Lego has just opened its first hotel at its theme park in California and, in celebration of this, Metro has decided to look at the top 10 weirdest hotels around the world.
10. Mirrorcube hotel
If you fancy staying in a cube like structure that is suspended above the trees in Harads, Sweden, then you should go to the Mirrorcube.
9. Underwater hotel
If you prefer something a bit different you can go below sea by booking a room at the Underwater hotel in Florida.
8. Ice hotel
Anyone that loves freezing temperatures can visit the Ice hotel in Jukkasjärvi, Sweden. Just make sure it doesn't melt while you're staying there.
An Indonesian hotel was named after Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard (Picture: Facebook)
7. Steven Gerrard hotel
You wouldn't be a true Liverpool fan unless you visited a guesthouse named after the Liverpool captain in Indonesia.
6. ‘World's worst hotel'
This Amsterdam inn will cost you just £18-a-night – but it comes with a disclaimer: ‘Those wishing to stay do so at their own risk and will not hold the hotel liable for food poisoning, mental breakdowns, terminal illness, lost limbs, radiation poisoning, certain diseases associated with the 18th century, plague, etc.'
5. Sandcastle hotel
Don't be surprised if you wake up wet or with sand down your back if you stay at a hotel in Weymouth, UK that is built entirely of sand.
Sugar coated: A popcorn-filled bath is just one of the tasty treats on offer at the cake hotel (Picture: Tate & Lyle)
4. Cake hotel
If you like cake you could stay at this establishment made entirely of the treat in Soho, London.
3. Legoland hotel
The aforementioned Legoland hotel in California boasts three million Lego pieces that were used to make models dotted around the building.
2. Ikea hotel
If you feel tired after shopping in Stockholm, Ikea have conveniently built a guesthouse in a shopping centre where you can rest your head.
1. Karostas Cietums
The former military prison in Liepāja, Latvia is a strange location for a hotel but nevertheless, someone has chosen to build one there.
Source: Metro