"In the art of floral arrangement, beauty is not measured by abundance... Just as important as the flowers themselves is the space between them, the quiet emptiness that allows each element to breathe."
— Written by GCS Times on Hospitality Net to market wooden key cards that replace front-desk staff, proving how funny corporate "nature connection" can be.
You don’t buy a ticket to see this. You don’t stand in a neat, predictable queue outside a gated museum to experience it, either. Just go to Tings in Lisbon – our boutique hotel in Graça where real flowers are a part of the everyday, cozy background of the space.
Before opening our first Tings in Kathmandu in 2011, we spent over 1,500 nights in hotels worldwide and watched a sad trend solidify. To cut costs, hotels began replacing everything that creates real ambiance. Authentic art became cheap IKEA commodities, and live plants were swapped for fake silk, plastic, or chemically treated “preserved” mummies. Today, that corporate trend is the global standard. Lobbies are filled with sterile, scentless, perfectly symmetrical floral designs that look great on a smartphone camera but completely break character the moment you lean in to take a breath.
That is exactly why I found a recent Hospitality Net article by GCS Times so funny. They wrote a long, academic essay about using wooden key cards to “connect with nature,” completely missing the irony that those cards only exist to automate desks and cut out human staff. Humans are the most natural thing in a hotel, yet big groups systematically banish real plants and human faces because they require actual work.
Like our night duty, original art, real music, and homemade sandwiches for early check-outs, we stubbornly insist on real flowers in hotels. Why? Because that’s the exact kind of place we love to stay in ourselves. Come by and smell the organic difference the second you cross our threshold.
Artificial flowers are getting harder and harder to visually distinguish from real botany due to high-fidelity manufacturing. But your skin and nose can always tell the difference. Like almost everything else we cultivate at Tings, our flowers are completely real. They aren’t just a corporate token dropped onto the reception counter to satisfy a 5-star design checklist.
They are woven directly into the daily DNA of our relaxed hotel Lisbon layout. Our real flowers are breathing in all guest rooms, cascading across the common lounge, spilling out onto our exterior street planters, and thriving throughout our hidden garden oasis. We host so many natural blossoms that during the peak blooming seasons, Annette spends her mornings actively cutting, trimming, and arranging them directly on the large communal table in the lounge.
Every single guest room is styled with live orchids. When their seasonal bloom naturally dies out, we don’t toss them into the trash bin like disposable commercial props. Annette packs them up, takes them to our private home space, and patiently nurtures them back to health. The moment they become strong and beautiful again, she brings them right back up the hill to reclaim their spots in the guest rooms. It is a slow, cyclical ritual that keeps our space tethered to the real rhythm of Lisbon.
Our organic botanical displays are integrated across every single square meter of the house. Keep an eye out for Annette’s custom hospitality fresh floral design arrangements at:
Our flowers are an active, evolving fixture 24/7/365, but the absolute best time to appreciate them is early morning. As the first light hits the lounge and rooms, the fresh water mist on the petals catches the sun, and the natural fragrance is at its peak before the heat of the Lisbon day sets in.
Lisbon doesn’t just build neighborhoods; it builds communities in the spaces between them. The quiosques are part of a broader, systemic urban design where architecture, historic preservation, and daily relaxation melt together. When you sit at one of these iron pavilions, you aren’t just having a drink—you are participating in a century-old ritual of reclaiming the street for the people.