Adapted Accommodation

 

All Accommodari properties are converted 

from other heritage building types.

Introduction

History Overview

Global Presence

 Australia

Spain’s Paradors

 

 

Intro & Overview

 

 

Adapted accommodation is predominantly (but not exclusively) an urban phenomenon 

which is evident in all types of accommodation,  in all categories (luxury to budget) 

and in accommodation properties serving all market sectors 

(corporate, leisure, “MICE”, Education & government business). 

 

 

History Overview

 

Adapted accommodation [AA]  has played a significant role in the history of 

visitor accommodation globally and was evident as early as 

Pompeii’s House of Sallust which was converted from a residence to a grand hospitium. [DeFelice] 

 

From the 13thcentury, many manor houses in England became inns, and during 

the Tudor period following the Reformation, many monastic houses 

were converted to Kings Head Inns. [Maskell] 

 

 “Hotel” was first used in England for the 1766 conversion of 1630’s 

portico houses in Covent Garden. [Sandoval-Strausz] 

 

Other early examples of English adapted hotels include

 

The Windmill 

converted from a synagogue,  friar’s quarters, 

nobleman’s house, & merchant’s establishment

 

The Goose & Gridiron 

from a Music house

 

The Rainbow Tavern 

from a barber’s shop

 

The Hummum in Covent Garden 

from a hot bathing house. [Shelley] 

 

Following the decline of the continental aristocracy during the 19th century, 

many of their palaces were converted to hotels, [Towner]  

one famous example being the Royal Danieli in Venice converted

 in 1822 from a 14th C palace. [Pevsner]

 

Adapted accommodation played a prominent role in the American 

colonial period, as almost every community had a public house 

(inn, tavern or ordinairewith most converted from residences eg 

 

 Fraunces Tavern in NYC [Sandoval-Strausz] 

and continued with the conversion of residences, schools & 

other older buildings [Sandoval-Strausz]] such as the

 

America Hotel (1827) on Broadway 

converted in 1827 from a town-house.[ Williamson]

 

Adapted hotels were created to serve International exhibitions such as 

when Thomas Cook converted the Mechanic’s Home into a 1,000-people 

dormitory–style hotel for London 1851 and converted a large building into basic B&B 

and a furnished house into luxury suites for Paris 1867. 

 

A famous adapted hotel is the Ritz Paris of 1898, 

converted from a row of late 17th century townhouses. [Withey] 

 

San Francisco rebuilt after the 1906 fire, including 6 apartment buildings 

quickly converted to hotels. [Williamson]

 

 

 

 

 

Global Presence

 

 

A flavour of the extraordinary diversity of the thousands of adapted accommodation 

properties throughout the world is evidenced by  a selection below. 

 

o   Four Seasons Istanbul 

converted from a 1918 Turkish prison. [Four Seasons] 

 

o   Hotel Fort Canning Singapore 

converted from a 1926 former British military command 

post [Hotel Fort Canning]

 

o   Waldorf Astoria on the Bund Shanghai 

converted from the 1911 neo-classical Shanghai Club. 

[Waldorf-Asroria Hotels & Resorts]

 

o   Fullerton Hotel Singapore 

converted from the 1928  Singapore GPO (which also 

housed the Singapore Exchange, Governor and other offices)

the 1933 Clifford Pier, the 1941 Art Deco Waterboat House and 

the 1969 Customs Police Harbour offices. [Fullerton Singapore]

 

o   Waterhouse South Bund Shanghai 

converted from a 1930s Japanese Army 

HQ building [Architizer]

 

o   TWA Hotel New York 

converted from the 1962 TWA 

flight centre  [Castañeda and Xinying]

 

o   Amerikanlinjen Hotel Oslo 

converted from a 1910s industrial 

building [Castañeda and Xinying]

 

o   Ace Hotel Kyoto 

converted from the 1920 Central 

Telephone Office [Castañeda and Xinying]

 

o   Hoxton LA 

converted from an early 20th Century 

Railway Authority HQ [Castañeda and Xinying]

 

La Purificadora Hotel Puebla Mexico 

converted from a  late 19th century ice factory. 

