Esso Motor Hotel
Native name | Motorby |
---|---|
Founded | 1963Laxå, Sweden | in
Services | Rest stops for travelers by car |
Esso Motor Hotel was a Swedish subsidiary of the American oil company Esso, for running hotels in Europe.
History
In the 1960s, with the rise of the numbers of travelers by car, the Scandinavian governments asked for dormitories for motorists at the service stations along the highways.
Until the splitting at the beginning of 1973, 59 Esso Motor Hotels were opened:[3] 27 in Sweden, 3 in Norway, 2 in Denmark, 3 in the Netherlands, 3 in Italy, 8 in the United Kingdom (notably at Wembley Park, Wembley), 1 in Austria, 10 in Germany and 2 in Belgium. The chain had an internal reservation system by which the customer could book the Esso Motor Hotel for the next stage of his journey. The hotels outside Scandinavia were managed by Esso Motor Hotel inc. in London.
The Esso Route
After the first three motor hotels in Sweden expansion abroad followed in 1965. The Scandinavian holidaymaker should be able to drive to the Italian coast using Esso Motor Hotels during the journey. The Hotels were situated in a one-day driving distance from each other. The northern end of this "Esso route" was Mölndal[4] in Sweden which opened in 1966, the southern end was Brescia in Italy which opened in 1965. The Swedish-Danish bordercrossing was made by ferry at Helsingborg, from Denmark to Germany the route followed the, then new, Vogelfluglinie. In Germany the HaFraBa autobahn route was chosen and south of Basel the route of the present E25 through Switzerland, France and the new Mont Blanc Tunnel. In Italy Brescia was reached through Valle d'Aosta and the Autostrada Serenissima. The intermediate hotels were situated in Hannover, Courmayeur,[5] Freiburg and Glostrup (Copenhagen). From Brescia the tourists could follow their way to the various resorts on the Adriatic in Italy as well as in Yugoslavia. More differentiation was created in 1967 by two more Hotels, Heidelberg and Sindelfingen in the south of Germany. In Sweden the hotels at Nörrköping and Jönköping were opened in 1967 too. These two enabled the travellers from and to Stockholm to follow the direct route from Stockholm to Helsingborg instead of the longer one via Laxå and Mölndal. In 1969 the southern end shifted to Florence, but Esso's Italian partner Pavesi built five hotels between Florence and Sicily. From the initial plan for the route from Trondheim in the North to Sicily in the South only the hotel in Trondheim was added afterwards.
Expansion
Fourteen hotels were in use in February 1968,
New owners
The saturation of the hotel market in the European cities and the need for cash to finance the oil exploration did Esso decide to sell the hotels outside of Scandinavia.
Crest
The hotel in Freiburg was sold, the nine remaining German and the only Austrian Hotel were leased to Crest Hotels at the end of 1972. The other hotels outside Scandinavia, including the ninth British hotel at that time under construction at Runcorn,[12] were sold to Crest Hotels as part of the same deal. From 1976 on the 17 hotels bought by Crest were rebranded as EuroCrest Hotel. In 1976 Crest wanted to double the number of hotels in Germany and bought the leased hotels in Germany and Austria[13] that were rebranded as Eurocrest as well. Eventually Crest sold all its "Esso Motor Hotels" to other hotel chains.
After the deal with Crest at the end of 1972, 32 hotels remained in Scandinavia, 27 of them in Sweden.
The Danish hotels were sold as well in the seventies, in 1974 Lego bought the hotel in Billund renaming it in Vis-a-Vis Hotel and later on Hotel Legoland. In 1979 the Glostrup hotel changed to Glostrup Park Hotel. Meanwhile, the expansion in Sweden and Norway continued from 28 in Sweden in 1974 to 44 in October 1976.[14] Besides the Esso Motor Hotels the chain created parallel markets of hotels, without motorist services, in cities branded as Esso Scandic and Esso Motels, such as Örkelljunga and Vara, with minimized services. Esso also operated roadside restaurants branded as Taverna. In 1977 Esso Motor Hotels owned 10% of the hotelcapacity in Sweden but had a 25% marketshare. In 1983 Esso decided to leave the hotel business. At that time 41 Esso Motor Hotels, 8 Esso Scandic Hotels and 6 Esso Motels were operated in Sweden. The locations in Sweden and Norway were sold to a group of investors. After the detachment from the Esso-company in 1984 the Hotel-chain changed its name in Scandic Hotels.
Esso Motor Hotels
See also
- List of hotels
- List of motels
Notes
- ^ Der Spiegel, 1 Jan. 1973, page 33
- ^ Grandprix 63. "Motorby". Grandprix63.blogspot.nl. Retrieved 2013-10-15.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Der Spiegel, 1 Jan. 1973, page 32
- ^ "Blogger".
- ^ Aruba Esso News, 7 Oct. 1966
- ^ AR-Zeitung nr. 8/1968, 22 Feb. 1968 page 37
- ^ Die Zeit 1967 nr.40, 6 Oct. 1967 "Totale Selbstbedienung"
- ^ Concrete Quarterly, edition 79, Oct-Dec 1968, Londen Dec. 1968
- ^ Glasgow Herald, 22 May 1970
- ^ Glasgow Herald, 22 Nov. 1972
- ^ Die Zeit 1972 nr.17, 28 Apr. 1972, "Kein Geld für deutsche Betten"
- ^ Glasgow Herald, 20 Feb. 1973
- ^ Die Zeit 1976 nr.50, 3 Dec. 1976, "Goldene Crest Zeiten"
- ^ Die Zeit 1976 nr.43, 15 Oct. 1976, "Schweden bittet sich billig an"
- ^ "Esso". Farbor-Sid. Archived from the original on 2012-11-07. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
References
- 115 Anni Esso Italiana 1891-2006, Rome 2006