Prompt: Hotel Sofitel Tokyo[1] (ホテルソフィテル東京) was a hotel high-rise building (106.07 m, 3 underground storeys) in Taito-ku, Tokyo (1-48, 2 Ikenohata, Taito-ku, Tokyo, Japan). It was established in 1994 as Hotel Cosima with 71 rooms on 26 cantilever floors. In 1999 it was purchased by Accor Group. After refurbishment (number of rooms increased to 83) it was reopened as 4-star hotel in September 2000, closed in December 2006 and was demolished between February 2007 and May 2008. Hotel Sofitel was a late work of Japanese architect Kiyonori Kikutake (66 years old, when the building was conceived), best known for his own pre-metabolist house (Sky House[2]), and Edo-Tokyo Museum(1993). Hotel Sofitel building resembled some metabolist ideas (as Joint Core,[3] capsules, modularity, and - theoretically - the possibility of replacement of its parts). The building shows a direct similarity to Kiyonori Kikutake's earlier theoretical project "Tree-shaped Community"[4] from 1968. However, this project consisted of a group of towers cross-shaped in the plan, it shows also a similarity to other metabolists projects (Nakagin Capsule Tower by Kisho Kurokawa, Shizuoka Press and Broadcasting
Prompt: Hotel Sofitel Tokyo[1] (ホテルソフィテル東京) was a hotel high-rise building (106.07 m, 3 underground storeys) in Taito-ku, Tokyo (1-48, 2 Ikenohata, Taito-ku, Tokyo, Japan). It was established in 1994 as Hotel Cosima with 71 rooms on 26 cantilever floors. In 1999 it was purchased by Accor Group. After refurbishment (number of rooms increased to 83) it was reopened as 4-star hotel in September 2000, closed in December 2006 and was demolished between February 2007 and May 2008. Hotel Sofitel was a late work of Japanese architect Kiyonori Kikutake (66 years old, when the building was conceived), best known for his own pre-metabolist house (Sky House[2]), and Edo-Tokyo Museum(1993). Hotel Sofitel building resembled some metabolist ideas (as Joint Core,[3] capsules, modularity, and - theoretically - the possibility of replacement of its parts). The building shows a direct similarity to Kiyonori Kikutake's earlier theoretical project "Tree-shaped Community"[4] from 1968. However, this project consisted of a group of towers cross-shaped in the plan, it shows also a similarity to other metabolists projects (Nakagin Capsule Tower by Kisho Kurokawa, Shizuoka Press and Broadcasting
Would you like to report this Dream as inappropriate?
Prompt:
Hotel Sofitel Tokyo[1] (ホテルソフィテル東京) was a hotel high-rise building (106.07 m, 3 underground storeys) in Taito-ku, Tokyo (1-48, 2 Ikenohata, Taito-ku, Tokyo, Japan). It was established in 1994 as Hotel Cosima with 71 rooms on 26 cantilever floors. In 1999 it was purchased by Accor Group. After refurbishment (number of rooms increased to 83) it was reopened as 4-star hotel in September 2000, closed in December 2006 and was demolished between February 2007 and May 2008. Hotel Sofitel was a late work of Japanese architect Kiyonori Kikutake (66 years old, when the building was conceived), best known for his own pre-metabolist house (Sky House[2]), and Edo-Tokyo Museum(1993). Hotel Sofitel building resembled some metabolist ideas (as Joint Core,[3] capsules, modularity, and - theoretically - the possibility of replacement of its parts). The building shows a direct similarity to Kiyonori Kikutake's earlier theoretical project "Tree-shaped Community"[4] from 1968. However, this project consisted of a group of towers cross-shaped in the plan, it shows also a similarity to other metabolists projects (Nakagin Capsule Tower by Kisho Kurokawa, Shizuoka Press and Broadcasting
Modifiers:
elegant
extremely detailed
intricate
oil on canvas
photorealistic
beautiful
high detail
dynamic lighting
hyperrealistic
high definition
crisp quality
coherent
serene
graceful
4k HDR
Dream Level: is increased each time when you "Go Deeper" into the dream. Each new level is harder to achieve and
takes more iterations than the one before.
Rare Deep Dream: is any dream which went deeper than level 6.
Deep Dream
You cannot go deeper into someone else's dream. You must create your own.
Deep Dream
Currently going deeper is available only for Deep Dreams.