10 of the Craziest Places to Sleep Around the World

Indulge your adventurous side by sleeping out in the rainforest among leopards, tigers and wild gibbons at the Gibbon Experience in Laos. Embark on a two- or three-day trek through the rainforest, tackling a thrilling course of ziplines and canopy walks during the day and sleeping out at night in the world's highest treehouses.
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Whether bedding down in a wacky hotel, camping at a dizzying altitude or indulging in an unforgettable back-to-nature experience, your accommodation choice can sometimes be one of the most memorable parts of your vacation. Looking to add a unique twist to your trip, impress a loved one with a spectacular hotel or just dare to be different? Here are 10 of the craziest places to sleep around the world.

1. In a Treehouse

The high-tech alternative to the garden treehouse you dreamed of having as a kid, the Treehotel in Sweden offers the perfect juxtaposition of contemporary architecture and back-to-nature simplicity. Choose from themed rooms like the UFO, Bird's Nest and Mirror Cube, each perched in the treetops four to six meters off the ground and offering uninterrupted views of the surrounding forest. Located around 40 minutes from Boden in Northern Sweden, you'll truly be surrounded by wilderness, making this the ultimate eco-getaway for nature enthusiasts.

2. Under the Ocean

Sure, you could snorkel the Great Barrier Reef, cage dive with sharks or swim with dolphins on your next vacation. Or you could go one step further and spend a night beneath the ocean. Book the Underwater Room at the Manta Resort in Zanzibar and spend a night on your own private floating island, reachable only by boat and featuring a glass-walled room beneath the ocean. Alternatively, the Atlantis The Palm hotel in Dubai has magnificent underwater suites, and the Conrad hotel in the Maldives offers a truly unique dining experience at its undersea restaurant.

3. Beneath the Northern Lights

Watch nature's dazzling lightshow without having to step outside by booking a room at the Kakslauttanen hotel in north Finland. Sleep beneath the stars in a glass igloo and watch the awe-inspiring Aurora Borealis dancing overhead, cozy up in a romantic log cabin or brave a night in an authentic snow igloo.

4. Among Wild Gibbons

Indulge your adventurous side by sleeping out in the rainforest among leopards, tigers and wild gibbons at the Gibbon Experience in Laos. Embark on a two- or three-day trek through the rainforest, tackling a thrilling course of ziplines and canopy walks during the day and sleeping out at night in the world's highest treehouses.

5. At 17,000 Feet


Camping at Mount Everest

It's the ultimate feat for climbers and mountaineers, but for most hikers, a visit to Mount Everest Base Camp is the nearest they get to scaling the mighty peak. Located at a dizzying 17,598 feet (5,364 meters), the South Base Camp in Nepal presents a hiking challenge in itself, but for those who can't handle the trek, the North Base Camp at 16,900 feet (5,150 meters) can be reached by road from Tibet.

6. 155 Meters Underground

Brave a night in the world's deepest hotel room at Sweden's Sala Silvermine, an incredible 155 meters underground. The hotel is actually a single suite located in a former silver mine and reached by elevator. It's cold, dark and eerily beautiful, with a maze of winding passages and cavities to explore, and assistance available above ground if needed.

7. In a Giraffe Manor

Home to a free-roaming herd of Rothschild's giraffes, Kenya's aptly named Giraffe Manor might just be the only hotel in the world where you can share your breakfast with the long-necked giants. Set on a 12-acre private plot, the grand mansion offers luxury rooms with huge windows at giraffe's-head height, so the friendly creatures can pop in to say hi to guests.

8. On a Plane

Forget wedging your travel pillow against the window or fighting for the armrest with your neighbor -- the coolest way to sleep on a plane is to check into Costa Rica's luxurious Hotel Costa Verde. Built within a refurbished 1965 Boeing 727, the two-bedroom suite lies at the heart of the rainforest, just minutes from the beach and the Manuel Antonio National Park. Alternatively, Jumbo Stay at Stockholm Arlanda Airport offers rooms in a converted jumbo jet, including a lavish suite housed in the cockpit.

9. In a Bubble

French company BubbleTree specializes in transparent bubble-inspired tents or "pods" which offer an eco-friendly way to get close to nature or sleep out beneath the stars. Can't shell out to buy your own? There are hotels, campsites and nature reserves all around the country that offer the chance to spend a night in a bubble, against a range of spectacular natural backdrops.

