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Washington,
DC – May 2024 / NewsmakerAlert: Historic
Hotels of America®, an official program of the National
Trust for Historic Preservation, is pleased to announce The
2024 Top 25 Historic Hotels of America Best of Adaptive Reuse list.
A popular and creative approach to historic preservation, “adaptive reuse”
saves unused historic buildings from demolition by rehabilitating and renovating
them for a new purpose. Travelers can visit many historic inns, resorts,
and hotels in the United States today because their owners chose to reimagine
historic buildings in sustainable and creative ways. At Historic Hotels
of America, adaptive reuse hotels offer travelers an immersive, authentic,
and fun way to experience their next trip.
Released
during Preservation
Month, The 2024 Top 25 Historic Hotels of America® Best of Adaptive
Reuse list spotlights 25 richly preserved historic buildings that were
not originally built to be hotels. Historic Hotels of America guests can
spend the night in former factories where Ghirardelli chocolate and world-class
cork products were produced, or make a historic Masonic temple their home
base while exploring New Orleans. One historic hotel featured on the list
is a former junior high school that embraces its past with “hall pass”
guestroom keycards and signature cocktails like the Prom Queen. Another
historic hotel featured on the list is a former train station that curates
train-car-themed suites, named after ticketing agents who once worked there.
Others offer dining inside a historic bank vault and historic smokestack.
These hotels are living proof that historic buildings can serve contemporary
needs while preserving their timeless character.
This
month, the nation’s leading preservation nonprofit is shining a spotlight
on the ways in which history and heritage are preserved in the United States,
and on the people who are doing this important work. The theme this year
honors “People Saving Places.” For more information, please visit HistoricHotels.org
and sign up for Discover
& Explore to stay up to date on news and special offers.
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El
Convento Hotel (1646)
San
Juan, Puerto Rico
Former
Carmelite Convent
Located
in the historic walled city of Old San Juan, El Convento Hotel was built
over 350 years ago to be a Roman Catholic convent for nuns of the Carmelite
Order. The land was donated to the order by Doña Ana Lanzós,
a wealthy widow, in the early 1600s, but construction was delayed while
labor and material resources were redirected to build the city’s fortifications.
In 1646, King Phillip IV of Spain approved the convent, and San Juan finally
had its beautiful new convent. Debuting as the “Monasterio del Señor
San José de la Orden de nuestra Señora del Carmen” in 1651,
the convent welcomed three nuns from Hispaniola as its first residents.
For nearly 250 years, the convent was one of the Caribbean’s major Catholic
facilities, often providing support to the Catedral Basilica Menor de San
Juan Bautista—the second-most historic cathedral in the Americas. In 1903,
the convent closed. The Bishop of Puerto Rico determined that the convent
was too expensive to maintain, and the building faced an uncertain future
for 50 years. In the mid-20th century, Robert Woolworth stepped in and
invested in a complete rehabilitation of the building, ultimately transforming
the aged convent into a stunning, boutique hotel. Reborn as El Convento
Hotel, it soon emerged as one of the most popular vacation destinations
in all of San Juan. In fact, numerous celebrities—including Rita Hayworth
and Truman Capote—were among the first guests to step inside. Further restorations
and renovations have rejuvenated the building’s historical and structural
integrity, revitalizing the Spanish-style design features of the original
convent, such as the architectural details throughout the building’s façade.
Among other historic features, a 300-year-old Spanish nispero fruit tree
remains in the historic courtyard. El Convento Hotel was inducted into
Historic Hotels of America in 1999.
Kings
Courtyard Inn (1853)
Charleston,
South Carolina
Former
Mixed-Use Commercial Building
The
welcoming Kings Courtyard Inn was established in the mixed-use historic
Blum Building, which encompasses 192-198 King Street in downtown Charleston,
South Carolina. The Blum Building was constructed in 1853 by Colonel J.
Charles Blum and was designed by Francis D. Lee in the Greek Revival style
of architecture, with Egyptian-style architectural details. This building
transformed Lower King Street, changing the neighborhood from single-family
homes to mixed-use buildings, with retail trade, rental units, and hotels.
Establishments like “F. Petit Confectionary” and “Fancy Goods” and “Mrs.
Evan’s boarding house” opened in the 1850s. Over the years, the building
saw various occupants and uses, reflecting the evolving needs of Charleston.
By the mid-20th century, it had accommodated many different businesses,
including a bicycle shop and a skating rink. Despite experiencing periods
of neglect, the building’s architectural significance endured, and it was
lovingly restored to its former glory in 1983. The effort to rehabilitate
the building was led by Charleston businessman Richard T. Widman, Founder
of Charming Inns®. Original lightwells were transformed into courtyards,
and 34 guestrooms were appointed with 18th-century reproduction furniture.
The building’s stunning, oversized windows, and its stylized columns and
delicate ironwork, which were added around the turn-of-the-century, were
all meticulously preserved and can be seen at the inn today. The preservation
work accomplished at the Kings Courtyard Inn resulted in contemporary comfort
for guests, while making the building’s architectural significance and
its role in the city’s heritage accessible to visitors. Kings Courtyard
Inn was inducted as a Charter Member of Historic Hotels of America in 1989.
