Some hotels have a heritage from the golden age of steam railways and ocean liners, before the Second World War, in the 19th or early 20th centuries. These hotels were where the rich and the famous of the day would stay. They have an appeal all their own: old fashioned fittings, the lack of the latest amenities, and a certain graceful agedness. They are often in superb locations, either smack in the middle of cities – very often being next to or part of a major railway station, as they were often constructed to house railway travelers – or close to major outdoor attractions. Some were also located next to sea ports to serve steamship passengers. They are likely to neighbor a legacy department store or a legacy food market from the same era. For this article, we also include numerous mid-20th century hotels that are iconic and historically significant.
New York City, London, Paris and the Los Angeles area are known for having a particularly high concentration of such hotels.
Understand
edit“ | I stayed in a really old hotel last night. They sent me a wake-up letter. | ” |
—Steven Wright |
Even today such places generally offer fine accommodation and are usually not cheap, though more modern high-end places may be even more luxurious and are often more expensive.
- The Leading Hotels of the World. This is an association, primarily for marketing, with over 400 member hotels in many countries. It includes many of the grand old hotels, but also many newer luxury hotels.
A traveller with piles of money might consider a round the world flight, broken up with stays in many of these hotels. Travelling around the world overland, on routes such as the one taken in Around the World in Eighty Days, would give a more authentic experience of pre-flight travel.
While the grand old hotels are usually privately owned, they sometimes accommodate visiting heads of state and other dignitaries.
Do
editYou need not stay in such hotels to enjoy some of their services. Many have fine dining, live music and nightlife, as they had in the days of yore, and gambling if local law allows. A visitor to Singapore, for example, might go to Raffles just for a Singapore Sling at the Long Bar where it was invented, and where Rudyard Kipling and Noel Coward once drank, and check out the Billiard Room where Singapore's last tiger was shot.
Sleep
editGrand old hotels tend to have a 4- or 5-star rating. Due to their legacy and premium location, they can cost more than newer hotels with similar amenities.
Cope
editAs the buildings are old, they might be less accessible for travellers with disabilities. In most cases, the staff will be helpful for guests who need assistance.
Africa
editDemocratic Republic of Congo
edit- 1 Hotel Memling (Kinshasa). colonial luxury hotel inaugurated in 1937
Egypt
edit- 2 Cecil Hotel (Alexandria).
- 3 Marriott Hotel (Cairo). originally the "Al Gezira Palace" built to house Napoleon's wife, Empress Eugenie of France
- 4 Mena House Oberoi (Giza).
- 5 Winter Palace (Sofitel Winter Palace) (Luxor). The discovery of Tutankhamen's tomb was first announced on their bulletin board.
- 6 Cataract Hotel (Sofitel Legend Old Cataract Aswan) (Aswan).
Kenya
editMorocco
editMozambique
edit- 9 Polana Hotel (Maputo).
Namibia
edit- 10 Swakopmund Hotel (Swakopmund, Namibia).
South Africa
editTanzania
editTunisia
editZimbabwe
editAsia
editEast Asia
edit- 1 The Peninsula (Hong Kong, China). Kowloon side, by the ferry dock and right at the foot of Nathan Road, a major tourist street. Famous for serving traditional English afternoon tea in Victorian splendor.
- 2 Westin Chosun (Seoul, South Korea).
- 3 The Grand Hotel (Taipei, Taiwan). Built in the early 1950s, mainly so that Chiang Kai Shek's government would have a suitable place to accommodate visiting dignitaries.
China
edit- 4 Beijing Hotel (Beijing, China).
- Shanghai has several fine hotels built in the Art Deco style in the city's glory days, the 1840s to the 1930s:
- 5 The Peace Hotel (Shanghai, China). Their jazz band became famous in the 1930s and is still an attraction in the 2020s. The players have of course changed, the style not so much.
- 6 Park Hotel (Shanghai, China).
- 7 The Yangtze Hotel (Shanghai, China).
- 8 Astor Hotel (Tianjin, China).
- 9 Centre Hotel (Nanjing, China).
- 10 Modern Hotel (Harbin, China).
