Hyatt Regency Chennai | |
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Location | India |
Address | 365, Anna Salai, Teynampet Chennai, Tamil Nadu |
Hotel chain | Global Hyatt Corporation |
Opening date | 2011 |
Architect | P.G. Patki Associates[1] |
Management | Hyatt Hotels Corporation |
Rooms | 329 |
Total floor area | 800,000 sq ft (74,000 m2) |
Floors | 18 |
Total height | Total: 71 m (233 ft)[2] Top floor: 62.76 m (205.9 ft)[1] |
Website | chennai.regency.hyatt.com |
References: [3] |
Hyatt Regency Chennai is a five-star luxury hotel located on Anna Salai at Teynampet in Chennai, India. Designed in 1986, the construction of the hotel started in the 1990s. However, the completion was delayed for nearly two decades and the hotel was opened on 10 August 2011 at a cost of 5,500 million. Built on an 83-ground land, it is the first Hyatt hotel in South India and has 327 rooms.[2]
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From a map of the city in 1942, the property can be traced back to a house called "Teynampet Villa", a government property allotted to P.S. Viswanatha Iyer, ICS in the late 1940s. The area was then occupied by "Abbotsbury", a community hall, in the 1950s, which, soon after becoming the Tarapore property, was gifted to the Sai Baba of Puttaparthi, who later sold it to Magunta Subbarami Reddy, the founder of the Balaji Group of Hotels.[4] The structure was demolished to build a luxury hotel with a helipad with about 320 rooms and 250,000 sq ft of commercial space. With the collaboration of the Oberoi Group of Hotels, Balaji Group of Hotels started building the structure in 1989 at a cost of 2,900 million.[5][6] However, after the murder of Magunta Subbarami Reddy,[7] the group was caught in a financial crisis and the work on the project, initially named Magunta Oberoi, ceased in 2000 when about 75 percent of the work was complete. Consequently, the Oberois withdrew from the project the same year and it could not be completed in time. In 2006, the unfinished property was acquired by Lalit Suri, for 3,900 million, when the civil structure was almost 80 percent complete.[8] After the death of Lalit Suri, Robust Hotels purchased the unfinished hotel development from IFCI and TFCI in mid-2007 and appointed Confluence, an international consultancy firm, to manage the completion of the project, which started remodelling the structure in January 2008 and completed in February 2011.[9] The retail space was bought from ICICI by Ramee Guestline Hotels.[10] With the acquisition by the Hyatt Group, the hotel was opened as Hyatt Regency Chennai on 10 August 2011.
The hotel has a total of 327 rooms and covers about 600,000 sq ft[10] with more than 20,000 sq ft (1,900 sq m) of versatile convention and event space and a sun-filled atrium lobby with water features and green landscaping. It also has a fully equipped fitness centre, the Chic Lobby Lounge, Biscotti—the hotel's gourmet deli, Spice Market—the all-day-dining buffet restaurant and Stix serving authentic Chinese cuisine from the Sichuan region. The Spice Market has five interactive kitchens across a space of over 9,000 sq ft (842 sq m). Each of the five live kitchens specialises in a specific culinary genre within the Indian Comfort food landscape. The Lobby Lounge, the 24-hour lounge, is set amidst the indoor green landscaping under the hotel atrium. The hotel also has an outdoor pool which overlooks the city and is set amidst custom-made art installations and lush landscaping. Additional hotel services and amenities include Regency Club, the Spa, the hotel's premium suites, speciality restaurant and a bar.[11]
The hotel also houses one of the largest collections of publicly displayed art installations in the country created by more than 40 national and international artists.[12]
The first three floors, including half the ground floor and the first floor and the whole of the second floor, of the hotel building has been developed as a boutique shopping mall named as the Ramee Mall developed by Ramani Hotels Ltd at a cost of 1,200 million. Designed by architect P.G. Patki, the mall has a gross leasable area of 150,000 sq ft for 35 stores with a floor-to-floor height of 4.2 m and has a parking provision for 200 four-wheelers and 350 two-wheelers. The mall has 2 pair of escalators and 4 passenger elevators, in addition to 2 separate service elevators for retail.
A third of the retail space (50,000 sq ft) has been leased out to Shoppers Stop and another 15,000 sq ft has been occupied by a book store. Apart from the large-format stores, there are about 30 vanilla stores—small shops each occupying less than 1,000 sq ft, and a 15,000 sq ft food court in the mall[10], in addition to a fine dining restaurant, a spa and a salon.[13]