Mesa Line Design Co. | Boutique Hotel Interiors

Boutique Hotel
Interior Design

Our firm has been doing boutique hotel work in the American Southwest for nine years now.

We started in Santa Fe. That city has strict building codes about adobe and regional style – you can't just put up anything you want. I actually like that.

Boutique hotels are not big hotel chains. They are small. Twenty rooms, thirty rooms. The one we just finished in Tucson has seventeen. The lobby is smaller than most people's living rooms. That's the point.

  • reclaimed wood
  • local stone
  • handwoven textiles
  • wrought iron hardware
Southwest interior detail with warm tones

The whole idea is that a hotel in New Mexico should feel like New Mexico.

Not like it was designed in some office in New York and dropped there. We've lost projects because clients wanted something "more universal." We don't do universal.

Handwoven textile detail
Chimayó, NM
Local weaving tradition

The Furniture

We buy most of our furniture from salvage yards and small makers within a 200-mile radius. Old ranch pieces. Mesquite. Pine that's been sitting in barns for sixty years. Heavy stuff. Real joinery. We're not putting particle board in a hotel room.

The Textiles

For textiles, we work with weavers in Chimayó. They've been doing this for generations. Wool blankets, rugs, pillow covers. The colors come from the region – rust, sage, that particular brown you see in the high desert. We've been buying from the same family since 2017.

about the tile work...

Mexican tile is everywhere in the Southwest. Talavera. You know it – the blue and yellow hand-painted stuff. We use it sparingly. A bathroom backsplash. The front desk surface. Covering an entire wall looks like a theme restaurant. We learned that the hard way on an early project.

Our tiles come from a workshop in Dolores Hidalgo. They ship to El Paso, we pick up from there. Each tile is hand-painted. Imperfect. Some of them have small chips. We use those ones anyway – they look better than perfect ones somehow.

Imperfect handcrafted tiles

the lighting thing...

Lighting can wreck a space. We've walked into beautiful rooms that feel like a dentist's office because someone put in 4000K LEDs. Cold and flat. Everything looks bad.

We stick to warm. 2700K, sometimes 2400K in bedrooms. Table lamps. Sconces. Floor lamps with linen shades. Almost no overhead fixtures in guest rooms – we just don't like them. The lobby gets one or two pendants. We hunt for vintage ones from the 1940s and 1950s when we can find them.

Warm ambient lighting

dealing with old structures...

Old buildings in the Southwest have their own issues. Adobe cracks. Vigas sag. Plumbing was added decades after construction and it shows.

We don't fight the building. A crack in a 1920s adobe wall isn't a problem – it's just what the wall does. What we fix: safety stuff, comfort stuff, things that actually don't work. A sagging beam gets sistered. A crack gets sealed but not hidden.

The property we finished in Old Town Albuquerque last year had original brick floors. Uneven. Some bricks were cracked. We cleaned them, sealed them, left them alone. New tile would have been faster. Would have looked like every other renovation. The client pushed back at first. Now she sends us photos of guests taking pictures of those floors.

Before / After
Old brick floor texture
Original brick flooring, circa 1920

our vendor situation

We keep a list. Forty-one vendors right now. Salvage dealers, furniture makers, tile sources, metalworkers, electricians who won't panic when they see old wiring. Took us years to find all of them. We don't share this list with competitors.

If you're starting a firm that does this kind of work, make your own list. Drive out to the workshops. Shake hands. Watch people work. It takes a looong time. Nobody's going to hand it to you.

Boutique Hotel
Interior Design

Regional hotel design using salvage materials and local craft traditions.

#boutiquehotel #interiordesign #adobearchitecture #reclaimedwood #southwestdesign regional

Project Specs

Category
Hospitality Interiors
Region
American Southwest
Project Timeline
12-16 months typical
Room Count
12-40 rooms
Budget Range
$95-180 per square foot
Firm
Mesa Line Design Co.

Key Elements

For Guest Rooms

  • Reclaimed wood furniture from regional salvage
  • Handwoven wool textiles from New Mexico weavers
  • Warm lighting, 2700K or lower
  • Hand-painted tile accents in bathrooms
  • Original architectural details left intact

For Common Areas

  • Mixed seating, different eras, different makers
  • Regional artwork, purchased direct from artists
  • Native plants in terra cotta
  • Reading light at every chair

Process

Site Evaluation

Walk the building three times minimum. Different times of day. Bring a notebook. Write down what the building already does well. Write down what fights you.

Sourcing

Start local. Visit in person. Don't email first. Dealers remember faces. They call you when the right piece comes in. This takes months. Sometimes years.

Construction Phase

Old buildings don't follow the plan. Adobe shifts. Dimensions are off. Budget twenty percent contingency. You'll spend most of it. Maybe all of it.

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