Business Traveller

FROM THE ARCHIVE

Reflecting on the fate of New York’s Grand Hyatt as it faces demolition next year

- WORDS JENNI REID

Looking back at the grand Manhattan hotels of the 1980s

AT THE START OF 1981, our writer, Philip Jacobson, went on the hunt for an endangered species – the Grand Hotel. It was a title, he mused, that had been adopted by many an establishm­ent that barely qualified as a hotel, let alone a grand one. From a yellow cab on the streets of Manhattan, he spotted a few potentials under constructi­on. These were to add a “much-needed” 5,000 rooms to the island, and included the Helmsley Palace (now the Lotte New York Palace), the Parker Méridien (now a Hyatt) and the Vista Internatio­nal (which was part of the World Trade Center).

The most spectacula­r of the new properties architectu­rally, he wrote, was the Grand Hyatt. Located by Grand Central station, the former Commodore hotel (est. 1919) had been sheathed in a striking glass and plastic cocoon that reflected the bustling streets and skyscraper­s around it, with a cantilever­ed cocktail lounge jutting out above 42nd Street.

Times change, and the entire 1,298-room hotel is set for demolition next year. It will be replaced by a US$3 billion developmen­t that will include a smaller Hyatt property, heralding the end of this grand hotel.

 ??  ?? BELOW: The Commodore Hotel in 1921 and (inset) its current look as the Grand Hyatt, at least until next year
BELOW: The Commodore Hotel in 1921 and (inset) its current look as the Grand Hyatt, at least until next year

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