Cork
Factory Hotel (1865)
Lancaster
County, Pennsylvania
Former
Cork Factory
Cork
Factory Hotel in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, was once the home of Lancaster
Cork Works and the Armstrong Cork and Kerr Glass companies. Built in 1865,
the Lancaster Cork Works factory contributed to the region’s manufacturing
identity, and its infrastructure helped Thomas M. Armstrong, the founder
of the world’s largest supplier of cork-related goods in the 1890s, expand
into the region in 1895. Armstrong named the factory the Lancaster Closure
Plant, where the manufacturing of cork gave way to insulated corkboard,
fiberboard, and then linoleum products. The Lancaster factories proved
so effective in producing the new goods that the entire Armstrong Cork
Company completely relocated to Lancaster in 1929. By the mid-20th century,
the Armstrong Cork Company was one of the most powerful corporations in
the United States, and employed 800 workers at the Lancaster factory. In
1969, the company sold its Lancaster complex to the Kerr Glass Manufacturing
Corporation, who retained most of the workforce and honored existing labor
contracts. In 2000, the glass factory closed, and a real estate developer
transformed the historic brick building into Urban Place, a mixed-use community
with offices, restaurants, storefronts, and upscale apartments. One wing
of the facility was transformed into a luxurious boutique hotel, which
opened in 2009 as the Cork Factory Hotel. Visitors to Cork Factory Hotel
can enjoy the restored factory’s original brick interior walls and exposed
wood ceilings, along with the luxury of a modern hotel. Cork Factory Hotel
was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2010.
The
Inn at Leola Village, Est. 1867 (1867)
Leola,
Pennsylvania
Former
Amish Tobacco Farm
Nestled
in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, The Inn at Leola Village, Est. 1867,
is a collection of charming 19th-century farmhouses, barns, and other buildings
that once supported a historic tobacco farm, but is a romantic destination
today. Starting with the construction of the first farmhouse in 1867, this
farm cultivated tobacco for the cigar factories in the nearby city of Lancaster.
The farm operated until the late-20th century. By 1999, the buildings were
abandoned and threatened with demolition, but were saved when preservation-minded
caretakers acquired the land. The new owners transformed the village’s
several barns, tool shed, two smaller farmhouses, and main farmhouse into
a boutique hotel, The Inn at Leola Village, Est. 1867. The team meticulously
converted the tobacco barn into a handful of signature suites, showcasing
vaulted ceilings and rustic post-and-beam construction. The Wine Cellar
Suite in the lower level of the historic Bard House offers guests a unique
guestroom with exposed stone walls, an arched reading nook, and exposed
beams—as well as an oversized whirlpool tub, luxury king-size bed, and
fine appointments. The inn offers contemporary guests the best qualities
of Amish life in the 19th century, blended with today’s modern comforts
and luxury offerings, like an award-winning spa. The Inn at Leola Village,
Est. 1867 was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2001.
Atheneum
Suite Hotel (1879)
Detroit,
Michigan
Former
Seed Company Warehouse
Originally
a seed company warehouse in Detroit, Michigan, when the city was considered
to be the “Seed Capital of the World,” Atheneum Suite Hotel offers contemporary
travelers 173 elegant suites with views of the city’s skyline. The business’s
history can be traced to 1856, when businessman Dexter Mason Ferry established
his seed-growing company in Detroit, and opened a large warehouse complex
on the corner of Monroe Street and Beaubien Boulevard in 1879. The most
historic portion of the surviving building dates to 1886, when a newer,
grander warehouse was designed by architect Gordon S. Lloyd, who drew inspiration
for a new Romanesque-style warehouse from Marshall Field’s Wholesale Store
in Chicago. Debuting as the largest industrial structure in Detroit at
the time, the building stood eight stories tall and featured a marvelous
brick façade with limestone trim. The ornate warehouse served as
the company’s headquarters for decades. By the 1950s, the company expanded
into world markets as the Ferry-Morse Seed Company and moved its business
operations away from Detroit, leading to the closure of its historic warehouse.
In the 1980s, businessman Jim Papas, a Greek immigrant with deep connections
to the neighborhood, acquired the site and planned to build an upscale
hotel. He recognized the building’s rich heritage and directed the renovations
to preserve the building’s architectural integrity. Papas and his team
transformed the Ferry-Morse Company’s warehouse into a multi-use urban
mall known as Trappers Alley, establishing the Atheneum Suite Hotel at
the same time. Part of the historic Greektown neighborhood, the Atheneum
Suite Hotel was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2023.
La
Posada de Santa Fe (1882)
Santa
Fe, New Mexico
Former
Family Home
Set
on six beautifully landscaped acres in Santa Fe, New Mexico, La Posada
de Santa Fe was originally constructed as a private family home. La Posada’s
history harkens back to the arrival of German immigrant Abraham Staab and
his wife, Julia. The Staabs arrived in Santa Fe in the mid-1850s, after
making the arduous journey along the Santa Fe Trail. Their grand family
home, now part of a luxury resort in downtown Santa Fe, was completed in
1882. When Abraham passed away in 1913, the house remained a private residence
until the 1930s, when the new owners transformed the mansion and adjacent
land into a hotel with casita-style guestrooms, calling it La Posada Inn.
At the time, Santa Fe was a major stop along historic Route 66, which many
Dust Bowl refugees used to travel to California during the Great Depression.
New motels, restaurants, and service stations popped up along the route
to support the increasing traffic during this era. Although many of these
establishments have disappeared, La Posada de Santa Fe has offered fine
hospitality ever since, with millions of dollars invested in preserving
its 19th and 20th century historic details, while modernizing accommodations
throughout the years. For example, in 1987, several historic stables and
sheds were converted into new casita-style guestrooms. Ten years later,
a larger investment transformed La Posada de Santa Fe into a sprawling,
world-class resort, with new facilities like a spa and conference space.
