St Pancras Renaissance London Hotel

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St. Pancras Renaissance London Hotel

Middlesex


St Pancras Renaissance London Hotel
Type: Hotel
Location
Grid reference: TQ30148290
Location: 51°31’48"N, 0°7’31"W
City: Westminster
History
Address: Euston Road
Built 1873
For: Midland Railway Company
by Sir George Gilbert Scott
Hotel
Information
Owned by: Manhattan Loft Corporation
Website: Marriot Hotels: St Pancras

The St. Pancras Renaissance London Hotel, which is also popularly known by its original name, The Midland Grand Hotel, is a grandiloquent Victorian Gothic building standing on Euston Road in London's West End, which forms the frontispiece of St Pancras railway station. St Pamcas is one of the main termini in the capital and the final stop for international trains departing to Continental Europe.

The clock tower of the building stands 250 feet tall, with more than half its height usable.[1]

The hotel in its modern form and by its modem name opened in 2011, and occupies much of the former Midland Grand Hotel: the Midland Grand was designed by George Gilbert Scott which opened in 1873 and closed in 1935. The reborn hotel is managed by Marriot International.[2][3]

The building as a whole including the apartments is known as St Pancras Chambers and between 1935 and the 1980s was used as railway offices. The upper levels of the original building were redeveloped between 2005 and 2011 as apartments by the Manhattan Loft Corporation.[4]

The Midland Grand Hotel

In 1865 the Midland Railway Company held a competition for the design of a 150-bed hotel to be constructed next to its railway station, St Pancras, which was still under construction at the time. Eleven designs were submitted, including one by George Gilbert Scott, which, at 300 rooms, was much bigger and more expensive than the original specifications. Despite this, the company liked his plans and construction began.[5] Scott's design was for a hotel with five floors below roof level but in the event it was built with four (which remains the case today) to save on construction costs – although the Midland Railway frequently reproduced Scott's original impression, showing the hotel with its non-existent top floor, in its publicity material. The east wing opened on 5 May 1873,[6] with the Midland Railway appointing Herr Etzensberger (formerly of the Victoria Hotel, Venice) as general manager. The hotel was completed in spring 1876.[7]

The Midland Grand Hotel St Pancras, as built, c. 1876

The hotel was expensive, with costly fixtures including a grand staircase, rooms with gold leaf walls and a fireplace in every room. It had many innovative features such as hydraulic lifts, concrete floors, revolving doors and fireproof floor constructions, though none of the rooms had bathrooms, as was the convention of the time.[5]

The hotel was taken over by the London, Midland and Scottish Railway in 1922 before closing in 1935, by which time its utilities were outdated and too costly to maintain, such as the armies of servants needed to carry chamber pots, tubs, bowls and spittoons.

Rail use and preservation

After closing as a hotel, the building was renamed St Pancras Chambers and used as railway offices, eventually for British Rail.

British Rail had hoped to demolish it, but was thwarted in a high-profile campaign by Jane Hughes Fawcett and her colleagues at the Victorian Society, a historic preservationist organisation founded in part to preserve the Victorian railways and other buildings.[8] Officials dubbed Jane Fawcett the "furious Mrs Fawcett" for her unceasing efforts,[9] and in 1967, the Hotel and the St Pancras station received Grade I listed status.[10]

The building continued its use as rail offices, until the 1980s when it failed fire safety regulations and was shut down.[5] The exterior was restored and made structurally sound at a cost of around £10 million in the 1990s.[5]

Reopening as hotel and apartments

Planning permission was granted in 2004 for the building to be redeveloped into a new hotel.

The main public rooms of the old Midland Grand were restored, along with some of the bedrooms. The former driveway for taxis entering St. Pancras station, passing under the main tower of the building, was converted into the hotel's lobby. In order to cater for the more modern expectations of guests, a new bedroom wing was constructed on the western side of the Barlow train shed.[11]

As redeveloped the hotel contains 244 bedrooms, two restaurants, two bars, a health and leisure centre, a ballroom, and 20 meeting and function rooms.[5] The architects for the redevelopment were Aedas RHWL. At the same time, the upper floors of the original building were redeveloped as 68 apartments by the Manhattan Loft Corporation.

The St. Pancras Renaissance Hotel opened on 14 March 2011 to guests, though the formal 'Grand Opening' was on 5 May – exactly 138 years after its original opening in 1873.[12][13]

In literature and on film

The Gothic extravagance of the Midland Grand Hotel has led to its being an evocative backdrop on film and in literature.

