Dexamenes Seaside Hotel shared by @michelinguide says: ""Dexamenes Seaside Hotel is part of theMICHELIN Guide hotel selection. Each of the 6000+ hotels in the selection has been chosen by our experts for its extraordinary style, service, and personality — and each can be booked on the MICHELIN Guide website and app.Have you ever stayed in a wine tank?That’s the question they ask atDexamenes Seaside Hotelbefore they show you to your beachfront room on the pristine west coast of the Peloponnese. The closest most of us come to experiencing this level of industrial revival is a waterfront warehouse in Brooklyn or Singapore, where exposed bricks mark the walls and metal pipes run visibly along the ceiling. This is more.You’d have to see the “before” photos to understand what a monumental undertaking it was to get this old wine factory up to modern luxury hotel standards. And yet, the main appeal of Dexamenes is that its fundamental character feels exactly as it was decades ago: rough, well-worn, proudly unpolished.And productive. You’re meant to engage with the fruitful history of this facility, which has deep meaning for both the region and for those responsible for its new life. In the rooms, raw concrete still bears stains from the wine fermentation process. The imperfections that signify years of making and manufacturing have been left to tell their stories. It’s a sparse style, yes, but not without warmth, and certainly not without consideration. Light splashes with purpose through textured glass, dancing over the kind of space you’ll struggle to find anywhere else in the hospitality world.The eccentric setting is the happy result of an economic story that brought wine to this region in the first place. As Greek black currants lost their position at the top of the marketplace, the industry found they could reroute their devalued grapes into wine exports. The winery here was built in the 1920s, set on the beach so the product could be pumped directly onto waiting ships. Today, the clear waters of Kourouta Beach aren’t for exports. They’re a magnet for obsessives of design and architecture.The two silos are the visual signatures ofDexamenes Seaside Hotel, but these aren’t hotel rooms. Once used to store the juice of the grapes before transfer to the fermentation tanks, they’ve had their rusting roofs removed and floors refinished to create a comfortable gathering spot for sound healing, yoga, curated dinners, and wine tastings.The fermentation tanks are where you’ll sleep.Less silo than bunker, the 34 tanks make 34 suites in two long, concrete rows. Outside and in, they retain as much of their original feel as possible. Touches of wood and glass soften the spaces, but few fundamental changes were made. Slabs of concrete were removed to create entrances — filled later by sliding-glass doors within timber-screened patios — but even those found reuse at the hotel, as stepping stones for the courtyard or for remolding into coffee tables and chairs. Sustainability and the concept of upcycling form two pillars of intention here. Reclaimed bricks from the old warehouse line the floor of the restaurant. Irrigation pipes form handrails for the esplanade.It’s a gem that the typical Greece tourist won’t uncover. But make it here and you’re not just rewarded by one of the coolest hotel concepts in Europe. Endless sandy beaches mingle with an agricultural region where visitors eat locally grown produce and drink locally vaunted wine. Dexamenes facilitates those organic pleasures with a restaurant and a newly planted vineyard, which should one day contribute to the roster of Greek wines on offer.The owner, a man named Nikos Karaflos, grew up here, hearing stories of the abandoned winery and its place in his hometown’s economic story. He runs it now as a landmark remade, a testament to local ingenuity and a new chapter for the Peloponnese.Have you ever stayed in a wine tank?This one won’t disappoint."" on Postcard