For upwards of almost £120 a night, guests at a Swiss hotel might expect to catch a glimpse of the towering Alps or overlook one of the country's famous lakes.
But visitors to Hotel La Claustra get a room without a view.
The 17-room hotel is buried in the Gotthard mountain range and, with cavernous walls and minimalist interior, offers the chance to spend a few nights in an ex-army bunker.
Guests arrive to the resort's bleak brick entrance, decorated only with a Swiss flag. Inside, a restaurant, windowless rooms and lounge are all hacked from the bare, surrounding rock.
La Claustra is part of a wider trend in Switzerland for recycling the plentiful decommissioned bunkers first carved out to defend the famously neutral country from foreign invasion.
From data centres to museums, from mushroom farms to cheese factories, businesses have been refashioning the former strongholds.
Frank Harzheim, managing director at Deltalis data centre - located in a bunker which once housed up to 1,500 soldiers - said: 'Along with our processors, our key selling points are the Swiss brand and the physical safety of this bunker.'
During World War Two, Switzerland had a network of around 8,000 bunkers and military shelters. Faced with high maintenance costs and a cooling threat of invasion, the Swiss army handed a property firm the task of trimming that number down in the mid-1990s.
The vast majority have now been bought, sealed off, or set aside for historical preservation and are dotted around Switzerland, often still disguised as barns, houses and medieval castles.
Snowbound: A camouflaged 10.5cm gun at the former Swiss artillery fort Furggels near the village of St. Magrethenberg, Switzerland. The fort was in military use from 1946 to 1998 and is now open to the public as a museum
Lease of life: With the threat of foreign invasion a thing of the past, thousands of military bunkers and fortresses in Switzerland have been put to commercial use, from hotels to data centres, museums to cheese factories
Check-in: Cyclists ride past the Hotel La Claustra, which is based in a former Swiss army bunker on the St Gotthard mountain pass. The 17-room hotel is buried in the mountain range and, with cavernous walls and minimalist interior, offers the chance to spend a few nights in an ex-army bunker
Room without a view: This is a shot of the guest restaurant inside the Hotel La Claustra, where rooms cost more than £120 a night
Welcoming? Guests arrive to the resort's bleak brick entrance, decorated only with a Swiss flag. Inside, a restaurant, windowless rooms and lounge are all hacked from the bare, surrounding rock
Can you see it? The muzzle of a 15cm gun is seen at the former Sasso da Pigna fortress at the St Gotthard mountain pass. Located at 6,909ft, it is now a museum in one of the most spell-binding spots on the planet
Warning: A sign reads 'Military site - Entering and photography forbidden' at the Sasso da Pigna fortress. The bunker was built from 1941 to 1945 and remained in military use until 1999
Get away from it all: A machine-gun bunker, part of a former Swiss artillery fortress called Fuchsegg, is camouflaged as a stable beside the Furka mountain-pass road near the village of Realp, in the central Swiss Alps. It was built in 1943 and was still an active military facility 23 years ago
A barn with a view: The Urserental valley lies before a camouflaged canon at Fuchsegg. The Swiss army has sold most of their decommissioned strongholds, but about a thousand unused bunkers remain, many still disguised
Homely: A former infantry bunker is camouflaged as a medieval house in the town of Duggingen. During World War Two, Switzerland had a network of around 8,000 bunkers and military shelters
In disguise: Although it may look like a cosy Swiss cottage, this is in fact a decommision bunker. Its stone walls are covered in a wooden facade that allows it to blend into its surrounding with ease
Set for change: Grey-walled bunkers at the artillery fortress in Reuenthal are seen standing on the top of a hill. Once used to defend the country, they are now discovering new leases of life
Hard to spot: A bunker at the Heldsberg fortress near the town of St. Margareten, Switzerland. Located on the Swiss-Austrian border near the River Rhine and Lake Constance, the structure was built in 1938 and remained in military use until 1992
Safe and secure: Barbed wire protects a bunker at Reuenthal. Sitting on the Swiss-German border, the site was active until 1988
Relic from the war: While many of the 70-year-old bunkers have been developed into something more modern, this one in Reuenthal pays homage to the past
Intimidating: The muzzle of a 15cm gun shoots out from the front of the former artillery bunker at Fort Furggels of the Swiss Army near the village of St. Magrethenberg
Cosy: Although they may be impossible to spot, the town of Faulensee was home to several war-time bunkers - and still is. They are just hidden, disguised as barns and outhouses
Not the safest place to graze: Cows stand in a meadow in front of the sizeable defence canon at one of the former artillery forts in Faulensee
Going underground: A tunnel connects all of the towns bunkers. This one is found underneath the artillery fort, and is now open to the public as part of a museum
Ready for action: The fort's 10.5cm gun - although decommissioned - remains as a war-time exhibit in the popular visitor museum
Swiss property: Faced with high maintenance costs and a cooling threat of invasion, the Swiss army handed a property firm the task of trimming their number of unused bunkers down in the mid-1990s
Incoming, incoming: The museum in Faulensee has exact recreations of how the bunker would have looked at the height of the Second World War
Novel use: Raclette cheeses made by Swiss cheesemaker Seiler Kaeserei AG mature in storage racks in what was once an ammunition bunker in Giswil
Plenty of storage space: Alex Lussi, of mushroom producer Gotthard-Pilze, picks a shiitake mushroom in one of his firm's bunkers near the town of Erstfeld. In eleven former bunkers, Gotthard-Pilze produces some 24 tons of shiitake mushrooms per year
Learning experience: A former control room is seen at a decommissioned Swiss military command bunker near Attinghausen, Switzerland
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