10. On Ice

Ice bars have become hugely popular in recent years, but there's still nothing quite like the experience of bedding down in a sub-zero hotel suite. The original ICEHOTEL is located in Jukkasjärvi in Northern Sweden and sculpted entirely from ice, re-built each winter season. You'll sleep in a magnificent ice suite at -5 degrees Celsius, complete with a bed, furniture and artworks sculpted from ice, but don't worry about catching a chill -- you'll be wrapped up warm in thermal sleeping bags and animal skin rugs. Alternatively, other ice hotels include the SnowCastle in Finland, the Kirkenes Snowhotel in Norway and Switzerland's Iglu-Dorf igloo hotels.

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19th January 1950: Trainee air hostess, Claire Swan, during a training session in a BOAC mock aircraft. (credit:Getty Images)
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A BOAC air stewardess collects equipment from the aircraft catering store before a flight from London Airport. (credit:Getty Images)
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Stewardess in Le Bourget (Seine-Saint-Denis), about 1945. (credit:Getty Images)
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Inside the cockpit of a de Havilland 'Comet Inside the cockpit of a de Havilland 'Comet', 16 May 1962. 'This is what it is like at the controls of a Comet 4 aeroplane. On the left is John Cunningham, chief test pilot for de Havilland. (credit:Getty Images)
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English model and actress Twiggy (left) with Christopher Gable (1940 - 1998) in the cockpit of a biplane laden with chorus girls in a scene from the fim version of Sandy Wilson's musical 'The Boy Friend', directed by Ken Russell, 1971. (credit:Getty Images)
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NBC News' Foreign Correspondent James Robinson in Ocotber 1958. (credit:Getty Images)
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Kukla the puppet, Burr Tillstrom (puppeteer), Ollie the puppet on a Northeast Airlines air mail plane. (credit:Getty Images)
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Preparing lunch on the Imperial Airways aeroplane 'Scylla', 19 November 1936. Photograph by James Jarche showing the galley on the Imperial Airways aeroplane 'Scylla'. Built by Shorts at Rochester, the 39-passenger 'Scylla' flew for the first time on 26 March 1934. Together with its sister aeroplane 'Syrinx' it was delivered to Croydon in June where it entered service almost immediately on the London to Paris route, setting new standards of comfort. Imperial Airways Limited was formed by the British government on 31 March 1924, after a government report recommended that Britain's interests in commercial air transport would be best served by merging the larger existing aircraft companies. The governments primary motivation for the merger was the need to carry mail throughout the empire. (credit:Getty Images)
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Waiter service aboard Imperial Airways 'Scylla' during its flight from London to Paris, circa 1935. (credit:Getty Images)
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Passengers enjoying a drink and a game of cards in the cabin of an Imperial Airways plane in 1936. (credit:Getty Images)
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Day cabin of an Imperial Airways flying boat, most likely of the Short Empire class, in August 1936. (credit:Getty Images)
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A sleeping berth on an Imperial Airways aircraft in March 1937. (credit:Getty Images)
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Baby travels by plane in New York In July 1945. (credit:Getty Images)
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A Douglas DC-3 airliner of Eastern Airlines ('The Great Silver Fleet') seen through the window of a viewing gallery at an airport, circa 1945. (credit:Getty Images)
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Air hostess Patricia Palley attends to passengers in the decorated cabin of a Pan-American air liner over the Atlantic on December 23, 1946. (credit:Getty Images)
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A projector being fitted into a United Airlines plane for the benefit of passengers who will be shown in-flight movies, circa 1950s. (Photo by General Photographic Agency/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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American magazine publisher Hugh Hefner and his companion, American model and actor Barbi Benton, relax on a bed while a stewardess attends to them in the private quarters of Hefner's DC-9 jetliner, 'The Big Bunny' en route to Heathrow, date unknown. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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Hugh Hefner, American editor, publisher and founder of Playboy magazine, and his girlfriend Barbi Benton are welcomed by 'Bunny Girls' from the London Playboy Club, on their arrival at Heathrow Airport aboard his private DC 9 jetliner, which bears the Playboy logo. One Bunny Girl is wearing a Union Jack costume. (Photo by Central Press/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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BOAC stewardesses peering through the port holes of the mock-up Jumbo Jet 747 at London's Heathrow Airport during training for the introduction of transatlantic Jumbo flights, date unknown. (credit:Getty Images)