More updates and restorations were made in 2013, when the hotel changed
ownership once again. Beloved for over 140 years, the historic 1882 Victorian
era Staab residence, and surrounding 1930s Pueblo Revival-style casitas,
are a fascinating way for guests to discover New Mexico’s rich history.
La Posada de Santa Fe was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2019.
Fairfield
Inn & Suites Madison Historic Eagle Cotton Mill (1884)
Madison,
Indiana
Former
Cotton Mill
Located
on the banks of the Ohio River, Fairfield Inn & Suites Madison Historic
Eagle Cotton Mill was built in 1884 as a cotton mill. Local builders Robert
Rankin and James White constructed the Eagle Cotton Mill in 1884 to bolster
Madison’s manufacturing economy. They used money raised through local subscriptions
to purchase and relocate equipment from a Pennsylvania mill, and by the
turn of the twentieth century, the mill was the city’s major industrial
plant, with 400 employees producing muslin, canvas, and twine. The mill
ceased operations during the Great Depression, and the building housed
other manufacturing operations for another 50 years, producing shoes, canvas
military goods, ice cream carts for vendors, and refrigerators. Despite
its prime location, the building fell into disrepair, and was even listed
on Indiana Landmarks’ 10 Most Endangered places list in 2013 and 2014.
Preservation-minded investors soon saved the building, carefully renovating
and restoring it. On the outside, the façade remains mostly the
same, as a masonry company repaired more than a million original bricks,
and new windows were installed within the original frames. Inside, the
building retains its original wooden beams, where visitors can see where
factory workers carved their names, and the names of their loved ones,
into the wood. Original wood from the mill’s historic stairs was repurposed
and installed as a statement wall behind the lobby bar. Complementing these
historic features, the interior design and artwork highlight the building’s
history. When the Fairfield Inn & Suites Madison Historic Eagle Cotton
Mill opened, it won the Indiana Landmarks Renaissance Award, recognizing
its physical and subsequent economic revitalization. Fairfield Inn &
Suites Madison Historic Eagle Cotton Mill was inducted into Historic Hotels
of America in 2023.
Napa
River Inn (1884)
Napa,
California
Former
Warehouse
Napa
River Inn is a historic hotel on the Napa River in California’s verdant
Wine Country. However, this riverfront getaway has not always been a boutique
hotel. Napa River Inn was known as the Hatt Building for decades, and served
a variety of purposes before its most recent transformation. In 1882, Captain
Albert E. Hatt, a German immigrant, decided to invest in a plot of land
at the corner of Main Street and Fifth Street in Napa, where he built a
massive multipurpose warehouse that became a success. Local merchants used
the warehouse to store goods, and the warehouse provided space for Alma
Hogan Hatt, Albert’s wife, to open a restaurant. On the second floor, the
Hatts added a skating rink, library, and dining area. After the Hatt family
moved on, the building served as a granary and mill for local farmers for
approximately 50 years. After a period of uncertainty in the late 20th
century, an investor acquired the building in 1992 with a plan to transform
it into a stunning hotel, worthy of the beautiful Napa Valley, while preserving
the facility’s rich architectural integrity. The Hatt Building debuted
as the Napa River Inn in 2000. Today, guests can stay in guestrooms with
exposed brick walls that are original to the warehouse, and can even book
Captain Hatt’s Suite, complete with a fireplace and clawfoot slipper bathtub.
Listed in the National Register of Historic Places and once named as one
of America’s Dozen Distinctive Destinations by the National Trust for Historic
Preservation, Napa River Inn was inducted into Historic Hotels of America
in 2004.
Ledges
Hotel (1890)
Hawley,
Pennsylvania
Former
Glass Factory
Perched
on the edge of Wallenpaupack Creek in Hawley, Pennsylvania, amid the breathtaking
scenery of the Pocono Mountains, Ledges Hotel is a tranquil destination
with a fascinating industrial history. The five-story Federal-style building
dates to the 1890s, when it served as the J.S. O’Connor American Rich Cut
Glassware Factory, one of the largest of its kind in the United States
at the time. Founded by an Irish immigrant, the factory on Wallenpaupack
Creek was water-powered, and one of the county’s biggest employers. In
2011, family-owned Settlers Hospitality Group acquired the building to
develop a hotel and restaurant that would preserve the aesthetic of this
historic building, constructed with Pennsylvania Bluestone. Wood from the
trusses of the adjacent Bellemonte Silk Mill was repurposed into modern
beds and tables for guestrooms. Décor in the hotel’s restaurant,
Glass, includes original glass mold prints from the factory, as well as
historic images from its factory era. Wood from a fallen 250-year-old copper
beech tree was used to create a live edge bar and tabletops for the dining
room. A part of the hotel known as “the ruins” was converted into an outdoor
lounge space. This area is a guest favorite, and allows visitors to see
a portion of the original factory building, where the architecture blends
seamlessly with the surrounding natural rock ledges and waterfall. Merging
modern design and amenities with historical integrity and environmental
sustainability, Ledges Hotel was inducted into Historic Hotels of America
in 2013.
Fairmont
Heritage Place, Ghirardelli Square (1893)
San
Francisco, California
Former
Chocolate Factory
With
history as rich as the chocolate that funded it, the historic clock tower
building at San Francisco’s Ghirardelli Square has been home to the Fairmont
Heritage Place, Ghirardelli Square since 2008. The residential-style, all-suite
private residence club allows owners and guests to experience one of San
Francisco’s most iconic tourist destinations. Many of the hotel’s guestrooms
feature the factory’s original brick walls, as well as breathtaking views
of the San Francisco Bay and city skyline. The building was established
in 1893, when chocolatier and Italian immigrant Domenico Ghirardelli purchased
an entire city block known at the time as the Pioneer Woolen Mill complex.