Japan
editThe following three are regarded as the Three Great Hotels (御三家 gosanke) of Tokyo, in reference to the three main branches of the ruling Tokugawa family of the Edo Period:
- 11 The Imperial Hotel (Tokyo, Japan). The oldest of the three, tracing its history to 1890 during the Meiji era, though the current building is a modern one completed in 1970. The entrance courtyard and the main lobby of the 1923 Frank Lloyd Wright-designed building was moved to the Meiji-Mura Museum in Nagoya, where it can be viewed today.
- 12 Hotel Okura (Tokyo, Japan). Opened in 1962 and a symbol of Japan's Postwar economic boom, the original building was demolished in 2015, and the current building completed in 2019, though its interior still very much preserves the feel of the original. The Okura Museum of Art, the first private museum in Japan in a building dating back to 1927, is located on its grounds.
- 13 Hotel New Otani (Tokyo, Japan). Completed in 1964, just in time for the Tokyo Olympics, it was the tallest building in Tokyo at that time. The New Otani was built on the grounds of an Imperial prince's residence and preserves its classical Japanese gardens, which date back to the 1600s. The only one of the three to still keep its original building.
There are some other grand old hotels to be found:
- 14 Tokyo Station Hotel (Tokyo, Japan). A comparative upstart, the Tokyo Station Hotel dates back to 1915, but was only reopened as a hotel in 2012.
- 15 Hotel New Grand (Yokohama, Japan).
- 16 Nara Hotel (Nara, Japan).
- 17 Nikko Kanaya Hotel (Nikko, Japan). The oldest surviving Western-style hotel in Japan, having opened in 1873.
- 18 Fujiya Hotel (Hakone, Japan).
Middle East
editEgypt is listed under Africa above.
- 19 Hotel Palmyra (Baalbek, Lebanon).
- 20 American Colony Hotel (Jerusalem, Israel).
- 21 King David Hotel (Jerusalem, Israel).
- 22 The Drisco (Tel Aviv, Israel). — originally called the Jerusalem Hotel when it first opened in 1866. Closed down in 1940 and sat forlorn and abandoned for decades before being painstakingly restored and reopened under its current name in 2018
South Asia
editIndia
edit- 23 Taj West End (Bangalore, Karnataka).
- 24 Taj Connemara (Chennai (Madras), Tamil Nadu).
- 25 The Great Eastern Hotel (Kolkata, West Bengal). built in 1841 and historically known as 'the jewel of the east'.
- 26 The Grand Hotel (Kolkata, West Bengal).
- 27 The Imperial Hotel (Delhi).
- 28 Maidens Hotel (Delhi).
- 29 The Taj Mahal Palace (Mumbai, Maharashtra).
- 30 The Cecil (Shimla, Himachal Pradesh).
Pakistan
edit- 31 Faletti's Hotel (Lahore, Punjab). built in late 18th century by an Italian, and now renovated.
Sri Lanka
editSoutheast Asia
editSeveral of Southeast Asia's grand old hotels can be credited to a single family, the remarkable Sarkies brothers from Armenia, who founded all of the following icons:
- 34 Eastern and Oriental (George Town, Penang, Malaysia). The oldest of the Sarkies hotels, it has played host to many famous guests over the years like Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Rita Hayworth, Rudyard Kipling and Sun Yat-sen.
- 35 Raffles (Singapore). With the bar where the Singapore sling was invented.
- 36 Hotel Majapahit (Surabaya, Indonesia).
- 37 Strand Hotel (Yangon (Rangoon) , Myanmar (Burma)).
Of course, there are some other very classy options as well:
- 38 Savoy Homann (Bandung, Indonesia). The Homann has been here since 1871, but the current building is a masterpiece of Art Deco from 1939. The 1955 Asian-African Conference brought an unlikely assemblage of world leaders to this (at the time) small town, meaning you might stay in a room once occupied by the likes of Ho Chi Minh, Jawaharlal Nehru, Zhou Enlai, Gamal Abdul Nasser or Tito.
- 39 The Oriental (Bangkok, Thailand).
- 40 The Metropole (Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi) (Hanoi, Vietnam).
