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Grand Entrance (click on the photo to view full size).

Photo: Fairmont

Lobby - Front Hall.

Photo: Fairmont

Lobby - Reading Room.

Photo: Fairmont

Lobby - Upper Thames Foyer

Photo: Fairmont

Bar/Lounge - Thames Foyer. The Thames Foyer is the heart of the hotel and the perfect venue for light, informal dining. Its reinstated glass cupola, based on a guest’s drawing allows natural daylight to flood in on even the darkest day. The centerpiece of the room is the magnificent new winter garden gazebo.

Photo: Fairmont

River Restaurant. The revived, overseen by Chef Ryan Murphy, offers an exciting and inspiring dining experience in a contemporary, Art Deco influenced setting with a fine view of the River Thames.

Photo: Fairmont

American Bar. With its electric blue and gold chairs, and constant buzz, the American Bar retains the style of the golden age of cocktails in the 1920’s.

Photo: Fairmont

American Bar in December 1931

Photo: Fairmont

Lancaster Ballroom is the largest of The Savoy's banqueting rooms. It has a completely clear floor space with no obscuring pillars, perfect for dancing. Uniquely for London it also has its own stage.

Photo: Fairmont

Mikado meeting room. Created in 1928, Mikado retains its original décor which is appropriately themed with Japanese prints and black-edged wooden panelled walls, a reference to the Gilbert and Sullivan opera from which it takes its name.

Photo: Fairmont

Princess Ida & Patience meeting room. Overlooking the Thames, this room has a double name because it was originally two separate private dining rooms when the hotel opened in 1889. The wall between the rooms was removed in 1935.

Photo: Fairmont

Pinafore meeting room. This is one of the Savoy's original private dining rooms. The décor featuring wooden panelling was designed by Basil Ionides, dating from 1926. Views towards the Thames provide a distinguished setting. Pinafore is well known as the place where The Other Club' meets every other week while Parliament is in session.

Photo: Fairmont

Abraham Lincoln meeting room. The Edwardian-style Abraham Lincoln Room takes its name from a bust of the President that was unveiled here at a birthday dinner party in 1923. The room has all the latest presentation and video conferencing facilities and is a fine space for business luncheons, formal dinners and dinner dances.

Photo: Fairmont

Edwardian corridor

Photo: Fairmont

River Entrance

Photo: Fairmont

Gondoliers meeting room. The Venetian look and feel of the Gondoliers' luxurious surroundings and appointments afford an air of particular grandness and opulence to cocktail parties and special dining occasions. The room was created in the 1940s, with the present décor inspired by photographs taken around 1910 of the original Pinafore room.

Photo: Fairmont

Beaufort Bar. In a theatrical, Art Deco interior of jet-black and burnished gold décor, the bar is all about champagne, cocktails and cabaret. The bar stands on the hotel’s former cabaret stage that was graced by luminaries such as Carol Gibbons, the Savoy Orpheans and George Gershwin.

Photo: Fairmont

Royal Suite Sitting Room. Refurbished at a cost of over £2.5 million, The Savoy’s Royal Suite is one of the capital’s finest and most well-appointed accommodations. Spread over the front of the entire 5th floor, the suite’s enfilade arrangement makes the most of the dramatic views over the River Thames. From each of the 8 windows, guests can enjoy a magnificent London vista from Canary Wharf to the Houses of Parliament and beyond with 7 of London’s bridges visible.

Photo: Fairmont

River View Deluxe 1 Bedroom Suite (Edwardian). Large, one-bedroom suites offering unrivalled, panoramic views of the River Thames from both the sitting room and bedroom. Decorated in elegant Edwardian style, the suites offer a separate sitting room, large bedroom with en-suite bathroom, entrance foyer and guest cloakroom.

Photo: Fairmont

Savoy Deluxe Guestroom (Art Deco).

Photo: Fairmont

Bathroom

Photo: Fairmont

River View at dusk

Photo: Fairmont

Savoy

NB!

Lots of interior photos!

Address: Savoy, Strand, London WC2R 0EU
Type: Commercial
Completion: 19th century
Accommodation: 268
Venues: 13
Website: www.fairmont.com/savoy
Viewed: 1025 times

Description

A British icon since 1889, The Savoy has once again taken its place on the world stage after a £220 million restoration. The hotel seamlessly blends elements of the original and the new while the stunning English Edwardian and Art Deco interiors sparkle with timeless elegance and glamour.

History

Back in 1246, a stretch of land between the Strand and the Thames was presented by Henry III to Peter, Count of Savoy, uncle and consort to the King’s wife. Peter built his Savoy Palace on the river, and the name has been associated with the place ever since.

