Cecil Hotel (Los Angeles)

Stay on Main

Stay on Main Logo

Cecil Hotel, photographed in 2013
Location within the Los Angeles metropolitan area
General information
Address 640 S. Main Street, Los Angeles, CA 90014
Coordinates 34°02′39.04″N 118°15′01.97″W / 34.0441778°N 118.2505472°W / 34.0441778; -118.2505472
Opening 1927[1]
Technical details
Floor count 19
Other information
Number of rooms 600
Website
http://stayonmain.com/

Stay on Main (formerly Cecil Hotel, Hotel Cecil and informally The Cecil) is a budget hotel in Downtown Los Angeles, located at 640 S. Main Street, opened in 1927[1] with 600 guest rooms (originally 700).

History

The Cecil was constructed in 1924 by hotelier William Banks Hanner, as a destination for business travelers and tourists. Built in the Art Deco style to the designs of Loy Lester Smith, the hotel cost $1 million to complete and boasted an opulent marble lobby with stained-glass windows, potted palms, and alabaster statuary. Hanner had invested confidently in the enterprise, in the knowledge that several similar hotels had been established elsewhere downtown, but he had been unable to predict that within five years of its opening, the United States would sink into the Great Depression. Main Street, road on which the hotel stood, quickly declined into the area known as Skid Row. As many as 10,000 homeless people lived within a four-mile radius. By the 1950, the hote had gained a reputation as a residence for transients.[2] A portion of the hotel was refurbished in 2007 after new owners took over.

In 2011, the Cecil Hotel was rebranded as "Stay on Main", and a new Website, stayonmain.com, was created. The old website thececilhotel.com continued online until the end of 2013.[3]

The hotel was sold to NYC hotelier Richard Born for $30 million in 2014, and another New-York based firm, Simon Baron Development, acquired a 99-year ground lease on the property. Matt Baron, president of Simon Baron, announced that whilst committed to the preservation of architecturally or historically significant components such as the grand lobby, his company planned to completely redevelop the interior and make good the "hodgepodge" work carried out there in more recent years[4]

In November 2016, the media reported that the Cecil Hotel could receive special recognition from the city of Los Angeles after the Cultural Heritage Commission voted unanimously to consider the downtown structure as a historic-cultural monument, a status that comes with certain local protections and the possibility of a property tax reduction. Its owner, Simon Baron Development, noted the building’s Beaux Arts exterior in its designation application, according to the L.A. Downtown News.[5]

On February 28th, 2017 the Cecil Hotel was granted historic status by the Los Angeles city council.[6]

Reputation for murder and suicide

In 2013, the Cecil Hotel (by then, re-branded as the "Stay on Main") became the focus of a 'viral' internet video, which showed surveillance footage of the bizarre behavior of a young Canadian student, Elisa Lam in one of the hotel's elevators, prior to her disappearance and the subsequent discovery of her body in a water supply cistern on the hotel roof.

This in turn led to a deeper interest in the hotel's past, which had long been rumored as a place of terrible happenings and recent research (carried out by trawling through the archives of the Los Angeles Times) has revealed a prolific history of suicide, murder or unexplained deaths at the hotel almost since it was first opened.

Los Angeles based author and journalist James T. Bartlett, who has catalogued his findings in a 2016 publication, "Gourmet Ghosts", acknowledges that, "with many thousands of guests per year, hotels are inevitably going to be the scene of accidents, natural deaths, suicides, crime and even pure bad luck". The Cecil however seems to be so disproportionately blighted by tragedy and violence - even when compared to other hotels in deprived parts of the city - that he writes: ".. it really is possible to wonder whether this building is cursed, or that there are negative forces inside" [7]

Elizabeth Short, victim of the Black Dahlia murder, the city's best-known unsolved killing, supposedly made the Cecil her last stop before her death in 1947, though such information is disputed.[8]

The Cecil is also notable for having been the reported residence for serial killers Richard Ramirez in 1985 and Jack Unterweger in 1991.[9][10]

Timeline of suicides, murder or unexplained deaths associated with the Cecil:

Thus it would appear that there have been at least 16 deaths at the Cecil, resulting from non-natural causes: either as a result of suicide, accident or murder. This excludes the case of Dorothy Sceiger (1940) who was reported to be in a critical condition after ingesting poison at the hotel, but with no further reportage as to whether she died as a result.

Cultural references

On 27 March 1987, the band U2 performed an impromptu live concert on the rooftop of a one-storey building on the corner of 7th and Main in Downtown Los Angeles, next door to the Cecil Hotel. The performance, with the hotel featuring as a backdrop, was filmed and commercially released as a music video for the release of the band's song "Where the Streets Have No Name".[18]

References

  1. 1 2 "Body found in LA hotel water tank may be missing Canadian tourist". Yahoo! News. 20 February 2013. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
  2. Condé Nast Traveler, article 14 December 2012
  3. Wallace-King, Donna (October 29, 2014). "True tales of terror to keep you up at night". KSLA News. Retrieved November 17, 2014.
  4. LAist.com: article by Juliet Bennett Rylah, 31 May 2016
  5. "Hotel Cecil could get historical, cultural status". 8 November 2016.
  6. "Downtown LA's notorious Hotel Cecil named historic-cultural monument - MyNewsLA.com". MyNewsLA.com. 28 February 2017. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 "James T. Bartlett, "Gourmet Ghosts 2: More Ghosts, Murders, Suicides and L.A. Weirdness", 2016. Research sourced from Los Angeles Times newspaper archives.
  8. lmharnisch (29 January 2014). "Black Dahlia and the Cecil Hotel — Another Good Story Ruined".
  9. Duke, Alan (22 February 2013). "Hotel with corpse in water tank has notorious past". CNN. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
  10. Hamilton, Denise (2007-12-10). "Serial Killer Central - Native Intelligence". Laobserved.com. Retrieved 2014-05-15.
  11. "Hot Case 1419". The Doe Network.
  12. "Body Found Inside Water Tank Atop Hotel Identified As Missing Canadian Tourist". CBS Los Angeles. February 19, 2013. Retrieved November 17, 2014.
  13. "'We thought the water tasted funny': Los Angeles hotel guests drank and bathed in water from tank where dead Canadian tourist decomposed for two weeks". Daily Mail UK. February 20, 2013.
  14. Melissa Pamer and Lolita Lopez (20 February 2013). "Body Found in Water Tank at Hotel is Missing Canadian Tourist: LAPD". NBC 4 Southern California.
  15. William M. Welch (2013-06-21). "Elisa Lam's death ruled accidental". USA Today.
  16. Nair, Drishya (June 21, 2013). "Elisa Lam Death: Canadian Tourist's death an accident, rules LA coroner's office". International Business Times.
  17. Gale Holland, Los Angeles Times, 13 June 2015.
  18. 'Flashback Monday: U2 performs on a roof-top in down-town L.A.', LAist.com, 23 September 2013, http://laist.com/2013/09/23/flashback_monday_u2_performs_on_a_r.php
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