Lord Elgin Hotel

Lord Elgin Hotel

View of Lord Elgin Hotel from above the Confederation Park
General information
Location 100 Elgin Street
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
K1P 5K8
Coordinates 45°25′10″N 75°41′30″W / 45.4195°N 75.6916°W / 45.4195; -75.6916Coordinates: 45°25′10″N 75°41′30″W / 45.4195°N 75.6916°W / 45.4195; -75.6916
Opened 1941
Other information
Number of rooms 355
Website
Official website
Detail of the hotel's chateauesque roof.

The Lord Elgin Hotel is a prominent hotel in downtown Ottawa, Ontario, Canada with 355 guest rooms, located at 100 Elgin Street at Laurier Avenue, across from Confederation Park. The twelve-storey limestone structure was named after James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin, the first Governor General of the united Canadas.

About

The Lord Elgin Hotel is a landmark hotel with 355 guestrooms and four suites, all of them refurbished since 2001. The hotel is smoke-free, and guestrooms include a number of amenities such as refrigerators, high-speed internet access, newspaper delivery and hairdryers.

The hotel is in the heart of Ottawa and is the main choice of accommodations for major Ottawa events such as Winterlude or the National Capital Marathon.

The hotel is just a short walk away from some of the capital's most important landmarks including Parliament Hill, the Rideau Canal, the National Gallery of Canada, the Byward Market, the National War Memorial, the U.S. Embassy, and the Rideau Centre.

The Lord Elgin Hotel received a Trip Advisor 2013 Certificate of Excellence. The hotel and its staff are also recipients of many Stars of the City awards, which is a customer service awards program by Ottawa Tourism.

History and architecture

The hotel was designed by the prestigious firm of Ross and MacDonald, which were the successors of Ross and MacFarlane, who designed the Chateau Laurier.[1] It was opened in 1941 by the Ford Hotel Company to compete with the Château Laurier. Unlike the Château, however, the Lord Elgin was built to primarily serve short-stay guests, particularly those who were in Ottawa on government and military business during the Second World War, especially after the recent loss of the nearby Russell Hotel.[1] As a result, the hotel did not originally contain any ballrooms or elegant restaurants, as would have been expected in a large hotel at that time, and the guest rooms were relatively small.

The building features stone walls which are complete with broken courses and are finished by flattened oriel windows and modernistic chevrons. The building is topped by a steep copper chateauesque roof, which, William Lyon Mackenzie King apparently urged the architects to include to reflect the Parliament buildings copper roof.[1]

In the 1970s and 1980s, the hotel's impressive facade hid the decline in its fortunes due to changes in the economy, increased competition from international hotel chains also located in the downtown core, and new demands from an ever evolving younger traveling business class. Significant renovations in the 1990s and 2000s resulted in the construction of large additions to the north and south of the building, the refurbishment and enlargement of existing rooms, and the addition of 60 new guestrooms, new meeting rooms and a new fitness facility which was finished in 2002.[2]

The interior showcases busts of James Bruce and his wife, Maria Louisa. Contemporary renovations have significantly altered the original streamlined art-deco inspired lobby.[1]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Kalman, 46.
  2. Fletcher, 156.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.