Over 600 years later, impresario Richard D’Oyly Carte chose the location for a new theatre to stage the famous operettas written by his friends Gilbert and Sullivan. He decided to call his new building the Savoy Theatre, and the productions were known henceforth as the Savoy Operas. Gilbert and Sullivan were huge on both sides of the Atlantic, and D’Oyly Carte spent a lot of time producing their shows in America. This meant he could stay in some of the newest and best hotels, which impressed him so much with their amazing new technologies that he decided to build his own hotel back in London. The new Savoy on the river took five years to build and opened on August 6, 1889. It caused a sensation.

This, the first true luxury hotel in London, was also the first to be lit by electricity. It had the first electric lifts, known as ‘ascending rooms’. Guest rooms were connected by speaking tube to the valet, maid and floor waiter - and to other parts of the hotel. The Savoy later became the first hotel to provide most of its rooms with private bathrooms en suite. The ‘Savoy bathroom’ became famous for its cascading shower and quick filling bath.

D’Oyly Carte tempted the well-known hotel manager César Ritz to join his new wonder hotel. Ritz was delighted by the perfectly-appointed facilities and great potential at The Savoy. He brought in Auguste Escoffier, leading ‘celebrity chef ’ of his day, to run the kitchens. In the early years, Savoy guests included Sarah Bernhardt and Dame Nellie Melba, for whom Escoffier famously created Melba Toast when she was on a diet and Pêches Melba when she was not.

Artists Whistler and Monet both used views from Savoy windows in their work. Oscar Wilde stayed with his friend Lord Alfred Douglas. The Prince of Wales himself and his coterie were frequent visitors. By 1904 the hotel was such a hit that the blocks on the Strand were added, designed by Thomas Collcutt, and the American Bar and Savoy Grill moved into this new part of the hotel. After the sobering interlude of the Great War, The Savoy gradually began to find itself again, always looking for the latest styles and fashions that would draw the feted and famous. The likes of Noel Coward, George Gershwin, George Bernard Shaw and H G Wells frequented the restaurants and American Bar.

Art deco, jazz and The Savoy were made for each other. The new style was introduced, and the iconic stainless-steel sign over Savoy Court erected in 1929. Top jazz musicians from America came to play and a hydraulic system, installed to raise the dance-floor and turn it into a stage for cabaret acts. Epitomising all the fun and flamboyance of the art deco jazz age, the famous Savoy Cocktail Book was published in 1930.

The stars loved The Savoy. England’s own Vivien Leigh was first introduced to her future husband Laurence Olivier in the hotel’s Front Hall. From America came Hollywood greats such as Al Jolson, Errol Flynn and Katharine Hepburn and from France, Josephine Baker and Coco Chanel. Winston Churchill frequently lunched with his cabinet at the hotel during World War II, and attended his Savoy dining club, The Other Club, until his death in 1965.

Once peace was declared, The Savoy quickly regained its air of glamour and luxury. Princess Elizabeth was first seen with Lt. Philip Mountbatten in public at a Savoy reception. When the Princess became the Queen a few years later, The Savoy threw quite the largest and most lavish Coronation Ball in London.

The new Elizabethan age saw a new generation of actors, film stars and politicians at The Savoy. Among the most glamorous: Elizabeth Taylor, Sophia Loren and Marilyn Monroe. The Savoy swung into the 1960s with guests ranging from Louis Armstrong, Marlon Brando and Jane Fonda to The Beatles and Bob Dylan.

A number of refurbishments were undertaken as the century came to a close, the last completed just in time for the great Savoy party that celebrated the new Millennium. In December 2007 began the most extensive of restorations that would re-launch The Savoy in 2010 with all the flair and opulence of old. What has been achieved is a quite remarkable synthesis of past and present. The Edwardian style of the original buildings and the art deco of the 1920s and 30s have been enhanced to embrace the very latest technology.

The restoration offers guests even higher standards of service and pinnacles of experience, with new names such as the Beaufort Bar and Savoy Tea added to the hotel’s illustrious eating and meeting spots. So The Savoy brings to the 21st century its own style of quality, charm and originality, steeped in the character of London of which it is an essential part. Authentically celebrating its past, The Savoy is now also leading the present.

Source: fairmont.com/savoy

Buildington Rating & Notes

hooned
1868
Location
1
Architecture
1
Condition
1
Plans
1
Transport
Environment
1

0.976

Building added by: Buildington
Published: 19. May 2011
2
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