- 41 Continental Hotel (Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam). Cheap for this class of hotel.
- 42 Majestic Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam).
- 43 Morin Hotel (Hue, Vietnam).
- 44 Centara Grand Beach (Hua Hin, Thailand).
- 45 Hotel Indonesia (Jakarta, Indonesia).
- 46 Hotel Majestic (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia).
- 47 The Manila Hotel (Manila, Philippines).
- 48 Le Royal (Raffles Le Royal) (Phnom Penh, Cambodia).
- 49 Grand Hotel d'Angkor (Siem Reap (Angkor Wat), Cambodia).
- 50 Goodwood Park Hotel (Singapore).
- 51 Settha Palace Hotel (Vientiane, Laos).
Europe
editNorthern Europe
editNordic countries
edit- 1 Hotel D'Angleterre (Copenhagen, Denmark).
- 2 Dalen Hotel (Dalen, Norway). Once a popular locale for European royalty, this is one of the largest wooden buildings in Norway and one of the best preserved hotels from the 1800s.
- 3 Hôtel Eggers (Gothenburg, Sweden). This location at the central station has hosted a hotel since 1861, and has had its current name and appearance since 1894.
- 4 Haparanda Stadshotell (Haparanda, Sweden). A hotspot during World War I, right at the border between the Russian Empire and Sweden. Spies, war profiteers and even Lenin himself stayed here.
- 5 Hotel Knaust (Sundsvall, Sweden). Opened in 1891 following the 1888 fire that destroyed most of the city. Famous for its fan-shaped marble staircase.
- 6 Kviknes Hotel (Balestrand, Norway).
- 7 Hotel Kämp (Helsinki, Finland).
- 8 Grand Hotel Oslo (Oslo, Norway).
- 9 Hotel Saltsjöbaden (Saltsjöbaden, Sweden). Famous for the 1938 "Saltsjöbaden agreement" (Saltsjöbadsavtalet) which has been the framework for the Swedish labour market for generations to come; see history of organized labor.
- 10 Grand Hôtel (Stockholm, Sweden). The preferred accommodation for state visits and Nobel laureates.
- 11 Hotel Tammer (Tampere, Finland). One of Finland's oldest operating hotels, built in 1929. Part of the national heritage area of the city centre.
Baltic countries
edit- 12 Grand Hotel Viljandi (Viljandi, Estonia).
- 13 Grand Palace Hotel (Riga, Latvia).
Western Europe
edit- 14 Hotel Metropole (Brussels, Belgium).
- 15 Shelbourne Hotel (Dublin, Ireland).
- 16 Hôtel Ritz (Paris, France).
- 17 Hôtel de Crillon (Paris, France).
- 18 Le Grand Hôtel (Intercontinental Paris Le Grand) (Paris, France).
- 19 Hôtel Lutetia (Paris, France).
- 20 Hôtel Negresco (Nice, France).
- 21 Amstel Hotel (Amsterdam, Netherlands).
- 22 Grand Hotel Krasnapolsky (Amsterdam, Netherlands). As central as anything could be, right on Dam Square.
- 23 Kurhaus (Scheveningen, The Hague, Netherlands).
- 24 Hotel des Indes (The Hague, Netherlands).
- 25 Claridge's (London, England).
- 26 Charing Cross Station Hotel (The Clermont at Charing Cross) (London, England). One of London's grand railway station hotels, opened in 1865.
- 27 Savoy Hotel (London, England).
- 28 The Ritz (London, England). Perhaps the most famous place in the world for high tea. Reservations are required many months in advance.
- 29 The Langham (London, England).
- 30 St. Pancras Renaissance Hotel (Midland Grand Hotel) (London, England). Located within the station building of St. Pancras railway station, it was originally opened in 1873 as the Midland Grand Hotel before closing in 1935. The former hotel space was then used as railway offices until 2004, when part of it was converted back into a hotel, and another part into luxury apartments.
- 31 Hyde Park Hotel (Mandarin Oriental Hyde Park London) (London, England).
- 32 Great Eastern Hotel (Andaz London Liverpool Street) (London, England). One of London's grand railway station hotels, opened in 1884 to serve passengers of the adjacent Liverpool Street station.
