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Don CeSar

Don CeSar Hotel
Don Cesar.jpg
General information
Location St. Pete Beach, Pinellas County, Florida
Opening January 16, 1928
Management Host Hotels & Resorts
Technical details
Floor area 40,000 square feet (3,700 m2)
Design and construction
Architect Henry H. Dupont
Developer Thomas Rowe
Other information
Number of rooms 277
Number of suites 40
Number of restaurants 3
Website
[1]
Don CeSar Hotel
St Pete Beach FL Don Ce Sar07.jpg
Don CeSar is located in Florida
Don CeSar
Don CeSar is located in the US
Don CeSar
Coordinates 27°42′32″N 82°44′15″W / 27.70889°N 82.73750°W / 27.70889; -82.73750Coordinates: 27°42′32″N 82°44′15″W / 27.70889°N 82.73750°W / 27.70889; -82.73750
Built 1925-28
NRHP Reference # 75000563
Added to NRHP April 3, 1975

Don CeSar Hotel is a hotel located in St. Pete Beach, Florida, in the United States. Developed by Thomas Rowe and opened in 1928, it gained renown as the Gulf playground for America's pampered rich at the height of the Jazz Age and it still serves as a popular retreat for the rich and famous of today. The hotel was designed by Henry H. Dupont. The Don CeSar is a member of Historic Hotels of America, the official program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

In 1924, Thomas Rowe purchased 80 acres (320,000 m2) of land in St. Petersburg, Florida for $100,000 to begin his dream of building a "pink castle". He hired Indianapolis architect Henry Dupont to design the hotel and Carlton Beard as contractor. To ensure the stability of the hotel on the shifting sand and avoid the high cost of sinking so many pilings, Beard devised a floating concrete pad and pyramid footings. To this day there is no sign of evident settling of the hotel. The architecture is a blend of Mediterranean and Moorish styles modeled after different hotels and developments that Rowe and Beard saw in Palm Beach, Coral Gables and Boca Raton. Arched openings, red clay tile roofs, balconies, stucco over hollow tile and tower like upper stories were some of the elements that they borrowed. The original design called for a $450,000 six-story hotel with 110 rooms and baths. It was later expanded to 220 rooms and 220 baths and the costs soared to $1.25 million, 300% over budget. Rowe named it Don Ce-Sar after Don César de Bazan, the hero of William Vincent Wallace's opera Maritana.


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