The Ghirardelli Chocolate Company grew exponentially at the end of the
19th century, and the family hired architect William S. Mooser to renovate
the entire complex. In the 1960s, the chocolate company moved to San Leandro,
leaving a chocolate shop to carry on the legacy at Fisherman’s Wharf. But
the history of San Francisco’s chocolate business lives on through the
creation of Ghirardelli Square, a commercial area that preserved the original
brick building and architectural details while inviting in new boutique
shops and restaurants. Set on the San Francisco Bay, Ghirardelli Square
has since become one of San Francisco’s most cherished attractions, charming
thousands of visitors every year. The historic Fairmont Heritage Place,
Ghirardelli Square was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2016.
The
Kendall Hotel (1894)
Cambridge,
Massachusetts
Former
Fire Engine House
The
origins of The Kendall Hotel in Cambridge, Massachusetts, harken back to
the height of the Gilded Age. During the 1890s, the neighborhood of Kendall
Square had rapidly emerged as one of Cambridge’s most industrialized areas.
Due to the neighborhood’s growth, city officials extended a branch of the
Cambridge Fire Department to the area. Engine 7, the new station, moved
into a state-of-the-art engine house in 1894. Designed by architects R.J.
Fitzgerald and S.D. Mitchell of Boston, it contained numerous technological
innovations, including advanced steam pumpers, coal bunkers, and a novel
fire engine. It was one of the region’s first single-purpose fire stations,
and the Engine 7 Firehouse served Kendall Square until 1993. At that time,
the historic Engine 7 moved to a new, modern headquarters. Left abandoned,
the fate of the engine house appeared bleak until two preservationists
made it their mission to save it. Charlotte Forsythe and her husband, Gerald
Fandetti, petitioned the City of Cambridge to transform the former fire
station into a boutique hotel. The city agreed, and sold the building to
the couple. In 2000, renovations began to transform the fire station dormitories
into modern guestrooms, and the firehouse into the hotel’s restaurant.
The renovations also restored the building’s architecture, and the new
owners took great pains to ensure that the fire station’s architectural
integrity remained intact, as evidenced by their meticulous work revitalizing
the building’s iconic cupola. Today, the décor is a creative and
eclectic mix of historic fire station memorabilia and motifs, Victorian
antiques, and contemporary art. The Kendall Hotel was inducted into Historic
Hotels of America in 2004.
St.
Louis Union Station Hotel, Curio Collection by Hilton (1894)
St.
Louis, Missouri
Former
Train Station
On
September 1, 1894, St. Louis’s iconic Union Station—the future St. Louis
Union Station Hotel, Curio Collection by Hilton—opened its doors. Local
architect Theodore C. Link led its design: a magnificent, sprawling complex
that stood as a masterpiece of American architecture. Link planned the
Grand Hall to resemble a passageway inside a medieval castle; the walled
French city of Carcassonne was his inspiration. Ornate details that can
still be seen today proliferated throughout the space, such as spectacular
gold leaf, wide stained-glass windows, and wall carvings made from Indiana
limestone. A stunning, 65-foot-tall, barrel-vaulted ceiling crested the
Grand Hall, anchored by a beautiful, wrought-iron chandelier. One of the
United States’ largest and busiest train terminals at the time, Union Station
was home to 22 railroads and 32 tracks in its heyday. Today, the transportation
complex has undergone a renaissance that restored and respects its heritage.
St. Louis Union Station Hotel, Curio Collection by Hilton is at the center
of an award-winning family entertainment destination within the historic
Victorian-era train terminal. The hotel’s guestrooms, meeting and event
space, and Grand Hall have been fully renovated and expanded. Clock Tower
Suites have train-themed décor, and each guestroom door is marked
with the name of a railroad ticketing agent whose offices were once in
that section of the building. The train shed is now the St. Louis Aquarium
at Union Station. Other entertainment at the complex includes the St. Louis
Wheel, carousel, and mini golf. In the Grand Hall, where visitors can watch
a 3D light show, the original stained glass and ornate plasterwork have
been restored. Designated a National Historic Landmark by the U.S. Secretary
of the Interior, St. Louis Union Station Hotel, Curio Collection by Hilton
was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 1991.
The
Lodge at the Presidio (1897) and Inn
at the Presidio (1903)
San
Francisco, California
Former
U.S. Army Housing
Built
in the shadow of the iconic Golden Gate Bridge, The Lodge at the Presidio
is San Francisco’s nearest hotel to the bridge and was constructed in 1897.
Close by, the historic Inn at the Presidio has the distinction of being
the first hotel to open within the Presidio of San Francisco, a 1,500-acre
national park site, and was constructed in 1903. These historic destinations
are part of Presidio Lodging and welcome guests today, but they originally
served as accommodations for officers and enlistees in the U.S. Army. The
brick Colonial Revival building that houses the Inn in at the Presidio,
Pershing Hall, was named for General John J. “Black Jack” Pershing, who
served at the Presidio of San Francisco and was commander of the American
Expeditionary Force in France during World War I. The Lodge at the Presidio
was known as Montgomery Street Barracks and the first unit to occupy it
was Battery F of the Third Artillery Regiment, as well as two companies
of infantry and a troop of cavalry. When it opened, a newspaper wrote that
“The accommodations for the men will be equal to those of a first-class
hotel and contain all the modern improvements for health and comfort.”