- 33 Great Northern Hotel (London, England). The oldest of London's railway hotels, opened in 1854 to serve passengers of the adjacent King's Cross station. It was named after the Great Northern Railway, the railway company that built King's Cross station.
- 34 Great Western Royal Hotel (Hilton London Paddington) (London, England). One of London's grand railway station hotels, part of the London Paddington station building, opened in 1854.
- 35 Hotel Great Central (The Landmark London) (London, England). One of London's grand railway station hotels, opened in 1899 to serve passengers of the adjacent Paddington station.
- 36 The Midland (Manchester, England).
- 37 The Randolph (Oxford, England).
- 38 Royal Station Hotel (The Principal York) (York, England). Opened in 1878 to serve passengers of the adjacent York station.
- 39 The Balmoral (Edinburgh, Scotland).
- 40 The Caledonian Hotel (Waldorf Astoria Edinburgh - The Caledonian) (Edinburgh, Scotland). Originally part of the Edinburgh Princes Street railway station, only the hotel remains today, while the railway station itself was closed in 1965.
- 41 Grand Central Hotel (Glasgow, Scotland). Opened in 1883 to serve railway passengers, and part of the Glasgow Central railway station building.
- 42 Royal Hotel (Cardiff, Wales). The oldest of Cardiff's grand hotels, opened in 1866.
Central Europe
edit- 43 Hotel Imperial (Vienna, Austria).
- 44 Hotel Sacher (Vienna, Austria).
- 45 Grandhotel Pupp (Karlovy Vary, Czech Republic).
- 46 Hotel Imperial (Karlovy Vary, Czech Republic).
- 47 Hotel Paris (Prague, Czech Republic).
- 48 Art Nouveau Palace Hotel (Prague, Czech Republic).
- 49 Grand Hotel Bohemia (Prague, Czech Republic).
- 50 Hotel International (Prague, Czech Republic). The largest Stalinist building in Prague, inspired by the Seven Sisters of Moscow.
- 51 Hotel Adlon (Berlin, Germany).
- 52 Frankfurter Hof (Frankfurt, Germany).
- 53 Hotel Atlantic (Hotel Atlantic Kempinski) (Hamburg, Germany).
- 54 Grand Hotel Heiligendamm (Heiligendamm, Germany).
- 55 Bayerischer Hof (Munich, Germany).
- 56 Hotel Gellért (Budapest, Hungary).
- 57 Corinthia Hotel (Grand Hotel Royal) (Budapest, Hungary).
- 58 Grand Hotel (Krakow, Poland).
- 59 Hotel Europejski (Warsaw, Poland).
- 60 Hotel Monopol (Wroclaw, Poland).
- 61 Beau Rivage (Geneva, Switzerland).
- 62 Hotel Métropole (Geneva, Switzerland).
- 63 Grand Hotel National (Lucerne, Switzerland).
- 64 Badrutt's Palace Hotel (St. Moritz, Switzerland).
- 65 The Dolder Grand (Zurich, Switzerland).
- 66 Hotel Widder (Zurich, Switzerland).
- 67 Hotel Moskva (Belgrade, Serbia). Good prices for this class of hotel.
Southern Europe
edit- 68 Hotel Grande Bretagne (Athens, Greece).
- 69 Royal Victoria Hotel (Pisa, Italy).
- 70 Hôtel de Paris (Monaco).
- 71 Hotel Phoenicia (Valletta, Malta).
- 72 Reid's Palace (Funchal, Portugal). Has a Michelin starred restaurant.
- 73 Pestana Palace Hotel (Lisbon, Portugal).
- 74 Hotel Avenida Palace (Lisbon, Portugal).
- 75 El Palace (Barcelona, Spain).
- 76 Hotel Ritz (Madrid, Spain).
- 77 The Westin Palace (Madrid, Spain).
- 78 Hotel Alfonso XIII (Seville, Spain).
- 79 Pera Palace (Istanbul, Turkey). Built in 1892 for the purpose of hosting the passengers of the Orient Express service.
