Rossiya Hotel

Rossiya Hotel in 2004
Demolition of Rossiya, February 3, 2007

The Rossiya Hotel (Russian: Гостиница «Россия»), also known as Russia Hotel, was a large five-star international hotel built in Moscow from 1964 until 1967 at the order of the Soviet government. Construction used the existing foundations of a cancelled skyscraper project, the Zaryadye Administrative Building, which would have been the eighth of what is now referred to as the "Seven Sisters". The architect was Dmitry Chechulin.

Large portions of a historic district of Moscow, known as Zaryadye, were demolished in the 1940s for the original project. It was registered in the Guinness Book of Records as the largest hotel in the world until it was surpassed by the Excalibur in Las Vegas, Nevada in 1990. It remained the largest hotel in Europe until its 2006 closure.

The 21-storey Rossiya had 3,200 rooms, 245 half suites, a post office, a health club, a nightclub, a movie theater and a barber shop, a police station with jail cells behind unmarked black doors in proximity to the barber shop, as well as the 2500-seat State Central Concert Hall. The building was capable of accommodating over 4,000 guests. Most of the rooms were 11 square metres (120 sq ft). The hotel was adjacent to Red Square, its 21-storey tower looming over the Kremlin walls and the cupolas of Saint Basil's Cathedral.

Fire

On February 25, 1977, a huge fire in the building killed 42 and injured 50.[1]

Demolition

The Rossiya Hotel officially closed its doors on January 1, 2006. Demolition of the building began in March 2006 for an entertainment complex loosely based on the design of the old Zaryadye district.[1][2] The project is being overseen by British architect Sir Norman Foster and includes plans for a new, two thousand room hotel with apartments and a parking garage.[3] In October 2006 the Supreme Arbitration Court has cancelled the results of a tender to reconstruct the Rossiya hotel near the Kremlin.[4]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Osipovich, Alexander. "Backstory: Do svidaniya, Rossiya!". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 21 December 2011.
  2. BBC (10 August 2004). "Moscow to pull down eyesore hotel". BBC News. Retrieved 21 December 2011.
  3. Sky's the limit for booming Moscow (Times Online)
  4. "Court Cancels Rossiya Rebuilding Contract". Financial Times Ltd. 26 October 2006.

External links

Coordinates: 55°45′05″N 37°37′44″E / 55.75139°N 37.62889°E