Working with the Presidio Trust, Presidio Lodging opened the former military
buildings to the public in the 2010s. The hotels both underwent environmentally
sensitive restorations, adhering to the U.S. Secretary of Interior’s Standards
for historic properties and the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED standards.
Most of the buildings’ original features—including the exterior, hardwood
floors, doors, light fixtures, and staircases—were preserved. Guests can
learn about the hotels’ history through the curated art collections and
historical exhibits at each location.
Chicago
Silversmith Hotel & Suites (1897)
Chicago,
Illinois
Former
Artisan Workshop and Retail Building
Steps
from Chicago’s Millennium Park, the Magnificent Mile shopping district,
and cultural attractions like the Art Institute of Chicago, the Chicago
Silversmith Hotel & Suites is located in the city’s historic Jewelers
Row District. Constructed in 1897, this Romanesque Revival-style skyscraper
was originally the Silversmith Building, and was built as part of a construction
boom that followed an influx of jewelry dealers, designers, wholesalers,
and storefronts to the neighborhood. Two large jewelry corporations—the
Gorham Manufacturing Company and the Benjamin Allen and Co.—had commissioned
the Silversmith Building in 1896, and hired Peter J. Weber of D.H. Burnham
& Company to design it. Weber designed a spectacular facade that displayed
some of the best architectural motifs in the Loop, incorporating round
brick columns and terra cotta tiling. In addition to the Gorham Manufacturing
Company and Benjamin Allen and Co., the building was quickly occupied by
jewelers. Tenants wanted to work in the central court that provided ventilation
and natural light, which was ideal for hammering silver and crafting elaborate
jewelry designs. In 1995, the hotel’s jewelry tenants moved on, and the
hotel was converted into a beautiful hotel. Two years later, the building
was listed in the National Register of Historic Places for its architectural
and commercial history. Today, this boutique hotel from the Gilded Age
nods to its heritage through lustrous silver and crystal decor, and offers
guests contemporary, spacious guestrooms featuring 12-foot ceilings. Chicago
Silversmith Hotel & Suites was inducted into Historic Hotels of America
in 2016.
The
Union Station Nashville Yards (1900)
Nashville,
Tennessee
Former
Train Station
The
Union Station Nashville Yards was originally a train station, home to the
Louisville & Nashville Railroad. Constructed in 1900, the building
was once home to a ticket counter, barber and shoeshine stand, a waiting
parlor for ladies, a carriage entrance where luggage and supplies were
dropped off and brought into the station, a newspaper stand, and an open-air
entrance. Union Station served as Nashville’s primary train station until
passenger service was discontinued in the late 1970s. With the building
facing demolition, the community rallied to preserve it. Nashville’s “Save
Our Station” movement was a success: the U.S. Secretary of the Interior
designated the historic train station as a National Historic Landmark,
and it opened as a hotel in 1986. Its most recent restoration and renovation
was a multimillion-dollar investment in 2023. Today, many of the station’s
original stone, Richardsonian Romanesque-style architectural and design
features have been preserved. Original features to look for include the
clock tower, adorned with a statue of Mercury, and the lobby’s limestone
fireplace, a popular place for couples to exchange wedding vows since 1915.
The station’s original flooring was exposed during a recent renovation
and can be seen in the lobby bar. The hotel has also preserved reliefs
on the fifth floor, where this artwork tells the history of human transportation
up until 1900. The guestrooms pay homage to the building’s history with
leather belting reminiscent of vintage luggage trunks, architectural elements
inspired by Pullman train cars, antique burnished brass accents, and designs
that combine the prominent Art Deco style of the station’s heyday in the
1920s with the original Romanesque Revival-style architecture of the station.
Specialty accommodations include two luxurious suites: the Conductor’s
Presidential Suite and a bachelorette-style suite that draws inspiration
from first-class sleeper cars. The Union Station Nashville Yards was inducted
into Historic Hotels of America in 2015.
The
Inn at Diamond Cove (1910)
Portland,
Maine
Former
U.S. Army Fort and Barracks
A
beautiful island located in the waters east of Portland, Maine, The Inn
at Diamond Cove has been a fixture on Great Diamond Island for decades,
and many of its historic buildings date to the early 20th century. The
U.S. Army established a military complex called Fort McKinley in the late
19th century, and in 1910, the Army Corps of Engineers expanded the fort
with barracks, including a two-story Colonial Revival-style building known
as the Double Barrack. Fort McKinley served as the linchpin for the imposing
Harbor Defenses of Portland for decades, including during both World Wars.
The fort also temporarily lent its munitions to units serving overseas
during World War I, specifically offering some of its mortars to act as
pieces of railroad artillery. Today, the historic Double Barrack—as well
as other buildings like the Quartermaster’s Storehouse—are part of The
Inn at Diamond Cove. After the fort was decommissioned in the 1960s, the
historic buildings fell into disrepair. It was not until the 1990s that
an entrepreneur came in to restore the fort, transforming it into a resort
community and transforming the Double Barrack into a boutique hotel and
the Quartermaster’s Storehouse into a restaurant. The Inn at Diamond Cove
has been a favorite destination among Maine’s holiday retreats since. It
has also continued to function as the centerpiece of Great Diamond Island’s
resort community, which has entertained cultural heritage travelers interested
in exploring the area’s rich history. The Inn at Diamond Cove is listed
in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, and was inducted into
Historic Hotels of America in 2023.