The exterior of the hotel was used in the 1995 film Richard III; an adaptation with a 1930s aesthetic starring Ian McKellen: the hotel stood in as the exterior of King Edward's Palace.[14]

The 1988 Douglas Adams novel The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul uses the derelict Midland Grand as the real world alternate to the Norse Gods' Valhalla.[15] He described it as a "huge, dark Gothic fantasy of a building which stands, empty and desolate… its roof line a vast assortment of wild turrets, gnarled spires and pinnacles which seemed to prod at and goad the night sky".[15]

The video for the 1996 song Wannabe by the Spice Girls was filmed at the Midland Grand Hotel. The music video was filmed in the entrance and main staircase of the building.[16] The song was to be filmed in Barcelona, Spain but permission was not given.

In Christopher Nolan's 2005 film Batman Begins, the Arkham Asylum stairwell was filmed in the hotel.[15]

The staircase was also the setting for Mistlethwaite Manor in the 1993 film production of The Secret Garden, released in 1993.[15]

The hotel is also seen in the background in the film Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, where St. Pancras stands in for King's Cross. The hotel is often confused by tourists that think this more ornate hotel is Kings Cross Station.[17]

Pictures

The hotel in 1928
The hotel in 1928  
The new bedroom wing under construction
The new bedroom wing under construction  
George Gilbert Scott's Grand Staircase inside the St. Pancras Renaissance Hotel
George Gilbert Scott's Grand Staircase inside the St. Pancras Renaissance Hotel  
Atrium of St. Pancras Renaissance Hotel, formerly the taxi entry driveway to St. Pancras station
Atrium of St. Pancras Renaissance Hotel, formerly the taxi entry driveway to St. Pancras station  

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about St Pancras Renaissance London Hotel)

References

  1. 'The Original of the Skyscraper': CTBUH Research Paper
  2. Pearman, Hugh (5 July 2009). "St Pancras: The right side of the tracks". The Times (London). http://property.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/property/new_homes/article6632774.ece. 
  3. "St. Pancras Renaissance Hotel" (in en-GB). https://www.kinlondon.co.uk/st-pancras-renaissance-hotel/. 
  4. "St Pancras Chambers by Manhattan Loft Corporation". Manhattan Loft Corporation. http://www.stpancraschambers.co.uk/. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 "The Midland Grand Hotel St Pancras". urban75. http://www.urban75.org/london/st_pancras1.html. 
  6. "The Midland Grand Hotel". London Evening Standard (England). 5 May 1873. http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000183/18730505/018/0003. 
  7. "Midland Railway Company". Sheffield Independent (England). 23 August 1876. http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000181/18760823/022/0003. 
  8. "Jane Fawcett, Bletchley Decoder -- Obituary", The Daily Telegraph, 25 May 2016.
  9. Matt Schudel, "Jane Fawcett, British code-breaker During Second World War, Dies at 95", Washington Post, 28 May 2016.
  10. Lefort, Rebecca (12 March 2011). "Inside London's lost landmark, the St Pancras Midland Grand hotel". The Daily Telegraph (London). https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/travelnews/8377950/Inside-Londons-lost-landmark-the-St-Pancras-Midland-Grand-hotel.html. 
  11. "Before and after: historic buildings restored and transformed". Daily Telegraph. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/property/renovatinganddiy/9943413/Before-and-after-historic-buildings-restored-and-transformed.html. 
  12. Mark Easton (5 May 2011). "A monument to the British craftsman". BBC. https://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/thereporters/markeaston/2011/05/a_monument_to_the_british_craf.html. 
  13. "In Pictures: Gothic St Pancras". BBC. 26 February 2011. http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_9407000/9407385.stm. 
  14. Ian McKellen. "Ian McKellen is Richard III". http://www.mckellen.com/cinema/richard/notes.htm. 
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 Melissa Rhoades (February 13, 2018). "St. Pancras Station Sparks Imaginations". Spokane County Library District. https://www.scld.org/st-pancras-station-sparks-imaginations/. 
  16. Sinclair, David (2004). Wannabe: How the Spice Girls Reinvented Pop Fame. Omnibus Press. p. 75. ISBN 0-7119-8643-6. 
  17. "Locations in London used for Shooting Harry Potter Films". March 4, 2015. http://www.themontcalmclub.com/blog/locations-london-used-shooting-harry-potter-films/.