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Four Seasons Hotel George V
Luxury hotel in Paris
Luxury hotel in Paris
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| hotel_name | Four Seasons Hotel George V |
| image | Hôtel George-V, 31 avenue George-V, Paris 8e 1.jpg |
| location | 31, Avenue George V, Paris, France |
| coordinates | |
| opening_date | 1928 |
| operator | Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts |
| owner | Kingdom Holding Company |
| number_of_rooms | 244 |
| number_of_suites | 59 |
| website |
Four Seasons Hotel George V (French, historically: Hôtel-George V, ) is a luxury hotel on Avenue George V in the 8th arrondissement of Paris. It has some of the most expensive hotel suites in France.
History
The Hotel George V, named for King George V of the United Kingdom, opened in 1928. It was financed, at a cost of $31 million (60 million Francs), by American businessman Joel Hillman. It was managed by restaurateur André Terrail, owner of La Tour d'Argent. Its architect was Georges Wybo, who had designed the Casino de Deauville and the reconstruction of the Printemps Haussmann following the fire of 1921.
The hotel was popular with Americans arriving in France on Transatlantic ocean liners, as it operated offices in the port of Cherbourg to receive customers on their arrival.
Joel Hillman was forced to relinquish the George V to his lenders after the Wall Street crash of 1929. The George V was bought in 1931 by the banker François Dupré and a new wing was built by the original architects, containing apartments that could be rented year-round or seasonally, with the residents enjoying the services of the hotel. Dupré brought many objets d'art to the hotel, including tapestries from Flanders, Boulle furniture, a Renoir and a Dufy.
In World War II, during the German occupation, a "round-table" of French and German intellectuals met at the hotel; including the writer Ernst Jünger, the Nazi legal scholar Carl Schmitt, the publisher Gaston Gallimard and the writers Paul Morand, Jean Cocteau, and Henry Millon de Montherlant.
In 1996 Saudi businessman Al-Waleed bin Talal bought the hotel from the Forte Group, spending $185 million for it. He then spent $120 million renovating the hotel, closing the hotel for two years. He signed a management contract with Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts on November 1, 1997, and the hotel was renamed Four Seasons Hotel George V. The hotel reopened on December 18, 1999. Starting in 2000, the hotel was voted "Best Hotel in the World" by a number of publications. A distinctive feature includes a lobby and walkways lined with floral displays.
Le Cinq
Main article: Le Cinq
Le Cinq is the hotel's Michelin gourmet restaurant.
References
References
- Al-Mousawi, Emma. (2021-04-28). "The Five Most Expensive and Exclusive Hotel Suites in France".
- Fitzmaurice, Rosie. (2017-07-12). "These are officially the 17 most expensive hotel suites in the world".
- Junger, Ernst. (2019). "A German Officer in Occupied Paris: The War Journals, 1941–1945". Columbia University Press.
- "Four Seasons Hotel George V (1928), Paris".
- (2005). "Alwaleed, Businessman Billionaire Prince". HarperCollins.
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