JW
Marriott Savannah Plant Riverside District (1912)
Savannah,
Georgia
Former
Power Plant
By
the beginning of the 20th century, Savannah, Georgia, emerged as one of
the region’s fastest-growing communities. To meet the modern city’s demands
for electricity, Savannah officials commissioned the development of a sprawling
power plant and station along the Savannah River in 1912. For nearly 100
years, Riverside Station helped power Savannah. The plant closed in 2005,
its future uncertain, but the Kessler Collection—a collection of hotels
known for their elevation of art and design in hospitality—acquired the
decommissioned power plant in 2012, and invested millions into transforming
the plant into a magnificent hotel. The former power plant debuted as the
JW Marriott Savannah Plant Riverside District in 2020. The exterior retains
the power plant’s iconic twin smokestacks and brick exterior, and the interior
was repurposed with the addition of hotel guestrooms, restaurants, shops,
and other mixed-use commercial spaces. “We wanted to maintain as much of
the existing power plant as possible by finding ways to reveal the history
and authenticity of this building,” Diana Kessler, Creative Director, Kessler
Design Studio, said of this adaptive reuse project. “When a guest experiences
the property, there are many architectural and design details that pull
from the history of the power plant.” Today, films, tours, and history
exhibit walls tell the story of Riverside Station at the hotel. Guests
will discover repurposed steel benches and refinished brick throughout
the property: 575,000 pieces of historic brick from the original building
were
cleaned and used in the rehabilitation. At Stone & Webster Chophouse—named
for the plant’s original architects—guests can dine inside the core of
a century-old smokestack. JW Marriott Savannah Plant Riverside District
was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2022.
21c
Museum Hotel Lexington (1914)
Lexington,
Kentucky
Former
Bank Building
The
21c Museum Hotel Lexington dates to 1914, when the Fayette National Bank
constructed its headquarters in Lexington, Kentucky. Desiring a grand high-rise,
Fayette National Bank hired the well-known architectural firm of McKim,
Mead & White to design its new headquarters. In 2012, 21c Museum Hotels—a
hotel collection known for adapting historic buildings to use as hotels
and arts spaces—acquired the former bank building and hired architectural
firms based in New York and Pittsburgh to adapt the Beaux-Arts-style bank
building into a hotel. The creative team produced a hotel building that
combined contemporary design with the restoration of the building’s Ionic
columns, marble walls, Tennessee Pink Marble flooring, and vaulted ceilings.
21c Museum Hotel Lexington opened four years later. Today, the building
is both a luxury hotel and a contemporary art museum, welcoming both visitors
and the local community to enjoy its curated exhibitions and cultural programming.
At the hotel’s restaurant, Lockbox, the Fayette National Bank Building’s
original safe deposit vault remains intact and has been reimagined as an
intimate private dining room for guests to enjoy. Listed in the National
Register of Historic Places, 21c Museum Hotel Lexington was inducted into
Historic Hotels of America in 2019.
Hotel
Grinnell (1921)
Grinnell,
Iowa
Former
Junior High School
Built
in 1921, Hotel Grinnell was originally the Grinnell Junior High School.
Designed by the prominent Des Moines-based architectural firm Proudfoot,
Bird & Rawson, the Classical Revival-style building lived its first
life as a public school, part of a larger complex of school buildings.
After the school closed in 1978 and much of the complex was demolished,
the surviving junior high school building served as a municipal office
building for the city. In the early-21st century, an ambitious entrepreneur
invested in the building. Meticulously restored and redesigned, Hotel Grinnell
was reborn in 2017 as a modern, eco-conscious boutique hotel, as well as
a dining and event destination. The boutique hotel seamlessly weaves its
history into every guest’s experience, ensuring an unforgettable stay.
The front desk was the principal’s office in 1921, and guestrooms are the
building’s former classrooms, with original maple hardwood floors and lofty
ceilings. Guests receive room keys designed as “hall passes,” can review
a “primer” detailing the many amenities at the hotel, and are given a necktie
to use as the “do not disturb” door hanger. The school’s theater, now an
event venue, has a soaring coffered ceiling which was painstakingly restored
to its former drama, and a grand staircase that leads up to the hotel’s
luxury penthouse suite, originally the dressing room above the stage. Periodic
Table, the hotel’s restaurant, offers signature cocktails with names like
Lunch Lady, Prom Queen, and First Crush. The school’s old locker rooms
are now bunk rooms with 10 beds each—designed for big families, wedding
parties, or children’s slumber parties—and some of the original wood locker
room benches are found throughout the hotel. Historic Hotel Grinnell was
inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2023.
Haywood
Park Hotel, Ascend Hotel Collection (1923)
Asheville,
North Carolina
Former
Department Store
The
historic Haywood Park Hotel, Ascend Hotel Collection was built in 1923
to provide Asheville, North Carolina with a larger downtown location for
its luxury department store, Bon Marché. Asheville’s new Bon Marché
location was famous for attracting dignitaries and celebrities from around
the world when it opened. During the Roaring Twenties, downtown Asheville
saw flappers, speakeasies, Prohibition violations, and the popular dance
of the time, the Charleston. The Bon Marché offered sophisticated
fashion options to locals and visitors alike. Another luxury department
store, Ivey’s, took over the building decades later, and operated there
until 1975. The building’s second life was realized in 1985 when—after
significant renovations and careful attention to details in the restoration—a
Classical Revival-style hotel opened its doors to welcome Asheville visitors.