- 80 Splendid Palace (Büyükada (Princes' Islands), Turkey).
Eastern Europe
edit- 81 Grand Hotel Yerevan (Yerevan, Armenia). Opened in 1926 as the premier state-owned hotel of the former Soviet Armenia.
- 82 Hotel National (Moscow, Russia).
- 83 Hotel Savoy (Moscow, Russia).
- 84 Hotel Ukraina (Moscow, Russia). This was the world's tallest hotel from its opening in 1957 until 1976, and is still Europe's tallest in 2022. One of the "Seven Sisters", a group of seven Stalinist skyscrapers in Moscow.
- 85 Hotel Leningradskaya (Moscow, Russia). Completed in 1954, and one of the "Seven Sisters", a group of seven Stalinist skyscrapers in Moscow.
- 86 Hotel Sovietsky (Moscow, Russia). Moscow's premier hotel during Soviet times, and today regarded as one of the finest surviving examples of Stalinist architecture.
- 87 Hotel Moskva (Moscow, Russia). Originally built in a Stalinist architectural style in 1935, it was demolished in 2004 and rebuilt in 2014, albeit with the facade being architecturally faithful to the original.
- 88 Hotel Metropol (Moscow, Russia).
- 89 Grand Hotel Europe (Saint Petersburg, Russia).
- 90 Hotel Astoria (Saint Petersburg, Russia).
- 91 Hotel d'Angleterre (Saint Petersburg, Russia).
- 92 Hotel George (Lviv, Ukraine).
- 93 Bristol Hotel (Odesa, Ukraine).
North America
editCanada
editThe grand old hotels in Canada, also referred to as railway hotels, have a unique place in Canadian history. Most of them were built during the first quarter of the 20th century by the Canadian Pacific Railway or Grand Trunk Railway to provide elegant accommodation while viewing the natural beauty along the rail line. Canadian Pacific, which purchased the former Grand Trunk (Canadian National) hotels in 1988, spun off all non-rail subsidiaries (including Fairmont, its hotel group) in 2001.
These hotels are popular with tourists and locals alike and though overnight stays are expensive; they represent a fine piece of Canadiana worth visiting even if you only have time for a walk through the lobby. Three – Banff, Lake Louise and Jasper- are major tourist resorts in their own right, located amid stunning Rocky Mountain scenery.
Listed approximately east-to-west, they are:
- 1 Lord Nelson Hotel (Halifax, Nova Scotia).
- 2 Hotel Nova Scotian (Halifax, Nova Scotia). Connected by walkways to both the Halifax railway station and Pier 21, the main dock for transatlantic ocean liners.
- 3 The Pines (Digby, Nova Scotia). Popular as a golf resort.
- 4 The Algonquin Resort (Saint Andrews, New Brunswick). An icon of the province with its Tudor-style architecture.
- 5 Le Manoir Richelieu (La Malbaie, Quebec).
- 6 Le Château Frontenac (Quebec City, Quebec). Tallest structure in "Vieux-Québec" (the old city) and the city's most easily-recognised landmark; arguably the most photographed hotel in the world.
- 7 Queen Elizabeth Hotel (Montreal, Quebec).
- 8 Le Château Montebello (Montebello, Quebec). Claims to be "the world’s largest log cabin". Close to Ottawa, often used for federal or even international conferences.
- 9 The Château Laurier (Ottawa, Ontario). One of Canada's Prime Ministers, R.B. Bennett, lived in this hotel, a block from Parliament, rather than in the mansion most PMs occupy. Well-known portrait photographer Yousuf Karsh also lived here; some of his photographs decorate the lobby.
- 10 The Royal York (Toronto, Ontario). Right across the street from Union Station, and connected by a tunnel. That station has trains for the Toronto subway, for GO (Government of Ontario) trains to suburbs and nearby towns, and for long-distance rail. The cross-country train The Canadian has its eastern terminus there. Also has free shuttle bus service to Toronto Island airport.
- 11 Fort Garry Hotel (Winnipeg, Manitoba).
- 12 Hotel Saskatchewan (Regina, Saskatchewan).
- 13 The Bessborough Hotel (Delta Bessborough) (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan).
