Hotel Sainte Claire | |
| Location | San Jose, California |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 37°19′51.4″N121°53′15.67″W / 37.330944°N 121.8876861°W /37.330944; -121.8876861 |
| Built | 1926; 100 years ago (1926) |
| Architect | Weeks and Day |
| Architectural style | ItalianRenaissance Revival -Mediterranean Revival |
| NRHP reference No. | 80000865[1] |
| Added to NRHP | June 3, 1980 |

The Westin San Jose, housed in the historicSainte Claire Hotel, is a six-story landmarkhotel inDowntown San Jose, California, United States. Built in 1926, it is listed on theNational Register of Historic Places and one of the city's most recognizedarchitecturallandmarks.
The Sainte Claire was designed by the prominent San Francisco architectural firm ofWeeks and Day, well noted for both their theater and hotel designs in California. Interior similarities exist between San Jose's Sainte Claire and theMark Hopkins Hotel inSan Francisco.Renaissance Revival detailing is basically derived from theItalian Renaissance tradition, though there are several references to French, Spanish, andMediterranean Revival architecture.
Especially notable are thecoffered lobby ceilings designed by the firm for both buildings. The northwest corner is truncated and recessed, forming the corner entrance which faces the intersection of South Market and San Carlos Streets. North and west elevations meet the truncated corner at a 120-degree angle, thus framing the entrance. Tawnybrick sheathes the steel-and-concrete frame on floors two through six, and rusticated buff-colored stone faces the ground level. The three-part vertical composition includes the arcaded ground level, a shaft of four stories, and the six floors distinguished by paired windows set in arched frames. Denticularstringcourses separate the first and second floors, the third and fourth floors and the fifth and sixth floors.
The hotel lobby remains the most intact interior space within the building. The Patio Room, once the hallmark of the hotel, has been covered over, modernized and combined with the Empire Room. Originally, the open patio room was framed by aCorinthianarcade. A smallformal garden and fountain room, the Spartan Room on the second floor has also been modernized. Ceilings in the lobby, Spartan and Empire rooms were hand-painted, but alterations over the years have obliterated the original work. Wood details in the guest rooms and the ornate hand-carved wood doors leading to the retail areas are intact. Many of the rooms have original bathroom fixtures.
The Hotel Sainte Claire enjoyed the status of being the premiere grand hotel in the entire South Peninsula region, and the reputation of having the most elegant accommodations between San Francisco and Los Angeles.
The hotel was financed by noted realtor and developer T. S. Montgomery, a prominent citizen of San Jose largely responsible for much of the commercial development in the downtown. In addition to financing such an ambitious project, Montgomery donated to the city a parcel of land across from the hotel for the new civic auditorium, which stands today.
After its restoration in the 1990s, it was known as theHyatt Sainte Claire. In the 2000s, it was renamed theHotel Sainte Claire. It was renovated and rebrandedThe Westin San Jose on July 9, 2015.[2]
This article incorporatespublic domain material from websites or documents of theNational Park Service.