Combining the iconic heritage of Asheville’s first department store with
a beautiful, modern boutique hotel, the Haywood Park Hotel, Ascend Hotel
Collection, honors its rich heritage through its hospitality and style.
Guests are encouraged to explore the hotel lobby, which displays a vintage
1929 Ford Model A and historic photographs from the same era—as well as
mannequins donning historic fashions and accoutrements that would not look
out of place at Bon Marché a century ago. Haywood Park Hotel, Ascend
Hotel Collection was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2011.
The
Emily Morgan San Antonio - a DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel (1924)
San
Antonio, Texas
Former
Medical Arts Building
In
1924, real estate developer Clifton George and architect Ralph Cameron
decided that the prosperous, growing city of San Antonio needed a medical
arts building. Medical arts buildings were a new concept for the era, a
large building for doctors and other medical professionals to practice
their various specialties. Rival cities like Dallas and Houston had their
own medical arts buildings, inspiring George and Cameron to invest in a
triangular plot of land near the historic Alamo. Two years later, the medical
arts building—the future Emily Morgan San Antonio – a DoubleTree by Hilton
Hotel—opened. It debuted as a 13-story skyscraper, the tallest building
in the city at the time, adorned with Gothic Revival-style motifs. Cameron
had masterfully incorporated many Gothic-inspired architectural elements
throughout his design, including a steeply pitched mansard roof, terra
cotta detailing, and a chateau-inspired corner tower. Perhaps the most
notable Gothic architectural features are the façade’s gargoyles,
many of them posing to show a series of ailments. The building was a success
for many decades, and it received a new lease on life when it was acquired
by hoteliers in 1984. They restored and renovated the building, and converted
the building into a hotel. It was named The Emily Morgan Hotel as an homage
to the legend of Emily Morgan, a woman who, according to the legend, helped
the Texans win the Battle of San Jacinto in 1836 by seducing Santa Anna.
Today, The Emily Morgan San Antonio – a Doubletree by Hilton Hotel, provides
its guests with some of the city’s best hospitality and proximity to the
Alamo. Not only have guests continued to find its charming guestrooms to
be among the finest in the city, but they have also enjoyed its proximity
to prominent historical attractions like the Alamo. The Emily Morgan San
Antonio – a Doubletree by Hilton Hotel is listed in the National Register
of Historic Places as part of the Alamo Plaza Historic District, and it
was inducted into Historic Hotels of America in 2015.
Hilton
New Orleans/St. Charles Avenue (1926)
New
Orleans, Louisiana
Former
Masonic Temple
In
New Orleans, Louisiana, the history of the Hilton New Orleans/St. Charles
Avenue can be traced directly to the founding of the state’s first Grand
Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons in 1845. Louisiana’s Freemasons established
their headquarters, abandoned it, and then returned in the 1890s. After
their third attempt at a Masonic Temple failed to come to fruition in the
late-19th century due to poor planning, there was renewed interest in building
a permanent home for their lodge. Interest turned into action after World
War I, and Masonic leadership commissioned the construction of a new Masonic
Temple. The grand building debuted as a stunning 18 story, 100,000 sq ft
skyscraper with three elegant ballrooms, a 1,000-seat theater, and a sprawling
ceremonial chamber called the Grand Chapel. The architect pulled inspiration
from the previous temple’s Gothic-inspired eclectic style, albeit in a
more modern, nuanced form. Perhaps the most magnificent component of the
building’s overall appearance was the mixture of antique cypress and pine
that were used for the interior walls. The Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted
Masons occupied the building until 1992, when the lodge moved, and the
Masons sold the building to hoteliers. After surviving Hurricane Katrina,
the hotel was restored and reintroduced to the city as the Hilton New Orleans/St.
Charles Avenue. Today, the hotel offers event space in the historic Grand
Chapel, a beautiful event space with restored hand-carved wood ceiling
details, colorful stained-glass windows, and original light fixtures. At
the hotel restaurant, Luke, guests can enjoy a relaxing atmosphere among
the historic carved-wood bar, hardwood floors, and vintage metal-panel
ceiling. Hilton New Orleans/St. Charles Avenue was inducted into Historic
Hotels of America in 2015.
21c
Museum Hotel St. Louis (1926)
St.
Louis, Missouri
Former
YMCA
21c
Museum Hotel St. Louis is a beautiful surviving example of early Young
Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) architecture, as directed by the organization’s
Building Bureau. Nearly a century before the 21c Museum Hotel St. Louis
opened its doors to guests, the building was known as the Downtown YMCA
Building. Constructed in 1926 for St. Louis, Missouri’s new YMCA branch,
the building served local members of the YMCA. The St. Louis YMCA was designed,
in large part, by two noted St. Louis-based architects, Louis LaBeaume
and Eugene S. Klein, who worked with the input and approval of the national
YMCA’s Building Bureau. The Building Bureau was formed in 1915 to ensure
architectural uniformity for every official YMCA location in the early
20th century, and they instructed the architects to include rooms for athletic
activities and short-term housing. LaBeaume and Klein met those requirements,
and also added their own touches, which can be seen in many of the building’s
intricate details and Renaissance Revival-style architecture. By the 21st
century, the YMCA had moved out of the building, and the building fell
into disrepair. In 2018, help came in the form of entrepreneurial real
estate developers, who invested in the historic structure and hired architects
to transform it into a boutique hotel and art gallery. The developers preserved
the building’s architectural integrity, ensuring that its heritage remained
intact for future generations to appreciate. In its new life, the building
kept its community-centered roots by providing a space where travelers
and locals can come together to experience contemporary art exhibitions,
local cultural programming, and shared meals. Many aspects of the building’s
original architecture can be seen today. On the lower level, the YMCA lap
pool has been restored and renovated as part of the Locust Street Athletic
Club, where guests and members can admire the intricate tilework. On the
second floor, the former basketball court retains its distinct style and
flooring, but it is now used as event and exhibition space for the property’s
innovative contemporary art programming. Listed in the National Register
of Historic Places in 2014, 21c Museum Hotel St. Louis was inducted into
Historic Hotels of America in 2023.
