Hotel Histórico
En 1944, este hermoso monolito fue el principal centro de conferencias de Quebec durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Profundamente inspirado en la arquitectura de la Edad Media y el Renacimiento, el arquitecto neoyorquino Bruce Price diseñó el Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac para la ciudad de Quebec. Su nombre procede del flamante gobernador francés hacia 1672, Louis de Buade, el Fairmont presume de un fuerte orgullo francés y quebequés. En sus 300 años de historia y fama, a nadie sorprende que entre sus muros se hayan alojado personalidades tan notables como Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt, el rey Jorge VI, la reina Isabel y la princesa Grace de Mónaco.
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Resumen de reseñas relacionadas con la categoría 'Histórico'.Si busca un hotel que rezume historia y carácter, no puede equivocarse con Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac. Este emblemático hotel es una pieza importante de la historia de Quebec y sus huéspedes hablan maravillas de su impresionante arquitectura y de su condición de lugar de moda en la ciudad. El hotel tiene un ambiente extranjero, con el francés como lengua principal, lo que proporciona una experiencia auténtica en el corazón de Quebec. El edificio en sí es emblemático y encanta a los visitantes por su encanto decorativo e histórico. A pesar de su antigüedad, el hotel está bien conservado y mantenido, y los huéspedes destacan su limpieza y belleza. De hecho, muchos lo comparan con los castillos históricos de Europa. La ubicación no podría ser mejor y la reputación del hotel como icono es bien merecida. Si busca una auténtica experiencia histórica, no busque más allá del Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac.
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Cuestionario
Año de construcción: 1893
¿Cuál es la historia del inmueble?
For more than a century, Québec City’s Fairmont Le Château Frontenac has been the true-life castle of many people’s dreams… Everyone - young and old, music and film stars, sports personalities and political figures - enjoys discovering Fairmont Le Château Frontenac and delights in returning again and again.
After Les Châteaux Saint Louis and Haldimand, residences of the French and English governors for over two centuries, Cape Diamond had lost its prestige and successive plans for a grand hotel in Québec City never materialized.
By the late 19th century, William Van Horne, President of Canadian Pacific Railways (C.P.R.), had raised enough funds to build the ideal stopover for C.P.R. travellers, Le Château Frontenac. Van Horne retained the services of the New York architect Bruce Price, who had already designed Montréal’s Windsor Station and who, incidentally, was the father of the American writer Emily Post. Drawing on the architectural styles of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, Price immortalized the history of the two great powers that had occupied Québec City’s highest promontory.
On December 18, 1893 the first wing of Fairmont Le Château Frontenac was inaugurated. it had 170 rooms, 93 of which had bathrooms and fireplaces, remarkable luxuries at the time. The Hotel also included three magnificent suites—the Habitant, the Chinoise and the Hollandaise.
Several extensions followed until 1993 to build the hotel as it stands today with its 610 rooms, spread over 18 floors. The citadel wing was built in 1899, followed by the Mont-Carmel wing in 1908. The Saint-Louis wing and the central tower, whose look resembles the dungeons of medieval castles, were built between 1920 and 1924. Following a fire in 1926, an original section of the hotel was reconstructed from architect price's original plans. A new expansion phase was completed in June 1993 with the Claude-Pratte wing, which offers Château Frontenac guests an indoor pool, a fitness center and a magnificent outdoor terrace.
Today, Fairmont le Château Frontenac rises even more proudly on cap diamant, always ready to receive its guests from around the world in a pleasant, elegant and refined atmosphere.
¿Cuál era la época y/o el estilo arquitectónico en que se construyó el inmueble?
A blend of Middle Ages and Renaissance architecture.
The hotel was inspired by the chateaux of the Loire Valley.
¿Está el inmueble rodeado de otros edificios históricos?
Yes, it is in the heart of Old Quebec, a UNESCO world-heritage site.
¿Se han realizado obras de restauración?
Yes, in 2014
¿Hay algún elemento de especial importancia histórica en el edificio?
The hotel has many painted ceilings and carved elements.
¿Hay algún huésped o propietario anterior importante que merezca la pena mencionar?
A ROYAL CASTLE
The Château Frontenac is proud to have welcomed King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in 1939. A luxurious suite has also been designated in honor of the official visits of Queen Elizabeth II and his Excellency the Duke of Edinburgh. T-he Princess Grace of Monaco and Prince Rainier III occupied a suite of the Château during their presidency of the Queen’s Ball at the Quebec Winter Carnival in February 1969. For the highest honor of the Château Frontenac, many other royalty members have visited the Quebec castle, including Prince Andrew and Lady Sarah Ferguson of England.
FRONTENAC: HOST OF CRUCIAL POLITICAL MEETINGS
In August of 1943 and again in September of 1944, Le Château Frontenac became the center of the Quebec Conferences of World War II involving U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King. The heads of the Allies held talks that proved decisive to prosecuting the war to a successful conclusion. The Château has been the host of many other American and Canadian political figures over the years: Theodore Roosevelt, Dwight Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, Pierre Eliott Trudeau, Brian Mulroney, and many more. Fairmont Le Château Frontenac is also proud to have hosted some of the world’s most known political personalities including Charles De Gaulle, president of the French Republic, Chiang-Kai-Shek from China, and François Mitterrand, from France are some of the legendary guests of the Quebec castle.
¿Ha habido algún acontecimiento importante en el pasado en la propiedad?
FRONTENAC: HOST OF CRUCIAL POLITICAL MEETINGS
In August of 1943 and again in September of 1944, Le Château Frontenac became the center of the Quebec Conferences of World War II involving U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King. The heads of the Allies held talks that proved decisive to prosecuting the war to a successful conclusion.
¿Ha recibido el inmueble alguna certificación por su estatus histórico?
National Historic Site of Canada
Describiría su propiedad como (o ha sido en el pasado) a: Castillo
Palacio