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Hotel Saskatchewan

Hotel Saskatchewan
Hotel-Saskatchewan.jpg
Hotel Saskatchewan
Record height
Tallest in Regina, Saskatchewan from 1927 to 1969
General information
Location Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
Coordinates 50°26′48″N 104°36′41″W / 50.44667°N 104.61139°W / 50.44667; -104.61139Coordinates: 50°26′48″N 104°36′41″W / 50.44667°N 104.61139°W / 50.44667; -104.61139
Opening 1927
Management Marriott International
Technical details
Floor count 10
Design and construction
Architect Ross and Macdonald
Developer Canadian Pacific Railway
Other information
Number of rooms 224
Number of suites 27
Number of restaurants 1
Website
http://www.marriott.com/hotels/travel/yqrak-the-hotel-saskatchewan/

The Hotel Saskatchewan is a historic hotel, one of Canada's grand railway hotels located in downtown Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada, overlooking Victoria Park.

The Hotel Saskatchewan was the fourteenth hotel in a nationwide chain constructed and owned by the Canadian Pacific Railway. The railway's earlier hotels, such as the Château Frontenac in Quebec City, the Chateau Lake Louise and the Banff Springs Hotel were designed in a distinctive château style, but by the late 1920s this had been abandoned in favor of a much simpler and less expensive style although the Canadian National Railway's Bessborough hotel in Saskatoon was built from 1928 to 1932. The Hotel Saskatchewan was the hub of the city's social life, and today operates as part of the Marriott International chain.

A prior attempt at construction of a grand railway hotel for Regina, the Chateau Qu'Appelle, failed when the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway went bankrupt. The partially constructed Chateau Qu'Appelle—now the site of the Royal Saskatchewan Museum on the corner of Albert Street and College Avenue—remained derelict for some years until Canadian Pacific purchased the disused girders for use in the construction of the Hotel Saskatchewan and the large excavation was finally filled.

The foundations remained in the ground, however, substantially accounting for the positioning of the Provincial Museum (now the Royal Saskatchewan Museum) at the corner of College Avenue and Albert Street but diagonally and substantially back from the streets. It is of course uncertain that if the Chateau Qu'Appelle had successfully been completed it would remain standing, but comparable palatial railway hotels in Quebec City, Montreal, Toronto, Saskatoon, Banff Springs, Vancouver, Victoria, BC and elsewhere remain standing and thriving.


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