Hotel
Warner (1930)
West
Chester, Pennsylvania
Former
Movie Theater
During
the Golden Age of Hollywood, communities and studios invested in opulent
theaters across the United States to show the latest form of entertainment:
motion pictures. In 1930, Warner Bros. Pictures selected West Chester,
Pennsylvania, to be the location for a magnificent Warner Theater, a 1,650-seat
venue that included the auditorium, as well as a restaurant and shops.
The Warner Theater in West Chester was designed by the architectural firm
Rapp & Rapp of Chicago, one of the leading designers of early-20th-century
movie palaces. Rapp & Rapp famously designed over 400 movie theaters,
including the Majestic Theater in Dubuque, Iowa (1910), the Chicago Theatre
(1921) and Oriental Theatre in Chicago (1926), and the Paramount Theatre
both in New York (1926) and Aurora, Illinois (1931). The design included
a magnificent two-story foyer and a three-story tower that supported the
marquee. The Warner Theater opened in 1930 with a screening of The Life
of the Party, a musical comedy starring Winnie Lightner. The theater closed
in 1984, and efforts to preserve the building were incomplete: the historic
façade and lobby areas survived, but the auditorium was demolished.
Investors acquired the building in the early-21st century and restored
the historic portions of the Warner Theater while constructing a complementary
hotel tower behind it. Hotel Warner opened its doors in 2012. Today, the
original theater lobby, with its ornate period staircase, is now a gorgeous
Art Deco-style hotel lobby, and a new tower behind the historic theater
offers luxurious guestrooms. The Marquee Bar and Lounge serves craft beers,
wine, and signature cocktails. Hotel Warner is centrally located, close
to the town’s restaurants and boutiques, and it is the only hotel in the
historic downtown area. Hotel Warner was inducted into Historic Hotels
of America in 2016.
The
Graylyn Estate (1932)
Winston-Salem,
North Carolina
Former
Family Home
The
Graylyn Estate in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, was built in 1932 to be
the country estate of Bowman and Nathalie Gray. With over 60 rooms, it
was one of the largest private homes in North Carolina at the time. Hiring
a young architect named Luther Snow Lashmit, the Grays established a magnificent
estate, located on more than 85 acres, that blended Norman, Gothic, Renaissance,
and Classical architectural styles. Nathalie and her sons gifted the estate
to Wake Forest University in 1946, and in 1984, the university’s Board
of Trustees agreed to transform the estate into a boutique hotel and conference
center. Today, guests of Graylyn Estate have the rare opportunity to eat,
sleep, and play in the home’s original spaces. Guests can dine in the home’s
original Adam-style dining room, and can play chess, read, or work remotely
in the Gray family’s original library, which is still adorned with rare
French wood-paneling installed by the Gray family. Many guestrooms are
in the family’s original sleeping quarters, including Mr. Gray’s Room and
Mrs. Gray’s Room. Many special events and receptions are held in The Atlantis
Room, the sea-themed space of the home’s original indoor pool. Guests may
add a guided history tour to their stays. Many of the historic public spaces
are open to guests throughout their stay. Self-guided tours of the estate
are available through a photographic timeline in the lobby, or by picking
up a copy of A Story of Graylyn to read. The Graylyn Estate was inducted
into Historic Hotels of America in 2016.
“Historic
hotels preserve the past to serve the present, making them a beacon of
sustainability, as well as fantastic destinations for solo travelers searching
for new experiences, couples in need of a romantic getaway, and families
setting out to make lifelong memories,” said Lawrence
P. Horwitz, Executive Vice President, Historic Hotels of America and
Historic Hotels Worldwide. “Historic Hotels of America applauds forward-thinking
investors and hoteliers who see potential in historic buildings, as well
as the guests who choose to stay at historic hotels. At Historic Hotels
of America, the ‘people saving places’ are the guests, hotel staff, and
the hotels’ communities, who support these special places throughout the
year.”
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About
Historic Hotels of America®
Historic
Hotels of America® is the official program of the National
Trust for Historic Preservation for recognizing, celebrating, and promoting
the finest historic hotels in the United States of America. The National
Trust for Historic Preservation was chartered by U.S. Congress in 1949
and is a private 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. The National Trust for
Historic Preservation is leading the movement to save places where our
history happened. To be nominated and selected for membership in this prestigious
program, a hotel must be at least 50 years old; designated by the U.S.
Secretary of the Interior as a National Historic Landmark, or listed in
or eligible for listing in the National
Register of Historic Places; and recognized as having historical significance.
Of the more than 300 historic hotels inducted into Historic
Hotels of America from 45 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto
Rico, all historic hotels faithfully preserve their sense of authenticity,
sense of place, and architectural integrity.
To
learn more, please visit:
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Contact:
Katherine
Orr
Historic
Hotels of America | Historic Hotels Worldwide
Director,
Marketing Strategy and Communications
Tel:
202-772-8337
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