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Located in the Dutch shipping town of Harlingen, this one-room hotel used to be a crane by the harbor.
Harlingen Harbor Crane
Guests can enjoy the whole crane to themselves. A cozy cabin, converted from the former machine room, is the sole guest room in the hotel.
Harlingen Harbor Crane
The cabin features all the mod-cons travelers can expect from boutique hotels. There's also a control that guests can use to turn the room 360 degrees.
Harlingen Harbor Crane
There is a small outdoor deck where guests can enjoy the views, 160 feet up in the air.
Harlingen Harbor Crane
The crane transported timber for 30 years before being transformed into a unique hotel in the 2000s.
MICHAL CIZEK/AFP/Getty Images
Critics say that the Zizkov Television Tower in Prague sticks out like a sore thumb. To avoid seeing it, plus enjoy great views afforded from the tower, book into the One Room Hotel inside the tower.
Peter von Reichenberg
To avoid seeing it, plus enjoy great views afforded from the tower, book into the One Room Hotel inside the tower.
Peter von Reichenberg
Located 73 meters (240 feet) above ground, the One Room Hotel is the only accommodation inside the tower, which also has two restaurants and an observation deck.
Verbeke Foundation
True to its name -- "house of anus" -- this hotel is an art installation of a human anus.
Verbeke Foundation
Located halfway between Antwerp and Ghent, it is the brainchild of artist Joep van Lieshout. Inside there's an all-white color palette.
Jon Norstrøm
This tiny dwelling consists of one single hotel room at the top, while the cafe on ground level only accommodates five.
Jon Norstrøm
The room has a double bed and a bathroom, and is so small that the owners advise against families booking a stay.
Michaela Rehle/REUTERS
The Eh'haeusl ("Marriage House") was built in 1782. The story goes that a businessman constructed a wall and a roof in space between two houses measuring 2.5 meters (8 feet) wide. He sold the home to couples looking to wed, who needed to bypass a law at the time that said only homeowners were allowed to marry.
Petr David Josek/AP
According to local lore in the town of Amberg, where the house is located, couples who stay at the tiny hotel will have a happy marriage.
CNN  — 

Imagine having a hotel all to yourself, apart from the person you’re sharing a room with. At these quirky one-room properties, you can do just that.

But these aren’t your average small-scale guest houses. From a crane by the ocean and an anus to a communist-era TV tower, CNN rounds up the quirkiest one-room hotels where you can stay in 2019.

Harlingen Harbor Crane

Harlingen Harbor Crane

What happens to cranes that are no longer in use? In the case of the Harlingen Harbor Crane, located in the shipping town of Harlingen in the Netherlands, it was remodeled into a one-room hotel.

From 1967 to 1996, the crane unloaded timber from Russia and Scandinavia. In 2001, the crane was sold and it took the new owners two years to turn the former machine room into a cozy space.

Guests access the room, which sits at 49 meters (160 feet) in the sky, via an elevator made from the original external ladders of the crane. With floor-to-ceiling windows, the space can be rotated 360 degrees – this is operated via a control panel inside the room. There’s also a small outdoor deck.

One feature that will please those who seek true solitude during their stay? Breakfast is delivered up to the room via a special elevator – no human interaction necessarily.

Dokkade 5 8862, NZ Harlingen, The Netherlands; +31 517 414 410

One Room Hotel

Peter von Reichenberg

Dominating the skyline the Czech capital city of Prague, the communist-era Žižkov Television Tower is often ranked among the world’s ugliest buildings. But for travelers looking for the best views of Prague without the tower in the way, the One Room Hotel within it should be high on your list.

Perched at 66 meters, the One Room Hotel features east-facing windows, offering unmatched views of the city. The only accommodation inside the tower, One Room Hotel also offers its guests a limousine and a driver. The tower also houses an observation deck and two restaurants.

Mahlerovy sady 2699/1, Prague 3-Žižkov; +420 210 320 081

Hotel CasAnus

Verbeke Foundation

When it comes to hotel exteriors, it doesn’t get any funkier than this.

Located halfway between Antwerp and Ghent in Belgium, Hotel CasAnus – or “Anus House Hotel” – is an art installation in the shape of … a colon.

CasAnus is the brainchild of Dutch artist Joep van Lieshout, who created a series of installations between 2005 and 2008 depicting human organs.

The exteriors of the structure are painted dark red, save for a depiction of an anus which is in yellow. Inside, the accommodation is painted a serene white.

The hotel is managed by Verbeke Foundation, a modern art museum that also offers other unique one-room concepts housed inside life-sized art installations.

9190 Stekene, Belgium; +32 378 922 07

Central Hotel

Formerly a shoemaker’s studio, the Central Hotel in Denmark consists of a 12-square-meter (130 square feet) room, and sit above a five-seater cafe.

The hotel’s website warns travelers that the room is not for families since it’s impossible to add an extra bed – but that’s not the only thing unusual about it.

To add to the cozy vibe, the majority of the furniture – the pull-out table, mini-bar and wardrobe – is built-in.

Tullinsgade 1, 1618 København, Denmark; +45 332 100 95

Eh’häusl

Michaela Rehle/REUTERS

The Eh’häusl (“Marriage House”) Hotel is located in Amberg, Germany. It has a floor space of 53 square meters (570 square feet) and measures just 2.4 meters (8 feet) wide.

The house dates back to 1728. The story goes that, back then, a law required couples to be homeowners before they could get married. In order to help lovebirds bypass this law, a businessman built a house in a narrow space between two existing properties. Couples could buy the home as a temporary measure, then sell it to the next couple once they were wed.

Seminargasse 8, 92224 Amberg, Germany; +49 962 137 854