Wanderlust
A Singapore school­house playing hookey from academic achievement makes for an object lesson in humorous hoteliering in Little India&rsquos Wan­derlust. Past the bar­ber chairs and fussball table, you fall down a rabbit hole to the bottom of a swimming pool &mdash the teal room of the Pantone floor, all lined in mosaic tiles with a sunken bed where a bath might have been. Nespresso pods, telephone, TV and earplugs are to hand &mdash and the rest of the room is a series of bathroom cubes and closet, making up three-fourths of the space. The soft drinks in the mini bar are free and toiletries Kiehl&rsquos...mmm. Up­stairs, in Whimsical, a typewriter monster swallows up some guests and a spaceship disgorges others in the duplex loft rooms. In between sit origami folded chambers and Pop Art spaces on the Mono floor. The Pantone floor has a vibgyor soaking pool on a deck outside. Down the warrens of Little India and beyond the seemingly incessant roadworks, this is just an incred­ible bolt hole. There is breakfast included, at Cocotte, the casual-fine French restaurant past the reception rabbit-hole, beyond the bar with the vin­tage Campari-bottle light &lsquoshades&rsquo hanging off the plumbing pipes. Breakfast should re­ally be called brunch with its mounds of bacon and pancakes or fruit salad with Chardonnay dressing. The industrial-edged bistro-chic eatery re­members its roots with its honest-to-goodness &lsquoshow kitchen&rsquo, fresh-faced behind the huge picture windows. For lunch it transforms into a chic bistro and the communal table heaves under whole grilled squid and roast pork collars and cote de boeuf and artisanal cheeses. Outside, Lit­tle India bustles and sizzles in the noonday sun. We could readily stay lost here. From S$170, 2 Dickson Road, wanderlusthotel.com