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Passengers checking in at New York's East Side Airlines Terminal, circa 1955. (Photo by Orlando /Three Lions/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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Signs for New York's three major airports, International (Idlewild), Newark and La Guardia, at New York's East Side Airlines Terminal, which provides rapid transit between the airports and the city, circa 1955. (Photo by Orlando /Three Lions/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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Passengers checking in their baggage at New York's East Side Airlines Terminal, circa 1955. (Photo by Orlando /Three Lions/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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Passengers checking in their baggage at New York's East Side Airlines Terminal, circa 1955. (Photo by Orlando /Three Lions/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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New York's East Side Airlines Terminal which operates on a 24 hour basis to provide transportation to every flight leaving from the city's various airports, around 1955. (Photo by Orlando /Three Lions/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly coming off the plane from Los Angeles at Idlewild Airport, near New York, between 1950 and 1955. (Photo by Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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Some of the TWA (Trans World Airline) air hostesses selected to attend a course at the TWA headquarters in Kansas City, Missouri. They have been instructed in grooming, charm and poise, reading, conversational French and entertainment, and received vital inoculations, date unknown. (Photo by Bert Garai/Keystone Features/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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A TWA pilot and stewardess greets the passengers coming off the plane, ca.1950s, Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Marsh Photographers/Cincinnati Museum Center/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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A portable altar used to deliver mass to passengers and crew who may have missed mass at church at Idlewild Airport, date unknown. (Photo by Orlando /Three Lions/Getty Images)
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Lufthansa flight attendants Jutta Kaemmerer (seated left) and Mascha Junge being served by Pan Am's Jerry Rand and Gertrude Vasel at the Pan American World Airways stewardess school in Long Island circa 1960. (Photo by Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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Flight attendant serving coffee to passengers seated in a lounge aboard a Braniff International airplane, late 1960s. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
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American singer Tony Bennett serenades TWA air hostess Gabriele Lehman prior to flying from New York to London on April 14, 1961. (Photo by Archive Photos/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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Heathrow Airport in London, July 1967. (Photo by Tim Graham/Fox Photos/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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An Esso truck refuelling a Pan-American aircraft, July 1967. (Photo by Tim Graham/Fox Photos/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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Faye Dunaway posing on the boarding dock of a Pan-American plane before departing for London for a vacation, John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York City in November 1967. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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The interior design of the new L-1011 jetliner passenger cabin with overhead luggage compartments, August 1968. (Photo by Alan Band/Fox Photos/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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Stewardesses on Southwest Airlines in Texas stand in front of planes belonging to the airline. (Photo by Alan Band/Keystone/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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Stewardesses working for Southwest Airlines of Texas must be able to wear hot pants and kinky leather boots or they don't get the job. In accordance with the airline's motto, 'sex sells seats' interviewees are selected on the strength of their legs and their face. Drinks served during flights have names such as 'Passion Punch' and 'Love Potion'. Photo circa 1972. (Photo by Alan Band/Keystone/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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Muslim passengers waiting for flights at Terminal 3, Heathrow Airport, London, facing Mecca for prayers, March 1977 (Photo by Graham Morris/Evening Standard/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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A line-up of some of the air stewardesses who attend to passengers on board the supersonic jet the 'Concorde', each one from a different airline. They are standing in front of a scale model of the aircraft. (Photo by Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
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A Pan American (Pan Am) airhostess serving champagne in the first class cabin of a Boeing 747 jumbo jet, date unknown. (Photo by Tim Graham/Getty Images)
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A steward and stewardess serving first-class passengers with drinks and refreshments on board a Boeing 747, date unknown. (Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)
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Passengers relaxing on the sleeper seats in the new Comet 4 during a demonstration flight at Hatfield. The plane, which is fitted out in accordance with an interior decor scheme designed for BOAC aircraft by Gaby Schreiber, flew from New York to London in under six and a half hours, date unknown. (Photo by Douglas Miller/Keystone/Getty Images)
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British European Airways latest commercial air liner is the Vickers V 700 Viscount, seen here at Northolt airport, date unknown. (Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)
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A passenger in the ladies' powder room on board the world's first jet airliner service. The Comet flight is bound for South Africa; date unknown. (Photo by PNA Rota/Getty Images)
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Stewards serving passengers on board an aeroplane, date unknown. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

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