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11th ProZ.com translation contest: "Contemporary society" » English to Norwegian

Competition in this pair is now closed, and the winning entry has been announced.

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Source text in English

We're accustomed to glamour in London SE26: Kelly Brook and Jason Statham used to live above the dentist. But when Anouska Hempel's heels hit the cracked cement of the parking space outside my flat, it's hard not to think of those Picture Post photographs of royalty visiting bombed-out families during the second world war. Her mission in my modest tract of suburbia is, however, about more than offering sympathy. Hempel—the woman who invented the boutique hotel before it bore any such proprietary name—has come to give me information for which, judging by the spreads in interiors magazines and anxious postings on online DIY forums, half the property-owners in the Western world seem desperate: how to give an ordinary home the look and the vibe of a five-star, £750-a-night hotel suite. To Hem­pelise, in this case, a modest conversion flat formed from the middle slice of a three-storey Victorian semi.

"You could do it," she says, casting an eye around my kitchen. "Anyone could do it. Absolutely no reason why not. But there has to be continuity between the rooms. A single idea must be followed through." She looks out wistfully over the fire escape. "And you'd have to buy the house next door, of course." That's a joke. I think.

...

It's worth pausing, though, to consider the oddness of this impulse. The hotel room is an amnesiac space. We would be troubled if it bore any sign of a previous occupant, particularly as many of us go to hotels in order to do things we would not do at home. We expect a hotel room to be cleaned as thoroughly as if a corpse had just been hauled from the bed. (In some cases, this will actually have happened.) The domestic interior embodies the opposite idea: it is a repository of memories. The story of its inhabitants ought to be there in the photos on the mantelpiece, the pictures on the wall, the books on the shelves. If hotel rooms were people, they would be smiling lobotomy patients or plausible psychopaths.

The winning entry has been announced in this pair.

There were 5 entries submitted in this pair during the submission phase. The winning entry was determined based on finals round voting by peers.

Competition in this pair is now closed.


Entries (5 total) Expand all entries

Entry #13787 — Discuss 0
Winner
Voting points1st2nd3rd
347 x42 x22 x1
Entry tagging:
  • No "like" tags
Entry #13690 — Discuss 0
Voting points1st2nd3rd
265 x41 x24 x1
Entry tagging:
  • 1 user entered 1 "like" tag
  • 1 user agreed with "likes" (1 total agree)
+1
viste det minste tegn til tidligere beboere
Good term selection
Kristin Høgsve-Mouton
Entry #13856 — Discuss 0
Voting points1st2nd3rd
254 x44 x21 x1
Entry tagging:
  • No "like" tags
Entry #13187 — Discuss 0
Voting points1st2nd3rd
121 x43 x22 x1
Entry tagging:
  • 1 user entered 2 "like" tags
bruker hoteller til å gjøre ting vi ikke ville gjort hjemme
Flows well
Kristin Høgsve-Mouton
agringssted
Good term selection
Kristin Høgsve-Mouton
Entry #12688 — Discuss 0
Voting points1st2nd3rd
82 x400
Entry tagging:
  • 2 users entered 2 "like" tags
gjør-det-selv fora
Flows well
Kristin Høgsve-Mouton
Hotellrommet er et hukommelsesløst sted
Flows well
Ivan Eikås Skjøstad