| Ritz-Carlton Hotel | |
|---|---|
The Ritz-Carlton in 1911 | |
![]() Present-day site of the building | |
| General information | |
| Architectural style | Neoclassical |
| Location | Manhattan,New York City |
| Coordinates | 40°45′20″N73°58′39″W / 40.755630°N 73.977580°W /40.755630; -73.977580 |
| Opened | 1911 |
| Demolished | 1951 |
| Owner | The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company |
TheRitz-Carlton Hotel was a luxury hotel inNew York City, owned bythe Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company. It was located at 46th Street andMadison Avenue inMidtown Manhattan until its demolition in 1951.
In 1898,César Ritz founded theRitz-Carlton Hotel Company with the first location opening inParis.[1]
The Ritz-Carlton Investing Company was established by Albert Keller, who bought and franchised the name in the United States. The New York hotel opened in 1911; it was the first Ritz-Carlton Hotel in the U.S.[2]
The opening of the New York location was followed by expansion intoPhiladelphia andAtlantic City. In the early 1920s, there were 15 Ritz-Carlton hotels worldwide. Following its growth, the Ritz Carlton chain in the United States experienced a rapid decline. The Philadelphia hotel was converted into an office building and the Atlantic City hotel was sold.[3] In 1951, the New York hotel was demolished to make way for an office building,[4] leaving only theBoston location.[5]
In 1982, Blakely licensed the Ritz-Carlton name to hotelier John Bennett Coleman for two hotels Coleman was renovating,The Fairfax in Washington, D.C., and the Navarro at 112 (now 110)Central Park South in New York City.[6][7] Coleman renamed them the Ritz-Carlton Washington, D.C., and the Ritz-Carlton New York in April 1982.[8] The two hotels eventually joined the modern chain that would be founded a few years later. Ritz-Carlton's management of the New York hotel ended in 1997, with the hotel joining the Sheraton chain and becoming a Westin, and later an InterContinental. The building was converted to a luxuryco-op in 2006.
In 1999 Ritz-Carlton acquired the formerHotel St. Moritz in New York City.[9] It was extensively renovated and re-opened in 2002 as a luxury hotel and condominium complex called the Ritz-Carlton New York, Central Park.[10]
The 1911 Ritz-Carlton’s New York, located inMidtown Manhattan, was designed byWarren and Wetmore and built in theRenaissance Revival[11] style. The hotel was constructed as a replica of theCarlton Hotel in London.[12]
On June 2, 1911, the New York Times announced a $1 million construction addition to the hotel. An 18-story structure was added to the main hotel, with a lower wing for a new ballroom with private dining rooms and a banquet hall. The addition increased the capacity of the hotel by about one-third.[13]
In the late 19th century and early 20th century, large scale infrastructure projects emerged throughout the city, such as theWilliamsburg Bridge and theNew York City Subway system. Consumer culture boomed with the development of luxurydepartment stores likeBergdorf Goodman andBloomingdale’s and mass amusement parks likeConey Island opened. It is in the context of New York City’srapid industrialization inGilded Age America that the Ritz-Carlton New York hotel opened.
Between 1900 and 1915, the Midtown neighborhood was under constant construction. In addition to the Ritz-Carlton, many famous landmarks were constructed in Midtown in the same time period, including theFlatiron Building in 1902,Grand Central Terminal in 1913, andNew York Public Library Main Branch in 1911. Although the hotel was demolished, the other buildings remain iconic pieces of New York Gilded Age Architecture.
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