- 14 The Hotel MacDonald (Edmonton, Alberta).
- 15 The Palliser Hotel (Calgary, Alberta).
- 16 Banff Springs Hotel (Banff Springs Hotel National Historic Site) (Banff, Alberta).
- 17 Chateau Lake Louise (Lake Louise, Alberta). In Banff National Park, on a beautiful glacier lake. Always expensive, painfully so in the summer high season.
- 18 Jasper Park Lodge (Jasper, Alberta).
- 19 The Hotel Vancouver (Vancouver, British Columbia).
- 20 The Empress Hotel (Victoria, British Columbia).
Of course, there are some other very classy options as well:
- 21 Ritz-Carlton Montreal (Montreal, Quebec).
- 22 Lord Elgin Hotel (Ottawa, Ontario).
Costa Rica
edit- 23 The Gran Hotel Costa Rica (San José). 20th-century colonial-style landmark
- 24 Hotel Grano de Oro (San José). Grand old hotel of Victorian design.
Cuba
edit- 25 Hotel Nacional de Cuba (Havana). A grand old lady filled with memories of times past
Haiti
editMexico
edit- 27 Hacienda Chichen (Chichen Itza, Yucatan). 16th-century colonial landmark.
- 28 Hotel Geneve (Mexico City).
- 29 Gran Hotel Ciudad de Mexico (Mexico City).
United States
editThere is a program called Historic Hotels of America with 260-odd hotels involved as of 2015. Each of these hotels is over 50 years old and is (or is eligible to be) a historic landmark.
- 30 Hilton Baton Rouge Capitol Center (Baton Rouge, Louisiana). (formerly the Heidelberg Hotel).
- 31 The Tutwiler Hotel (Birmingham, Alabama).
- 32 The Sagamore Resort (Bolton Landing, New York).
- 33 The Beverly Hills Hotel (Beverly Hills, California). One of the world's most famous hotels, it has long been popularly associated with Hollywood's biggest stars. It was a favorite of Elizabeth Taylor, who spent six of her eight honeymoons here.
- 34 Parker House Hotel (Boston, Massachusetts). Claims to be the oldest continuously operating hotel in the USA
- 35 Hotel Boulderado (Boulder, Colorado).
- 36 Mount Washington Hotel (Bretton Woods, New Hampshire). Where the Bretton Woods Conference that established the modern international financial system was held in 1944.
- 37 Hotel Lafayette (Buffalo, New York).
- 38 Warwick Allerton - Chicago (Chicago, Illinois). (formerly Allerton Hotel, Warwick Allerton Hotel Chicago, and Allerton Crowne Plaza Hotel)
- 39 The Blackstone Hotel (Chicago, Illinois).
- 40 Drake Hotel (Chicago, Illinois).
- 41 Hilton Chicago (Chicago Hilton and Towers) (Chicago, Illinois). (formerly Stevens Hotel)
- 42 Palmer House (Chicago, Illinois).
- 43 The Cincinnatian (Cincinnati, Ohio).
- 44 The Otesaga Hotel (Cooperstown, New York).
- 45 Culver Hotel (Culver City, California). Once a favorite among the superstars of the Golden Age of Hollywood, the cast of The Wizard of Oz and Gone with the Wind stayed here during filming.
- 46 El Tovar Hotel (Grand Canyon, Arizona).
- 47 Moana Hotel (Moana Surfrider) (Honolulu, Hawaii).
- 48 Casa Marina (Key West, Florida).
- 49 Chateau Marmont (Los Angeles, California). Originally completed in 1929 as a residential apartment building, it was converted to a hotel in 1931. The building's architecture was inspired by that of the Château d'Amboise, a medieval castle in the Loire Valley of France. It has long been a popular short-term residence for Hollywood celebrities over the years.
- 50 Millennium Biltmore Hotel (Los Angeles Biltmore) (Los Angeles, California).
- 51 The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel (Los Angeles, California). Named after Theodore Roosevelt and financed by Hollywood giants such as Louis B. Mayer, Douglas Fairbanks, Sid Grauman and Mary Pickford. The first Academy Awards ceremony was held here at the Blossom Ballroom on 16th May 1929. Marilyn Monroe lived here for two years, and the hotel's swimming pool was where she had her first commercial photoshoot.
