Legendary Hotel Celebrates 100 Years
Published: June 20, 2013 (Issue # 1764)
The
iconic Hotel Astoria lived up to its lavish reputation by celebrating
its centennial on Tuesday with a grand party of nearly 500 guests,
hosted by Sir Rocco Forte, co-owner, chairman and managing director of
The Rocco Forte Collection.
Designed
by Fyodor Lidval and regarded as an architectural gem, the Astoria has
always belonged to the cohort of the most prestigious and expensive. On
December 23, 1912, Lidval opened the luxurious hotel, named in honor of
the luxury New York hoteliers, the Astor brothers.
Located
on the corner of St. Isaac’s Square and Bolshaya Morskaya Ulitsa, the
facade of the hotel was decorated with exquisite medallions, masks and
garlands lining the gray and pink granite of the building. Surprisingly,
after all the events that followed during that same century, the hotel
managed to preserve its historic appearance with little change — a rare
and remarkable feat for a St. Petersburg building of this magnitude. It
endured events such as the 1917 Bolshevik revolution, two world wars,
Perestroika and the eventual collapse of the Soviet Union.
With ten
elevators, an electric light system for calling servants, city
telephone lines, an automated vacuuming system, steam-driven central
heating, as well as 350 rooms soundproofed with cork insulation, Hotel
Astoria immediately became a leader and model for the latest
technological advances in luxury accommodation.
The
hotel also included a grand restaurant that catered for up to 200 people
which included a mahogany-paneled hall. From the restaurant, guests
could access the hotel’s Winter Garden atrium and a banquet hall. This
grand hall was decorated with brass chandeliers in Art Deco style. In
the restaurant and hotel, the dishes used were from Bauscher, a German
porcelain manufacturer, silverware was sourced from the French brand
Christofle and crystal from a Saint-Louis manufactory in Lorraine.
From the
first months of World War I, Hotel Astoria became a favorite abode for
various allied missions and individual officers from England and France.
After the February Revolution, the hotel become the Petrograd military
hotel. Then in September 1918, the hotel was nationalized and became the
first house of the Petrograd Soviet. Afterwards, the hotel hosted
mostly foreign tourists.
During
its long history, the Astoria has played host to many important and
famous people including: Vladimir Lenin, Feodor Chaliapin, Isadora
Duncan, H.G. Wells, Mikhail Bulgakov and Alexander Vertinsky. According
to the hotel’s website, even Rasputin spent the night here in the
company of a lady whose husband was “something in the government.” In
more recent history, Margaret Thatcher, Elton John, Jean-Paul Gaultier,
Madonna, George Bush, Jacques Chirac and many others have been guests of
the hotel. In fact, the names of all famous guests can be read on
gilded plaques near the elevators.
Today,
the Astoria is the only hotel in Russia that is part of a collection of
luxury hotels founded by British hotelier Sir Rocco Forte. Almost $20
million was spent on renovations when Forte took over the management in
1997, which was completed under the direction of Olga Polizzi, Director
of Design Rocco Forte Hotels and Forte’s sister.
For its
100th anniversary, the hotel upgraded both its suites as well as
unveiling a 3,500 square foot Tsar Suite which includes a large bedroom
with a double walk-in wardrobe, a marble bathroom with a double shower, a
lounge overlooking St Isaac’s Square, a gym with a dedicated treatment
area, a library stocked with over 300 Russian classics, a fully-equipped
kitchen and bar area as well as a dining room that can seat up to 16
guests.
At
Tuesday’s birthday event, guests included artistic power couple composer
Rodion Shchedrin and legendary ballet dancer Maya Plisetskaya.
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