Lord Nelson Hotel
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Lord Nelson Hotel & Suites | |
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General information | |
Location | 1515 South Park St, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3J 2L2 |
Coordinates | 44°38′33.72″N 63°34′46.56″W / 44.6427000°N 63.5796000°W |
Construction started | 21 October 1927 |
Opening | 23 October 1928 |
Owner | Universal Realty Group |
Height | 32.68 m (107.2 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 9 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | O. C. Gross |
Developer | H.L. Stevens & Company |
Website | |
lordnelsonhotel |
The Lord Nelson Hotel & Suites, commonly referred to as the Lord Nelson Hotel, is a
History
On Friday, October 21, 1927, construction on the Lord Nelson Hotel began at the corner of Spring Garden Road and South Park Street, on the old Dwyer property. The turning of the first sod was done by Mayor Kenny of Halifax, who was supported by a group of friends and well-wishers. The Lord Nelson Hotel opened for business on October 23, 1928. The hotel has changed hands over the years and is now privately owned.
The task of supervising the construction was assumed by O.C. Gross, architect, with construction carried out by H.L. Stevens & Co. of New York and Toronto, for Canadian Pacific Railways, which had already constructed a chain of hotels in the Annapolis Valley for its subsidiary, the Dominion Atlantic Railway.[2] The Stevens company had building experience in frosty winter weather and at night heated the building area that had just been completed with small stoves, which kept the frost from getting into the finished walls. The building has a reinforced concrete foundation, topped with a course of granite to support the brick walls.
The hotels closest in style to the Lord Nelson Hotel at the time of construction was the Van Curler Hotel at
The main entrance to the hotel is on South Park Street and originally featured a semi-circular driveway with trees and shrubs. The Georgian style has been incorporated in the construction of the hotel, featuring special decorations pertaining to Lord Nelson. From the lobby a large mural of Nelson addressing his men on the deck of his flagship
The original section of the hotel had seven stories with 200 rooms. There have since been two additions, and the hotel now features 260 rooms. The 8th and the 9th floors were added in 1966, and the North Tower section was added in 1975. The hotel helped make Spring Garden Road into a major shopping district. Spring Garden Road shops at the time of construction simply consisted of a beauty shop, a barber shop, and a large grill. A drugstore now occupies the space that was once the grill.
Cultural impact
The Lord Nelson Hotel was named after England's greatest naval hero, Horatio Nelson. A young student, Oswald Schenk, won a contest for suggesting the name of the hotel, which opened during the early days of radio. Its height made CHNS, which began in 1926, move its broadcast studio from the old Carleton Hotel to the roof of the new Lord Nelson in 1928.[3][4] It inspired a critically-acclaimed novel by Ray Smith, Lord Nelson Tavern, first published in 1974.[5] The Lord Nelson also inspired the fictional hotel featured in the award-winning 1998 novel The Museum Guard by Howard Norman. Famous guests who have stayed at the Lord Nelson Hotel include the Rolling Stones, Anne Murray, Keith Urban, the White Stripes, Jerry Seinfeld, Ozzy Osbourne, Paul McCartney, and Willem Dafoe.
References
- ^ *"Lord Nelson Hotel", Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Institute
- ^ "Dominion Atlantic Hotels, Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Institute
- ^ William March, 1986, Red Line: The Chronicle-Herald and The Mail-Star 1875-1954, Halifax: Chronicle Agencies Limited, p. 216
- ^ Nova Scotia Archives, Broadcasting from the Lord Nelson hotel, 1928
- ^ Biblioasis, Lord Nelson Tavern