street in Tribeca <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Construction_Crane_Coll...jpg
  • Feb. 5, 2016 - New York City, NY, USA - <br />
General views of a crane collapse which killed one and injured several others on Worth Street in Tribeca <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Construction_Crane_Coll...jpg
  • Feb. 5, 2016 - New York City, NY, USA - <br />
General views of a crane collapse which killed one and injured several others on Worth Street in Tribeca <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Construction_Crane_Coll...jpg
  • Feb. 5, 2016 - New York City, NY, USA - <br />
General views of a crane collapse which killed one and injured several others on Worth Street in Tribeca <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Construction_Crane_Coll...jpg
  • Feb. 5, 2016 - New York City, NY, USA - <br />
General views of a crane collapse which killed one and injured several others on Worth Street in Tribeca <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Construction_Crane_Coll...jpg
  • Feb. 5, 2016 - New York City, NY, USA - <br />
General views of a crane collapse which killed one and injured several others on Worth Street in Tribeca <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Construction_Crane_Coll...jpg
  • Feb. 5, 2016 - New York City, NY, USA - <br />
General views of a crane collapse which killed one and injured several others on Worth Street in Tribeca <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Construction_Crane_Coll...jpg
  • Feb. 5, 2016 - New York City, NY, USA - <br />
General views of a crane collapse which killed one and injured several others on Worth Street in Tribeca <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Construction_Crane_Coll...jpg
  • Feb. 5, 2016 - New York City, NY, USA - <br />
General views of a crane collapse which killed one and injured several others on Worth Street in Tribeca <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Construction_Crane_Coll...jpg
  • Feb. 5, 2016 - New York City, NY, USA - <br />
General views of a crane collapse which killed one and injured several others on Worth Street in Tribeca <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Construction_Crane_Coll...jpg
  • Feb. 5, 2016 - New York City, NY, USA - <br />
General views of a crane collapse which killed one and injured several others on Worth Street in Tribeca <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Construction_Crane_Coll...jpg
  • Feb. 5, 2016 - New York City, NY, USA - <br />
General views of a crane collapse which killed one and injured several others on Worth Street in Tribeca <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Construction_Crane_Coll...jpg
  • Feb. 5, 2016 - New York City, NY, USA - <br />
General views of a crane collapse which killed one and injured several others on Worth Street in Tribeca <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Construction_Crane_Coll...jpg
  • BAICHENG, CHINA - SEPTEMBER 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Tourist Get Attacked By Red-Crowned Crane<br />
<br />
 A tourist gets attacked by a red-crowned crane at Xianghai National Nature Reserve on September 17, 2014 in Baicheng, Jilin province of China. Two tourists got attacked by a red-crowned crane in Baicheng on Wednesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Tourist_Attacked_By_Cra...jpg
  • BAICHENG, CHINA - SEPTEMBER 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Tourist Get Attacked By Red-Crowned Crane<br />
<br />
 A tourist gets attacked by a red-crowned crane at Xianghai National Nature Reserve on September 17, 2014 in Baicheng, Jilin province of China. Two tourists got attacked by a red-crowned crane in Baicheng on Wednesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Tourist_Attacked_By_Cra...jpg
  • BAICHENG, CHINA - SEPTEMBER 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Tourist Get Attacked By Red-Crowned Crane<br />
<br />
 A tourist gets attacked by a red-crowned crane at Xianghai National Nature Reserve on September 17, 2014 in Baicheng, Jilin province of China. Two tourists got attacked by a red-crowned crane in Baicheng on Wednesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Tourist_Attacked_By_Cra...jpg
  • BAICHENG, CHINA - SEPTEMBER 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Tourist Get Attacked By Red-Crowned Crane<br />
<br />
 A tourist gets attacked by a red-crowned crane at Xianghai National Nature Reserve on September 17, 2014 in Baicheng, Jilin province of China. Two tourists got attacked by a red-crowned crane in Baicheng on Wednesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Tourist_Attacked_By_Cra...jpg
  • BAICHENG, CHINA - SEPTEMBER 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Tourist Get Attacked By Red-Crowned Crane<br />
<br />
 A tourist gets attacked by a red-crowned crane at Xianghai National Nature Reserve on September 17, 2014 in Baicheng, Jilin province of China. Two tourists got attacked by a red-crowned crane in Baicheng on Wednesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Tourist_Attacked_By_Cra...jpg
  • BAICHENG, CHINA - SEPTEMBER 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Tourist Get Attacked By Red-Crowned Crane<br />
<br />
 A tourist gets attacked by a red-crowned crane at Xianghai National Nature Reserve on September 17, 2014 in Baicheng, Jilin province of China. Two tourists got attacked by a red-crowned crane in Baicheng on Wednesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Tourist_Attacked_By_Cra...jpg
  • BAICHENG, CHINA - SEPTEMBER 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Tourist Get Attacked By Red-Crowned Crane<br />
<br />
 A tourist gets attacked by a red-crowned crane at Xianghai National Nature Reserve on September 17, 2014 in Baicheng, Jilin province of China. Two tourists got attacked by a red-crowned crane in Baicheng on Wednesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Tourist_Attacked_By_Cra...jpg
  • BAICHENG, CHINA - SEPTEMBER 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Tourist Get Attacked By Red-Crowned Crane<br />
<br />
 A tourist gets attacked by a red-crowned crane at Xianghai National Nature Reserve on September 17, 2014 in Baicheng, Jilin province of China. Two tourists got attacked by a red-crowned crane in Baicheng on Wednesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Tourist_Attacked_By_Cra...jpg
  • BAICHENG, CHINA - SEPTEMBER 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Tourist Get Attacked By Red-Crowned Crane<br />
<br />
 A tourist gets attacked by a red-crowned crane at Xianghai National Nature Reserve on September 17, 2014 in Baicheng, Jilin province of China. Two tourists got attacked by a red-crowned crane in Baicheng on Wednesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Tourist_Attacked_By_Cra...jpg
  • BAICHENG, CHINA - SEPTEMBER 17: (CHINA OUT)<br />
<br />
Tourist Get Attacked By Red-Crowned Crane<br />
<br />
 A tourist gets attacked by a red-crowned crane at Xianghai National Nature Reserve on September 17, 2014 in Baicheng, Jilin province of China. Two tourists got attacked by a red-crowned crane in Baicheng on Wednesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Tourist_Attacked_By_Cra...jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky30.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky29.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky28.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky27.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky26.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky25.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky24.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky23.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky22.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky21.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky20.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky18.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky17.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky15.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky14.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky13.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky12.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky11.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky10.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky9.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky8.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky6.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky5.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky3.jpg
  • SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 27: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant In The Sky<br />
<br />
Diners are suspended from a crane as they enjoy a meal organized by the 'Dinner in the Sky' over Lujiazui Financial District on June 27, 2014 in Shanghai, China. The unusual table plan can accommodate up to 22 diners and each meal lasts about 50 minutes including hoisting customers up and down. Costs range from 1,888 to 8,888 yuan (302 - 1,422 USD) per person depending on choice of food. The hotel will offer 14 sittings, serving up to 308 people in three days. It will also operate in September and October. All diners are secured in their seats with waiters and cooks taking safety harnesses similar to those used in Bungee jumping.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Restaurant_In_The_Sky2.jpg
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