Grand Hotel (Scarborough)

The Grand Hotel at Scarborough
Detail of one of the hotel's four towers
The hotel's blue plaques

The Grand Hotel is a large hotel in Scarborough, England, overlooking the town's South Bay. It is now a Grade II* listed building that is owned by Britannia Hotels, and has undergone a £7 million refurbishment.[1]

The hotel was designed by the Hull architect Cuthbert Brodrick,[2] who was better known as the designer of several Leeds buildings, and when completed in 1867 was one of the largest hotels in the world, as well as one of the first giant purpose-built hotels in Europe. The hotel's distinctive yellow brickwork was made locally in Hunmanby.

The building is designed around the theme of time: four towers to represent the seasons, 12 floors for the months of the year, 52 chimneys symbolise the weeks, and originally there were 365 bedrooms, one for each day of the year. The hotel itself is in the shape of a 'V' in honour of Queen Victoria. The hotel's heyday was arguably during Victorian times, when wealthy holidaymakers made up the establishment's clientele. As Scarborough was a famous spa town, the building's baths originally included an extra pair of taps, so guests could wash in seawater as well as fresh.[3]

The hotel was badly damaged when the German Navy bombarded the town in 1914.

Nowadays, the hotel caters towards the budget end of the spectrum. The hotel was bought by Butlins, the company better-known for its holiday camps, in 1978, and run as an inexpensive choice of accommodation until it was sold to Britannia in 1998. Three blue plaques outside mark where the novelist Anne Brontë died in 1849, the contribution of the RAF trainees stationed at the hotel during the Second World War, and the original opening of the building.

Controversy

References

  1. "The Grand Hotel, Scarborough". Britannia Hotel. Retrieved 16 December 2006.
  2. "Britain's Best Breaks". Retrieved 16 December 2006.
  3. "Walk through Time". BBC North Yorkshire. Retrieved 16 December 2006.
  4. 1 2 "Hotel May Reopen Tomorrow after Outbreaks of Sickness". Yorkshire Post. 22 December 2004. Retrieved 16 December 2006.
  5. "Hotel not-so-Grand". BBC Inside Out. Retrieved 16 December 2006.
  6. "Hotel claims on TV are 'sensationalist". Scarborough Evening News. 14 February 2005. Retrieved 3 May 2007.
  7. "Bleach Contaminated Hotel's Drinking Water". Chartered Institute of Environmental Health. Retrieved 16 December 2006.
  8. "Hotel bid to evict". Scarborough Evening News. 22 September 2006. Retrieved 1 April 2007.
  9. "Hotel praised for speedy reaction to sickness bug". Scarborough Evening News. 27 March 2007. Retrieved 3 May 2007.
  10. "Scarborough Grand Hotel vomiting bug investigated". BBC News. 7 June 2011. Retrieved 9 June 2011.

External links

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Coordinates: 54°16′50″N 0°23′53″W / 54.28050°N 0.39800°W / 54.28050; -0.39800

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