- 52 Grand Hotel (Mackinac Island, Michigan).
- 53 The Peabody Memphis (Memphis, Tennessee).
- 54 The Pfister Hotel (Milwaukee, Wisconsin).
- 55 Hermitage Hotel (Nashville, Tennessee).
- 56 Hotel Monteleone (New Orleans, Louisiana).
- 57 Le Pavillon Hotel (New Orleans, Louisiana). (formerly New Denechaud Hotel, or DeSoto Hotel)
- 58 Mohonk Mountain House (New Paltz, New York).
- 59 Algonquin Hotel (New York, New York).
- 60 Park Central Hotel (New York, New York).
- 61 Waldorf Astoria New York (New York, New York). Where President Franklin Roosevelt stayed during his trips to New York during World War II. A secret train platform that Roosevelt used in an effort to hide his disability from the public survives underneath the hotel, though it is not accessible to the public.
- 62 The Barclay (InterContinental New York Barclay) (New York, New York). One of the large hotels built in the area to serve railway passengers of nearby Grand Central Terminal, the top floor was once a private suite for New York Central Railroad director Harold Stirling Vanderbilt, and today has a penthouse that you can stay in, if you can afford it that is.
- 63 The Lexington Hotel (The Lexington Hotel, Autograph Collection) (New York, New York). One of the large hotels built in the area to serve railway passengers of nearby Grand Central Terminal. One of its suites was once the residence of Marilyn Monroe and Joe DiMaggio during their brief marriage.
- 64 The Pierre (New York, New York).
- 65 Plaza Hotel (New York, New York).
- 66 St. Regis New York (New York, New York). One of the claimants to having invented the Bloody Mary cocktail.
- 67 The Knickerbocker Hotel (New York, New York).
- 68 Hotel Elysée (New York, New York).
- 69 Gotham Hotel (The Peninsula New York) (New York, New York).
- 70 Kimpton Cottonwood Hotel (Omaha, Nebraska). (formerly Blackstone Hotel)
- 71 The Breakers (Palm Beach, Florida).
- 72 Omni William Penn Hotel (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania).
- 73 Hotel Roanoke (Roanoke, Virginia).
- 74 Hotel del Coronado (The Del) (San Diego, California).
- 75 The Palace Hotel (San Francisco, California).
- 76 Westin St. Francis (San Francisco, California). (formery St. Francis Hotel)
- 77 La Fonda (Santa Fe, New Mexico).
- 78 Casa del Mar (Santa Monica, California). Originally completed in 1926 as a private beach club, it counted among its members Hollywood celebrities of the Golden Age such as Clark Gable and Greta Garbo. It was taken over by the U.S. Navy in 1941 to house enlisted soldiers during World War II, and struggled to regain its prominence following the war, eventually closing in 1960. It was then used for several different purposes in the intervening years before being restored to its former glory and reopened as a luxury hotel in 1999.
- 79 Willard InterContinental Washington (Willard Hotel) (Washington, D.C./West End).
- 80 The Greenbrier (White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia).
- 81 La Posada (Winslow, Arizona).
- 82 Ahwahnee Hotel (Yosemite National Park).
South America
editArgentina
editBrazil
editPeru
edit- 86 Gran Hotel Bolívar (Lima). – The cocktail Pisco Saur was invented here. Royalty stayed here, and the Rolling Stones had to leave for bad behavior.
Oceania
editAustralia
edit- 52 Canberra Hotel (Canberra). What was once "Hostel No. 1" originally opened in 1924 to house politicians visiting Parliament. After extensive renovations and extensions, it became Canberra's first five-star hotel when Hyatt adopted it into its flagship Park Hyatt collection in 1988. Low-rise and diminutive from the outside, it's surprisingly grand inside, with 1920s Art Deco style throughout.
- 53 The Carrington Hotel (Katoomba).
- 54 Hotel Windsor (Melbourne).
Fiji
editNew Zealand
editSee also
edit