[ La Purificadora]

 

Tai O Heritage Hotel Hong Kong 

converted from a 1902 marine 

police station. [ Tai O Heritage Hotel]

 

 

Australia

 

 

Australia’s early colonial period witnessed a similar phenomenon to America as many of the 

early inns were Adaptive reuse conversions from residences. [Kirkby, Luckins, and McConville] 

 

Three of the early “fashionable” hotels in Sydney were adapted  [McGuire] 

 

The Sydney Hotel and Coffee House 

at the SE corner of George & Grosvenor Streets 

converted in 1820 from the old residence of the Lieutenant-Governor

 

Cumming’s Hotel 

on Church Hill (subsequently Petty’s Hotel) 

converted in 1823 from a Presbyterian minister’s manse

 

Royal Hotel & associated playhouse 

converted in 1829 from a warehouse and 

windmill designed by Francis Greenway 

and built only 2 years earlier. [McGuire]

 

Early adapted accommodation was also evident in other parts of Australia incl

 

Jolly Hatter’s Inn Hobart 

converted from a hat factory in 1833. 

[Kirkby, Luckins, and McConville] 

 

Hydro at Leeton 

adapted from an Immigration Office. [McGuire] 

 

New Norcia Hotel WA

formerly an 1840s Benedictine Mission 

for aborigines. [Davidson and Spearritt]

 

Rottnest Island accommodation  

converted between the wars from an aboriginal 

prison, penal settlement, prisoner of war camp 

& a boy’s reformatory. [Davidson and Spearritt,]

 

The Lord Nelson in Sydney’s Miller’s Point  

is Australia’s oldest continually operating hotel 

and Australia’s oldest existing adaptive reuse hotel, 

having been converted in 1842 from a residence originally built 

in 1836. [NSW Government Office of Environment & Heritage]

 

The first hotel in Sydney’s Balmain in 1842 

was a conversion of the first harbor-master’s residence 

 [Kirkby, Luckins, and McConville] 

 

The Star Hotel in Macquarie Place 

was converted from Simeon Lord’s home, [McGuire]

 

The Bull & Mouth Mosman 

was originally a whaling base.[McGuire] 

 

In 1843, the Pitt St house of John Hosking, Sydney’s first mayor, 

was converted to the Metropolitan Hotel while Mayor Palmer owned the 

Liverpool Arms at the SE corner of King & Pitt Streets, 

which was converted from a watch-house. 

 

The hotels of the mid 19th century served countless purposes including 

clubs, marts, exchanges, political forums, council chambers, town halls, 

coffee-houses, tea-rooms, and academies.[McGuire] 

 

Adapted accommodation was less prevalent during the 

modernist period of the 1950s and 1960s. 

 

The unfortunate legacy of retaining the façade only of heritage hotels 

(& other buildings) during the 1970s and 1980s, was part of the impetus for 

preservation legislation and many hotels then embraced heritage with a 

“progress through preservation” attitude. [Kirkby, Luckins, and McConville] 

 

The 1980s witnessed the re-emergence of adapted Hotels in Sydney [Holliday]

 

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 There were also many others elsewhere in Australia in this period –

 

The Venetian Gothic-style Menzies Rialto 

(now InterContinental) Melbourne 

transformed from 1861 wool stores, offices & residences 

[InterContinental Hotels & Resorts]

 

The Italian renaissance-style Treasury Casino & Hotel Brisbane 

converted from the 1889 Queensland Government 

administration buildings [Brisbane History]

 

Adelphi Melbourne 

converted from a 1938 rag-trade warehouse [Wikipedia]

 

The neo-baroque Alto Melbourne 

converted from the 1916 Unity Hall used by the 

Australian Railways Union [Heritage Council, Victoria]

 

The Edwardian Baroque Rendezvous Flinders St Hotel 

converted from the 1913 Commercial Travellers Association 

Building [Heritage Council, Victoria]