Empire Landmark Hotel
Empire Landmark Hotel | |
---|---|
General information | |
Status | Demolished |
Type | Hotel |
Architectural style | Modern, Brutalism |
Location | Vancouver, British Columbia |
Coordinates | 49°17′17″N 123°07′51″W / 49.28806°N 123.13083°W |
Opening | January 18, 1974 |
Closed | September 30, 2017 |
Demolished | March 2018-May 2019 |
Height | |
Architectural | 120.1 m (394.0 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 42 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Lort and Lort |
Developer | Ben Wosk |
Main contractor | Smith Brothers and Wilson |
Other information | |
Number of rooms | 357 |
Number of restaurants | 1 |
Website | |
Official Site |
The Empire Landmark Hotel, often referred to by its original name, the Sheraton Landmark, was the tallest hotel in
The skyscraper is the tallest voluntarily demolished building in Canada, overtaking the 88 m (289 ft) tall Old Toronto Star Building that was demolished in 1972.
History
The Sheraton-Landmark Hotel was designed in the then-popular
The hotel suffered a fire in 1976 that sent 25 people to the hospital. Wosk sold the Sheraton Landmark, along with two other local Sheratons he owned (the Sheraton Plaza 500 and the Sheraton Villa Inn in Burnaby) to the Dallas-based Southmark Corp. in 1986 for $48.5 million. Southmark sold the three hotels to Los Angeles-based Daniel Lee two years later, for $82 million. Lee lost the Sheraton Landmark to his creditors, and they sold it to Hong Kong-based Asia Standard International Group in 1997 for $57.75 million. The new owners dropped the Sheraton franchise and renamed the hotel the Empire Landmark Hotel.[3]
Demolition
Due to economic pressures as a result of rising property values within downtown Vancouver,[4] combined with the building's historically unpopular brutalist architecture[5] and relatively small floor space being prohibitive to redevelopment of the original tower into anything but another hotel,[6] it was decided to demolish the Empire Landmark Hotel and redevelop the site.
The hotel and its restaurant closed on September 30, 2017 and the building was demolished, floor by floor, over a period of over a year, beginning in March 2018 and ending in May 2019.[7]
The building will be replaced by two shorter condominium towers, at 31 and 32 storeys, with 237 market condos, 63 social housing units, and retail and office space on the bottom three floors.[8] The development is called Landmark On Robson and is said to help "breathe new life into the neighbourhood".[9]
See also
References
- ^ "Downtown Vancouver Landmark prepares to stop its slow spin".
- ^ "Downtown Vancouver Landmark prepares to stop its slow spin".
- ^ "Downtown Vancouver Landmark prepares to stop its slow spin".
- ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2019-08-25.
- ^ Eldredge, Barbara (2017-09-28). "Brutalist landmark in Vancouver set to be demolished for luxury apartment towers". Curbed. Retrieved 2019-08-25.
- ^ Griffin, Kevin (2018-07-07). "Vancouver: Empire Landmark Hotel being slowly erased from city skyline". Retrieved 2019-08-25.
- ^ Mooney, Harrison (February 28, 2018). "Vancouver's Empire Landmark Hotel begins 'quiet' demolition in March". Vancouver Sun. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
- ^ "Vancouver's Empire Landmark hotel gets ready to say goodbye | CBC News".
- ^ "Demolition Continues at Landmark on Robson | SkyriseVancouver". vancouver.skyrisecities.com. Retrieved 2019-08-25.