Beverly Mountain Bay, Trademark Collection by Wyndham
Beverly Mountain Bay, Trademark Collection by Wyndham, occupies a prime position on Pratumnak Hill in South Pattaya — a location often referred to as the Beverly Hills of the city. This photography series documents a Superior room whose interior design language relies on clean geometry, warm natural materials, and carefully layered lighting to create a space that feels both polished and genuinely livable. The project spans every zone of the room — from the living area and bedroom to the bathroom and fully equipped kitchenette — with the aim of capturing not just the physical appearance of the space, but its character and atmosphere as a hospitality environment.
The first image offers a wide perspective on the room's overall spatial organization. A warm-toned wooden door anchors the entrance zone, while a wall-mounted television defines the focal point opposite the sleeping area. Accent cushions in teal and mustard yellow introduce color without disrupting the room's neutral palette, and the clean ceiling finishes contribute to an uncluttered, functional elegance. This establishing shot immediately communicates the design standard of a contemporary hotel room built for the modern traveler.
The seating area is defined by a compact sofa in warm beige, dressed with a single mustard yellow cushion that adds personality without visual noise. A round dark coffee table completes the grouping and introduces a quiet material contrast. The arrangement reflects considered space-planning — maximizing comfort within a compact footprint while preserving visual clarity. Soft ambient lighting ties the composition together and reinforces the sense of ease that the living zone is designed to deliver.
The bedroom is photographed in natural daylight entering through large windows dressed with floor-length blue-grey curtains. Crisp neutral bedding allows the architectural qualities of the space to remain front and center, while the tonal interplay between cool curtain fabric and warm flooring creates a palette that feels considered rather than accidental. This image captures one of the most fundamental qualities of a well-executed hotel room: a stillness that immediately communicates rest.
A close-up of the room's lamp becomes one of the most evocative images in the series. Shot in low ambient light, the warm glow of the pendant creates a dramatic contrast against the dark surrounding environment. Detail photographs like this one are essential in hospitality photography — they communicate the emotional quality of a space, its warmth and intimacy, in a way that wide-angle overviews cannot. The lamp's sculptural form adds personality to what might otherwise be a purely functional object.
The full-height built-in wardrobe is photographed straight-on to emphasize its clean lines and generous proportions. A light beige-wood finish integrates naturally with the room's tonal palette, ensuring the storage element reads as a designed feature rather than a utilitarian afterthought. Thin horizontal hardware accents across the panels introduce a refined detail that elevates the cabinetry well above a standard hotel fitout.
This atmospheric image reveals an upper sleeping zone — a feature that adds distinct spatial character to the room and speaks to its flexibility for different guest profiles. Deep grey-purple upholstery and restrained lighting create a deeply intimate composition. The photograph leans into the dramatic qualities of the space, using shadow and selective light to transform a functional element into a visually compelling subject.
The bathroom vanity area balances warmth and practicality. A warm-framed mirror and light wood cabinetry carry the material language of the main room into the bathroom, while a small blue tile accent above the countertop adds a quiet decorative note. A wicker basket introduces natural texture at eye level, softening the harder surfaces of stone and tile. The overall composition communicates cleanliness and a design sensibility that extends into even the most utilitarian areas of the space.
Captured in a near-monochromatic treatment, the shower area is defined by polished chrome fixtures, a ceiling-mounted showerhead, and integrated product dispensers. The reduced color palette shifts focus entirely onto form and texture — the curve of the fittings, the reflective quality of the metal, the geometry of the tile work. This editorial approach is increasingly common in hospitality photography, where restraint in post-processing can elevate an interior detail to the level of a product image.
The compact kitchenette is photographed in low ambient light to bring out the warm glow of the integrated LED strip beneath the upper cabinets. Dark cabinetry and marble-finish surfaces create a moody, premium atmosphere that communicates a hospitality standard well above the typical hotel room expectation. The composition frames the kitchen as a self-contained environment — a feature increasingly valued by guests who prize flexibility and independence during longer stays.
A second image of the kitchen, captured in brighter ambient conditions, reveals the full quality of the material specification. Bright white marble-effect surfaces, a microwave integrated into the cabinetry, and an uncluttered countertop communicate both functionality and aesthetic intent. Together with its low-light counterpart, this image completes a picture of the kitchen's qualities across different lighting conditions — a useful tool for any hospitality marketing campaign.
The final frame focuses on the sink area set against a full-height marble wall, with the built-in refrigerator visible at the edge of the frame. The quality of the stone-effect wall tile is clearly evident, and the composition reinforces how even the most utilitarian elements in this room are finished to the same standard as its more decorative areas. This consistency of material quality is a defining marker of a hotel that takes its design seriously at every scale.