Lord Elgin Hotel | |
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View of Lord Elgin Hotel from above the Confederation Park
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General information | |
Location | 100 Elgin Street Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1P 5K8 |
Coordinates | 45°25′10″N 75°41′30″W / 45.4195°N 75.6916°WCoordinates: 45°25′10″N 75°41′30″W / 45.4195°N 75.6916°W |
Opened | July 19, 1941 |
Other information | |
Number of rooms | 355 |
Website | |
Official website |
The Lord Elgin Hotel is a prominent hotel in downtown Ottawa, Ontario, Canada with 355 guest rooms, located at 100 Elgin Street at Laurier Avenue, across from Confederation Park. The twelve-storey limestone structure was named after James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin, the first Governor General of the united Canadas.
The Lord Elgin Hotel has 355 guestrooms and four suites, all of them refurbished since 2001.
The hotel was designed by the firm of Ross and MacDonald, which were the successors of Ross and MacFarlane, who designed the Chateau Laurier. It was opened in July 1941 by the Ford Hotel Company to compete with the Château Laurier. Unlike the Château, however, the Lord Elgin was built to primarily serve short-stay guests, particularly those who were in Ottawa on government and military business during the Second World War, especially after the recent loss of the nearby Russell Hotel. As a result, the hotel did not originally contain any ballrooms or elegant restaurants, as would have been expected in a large hotel at that time, and the guest rooms were relatively small.
The building features stone walls which are complete with broken courses and are finished by flattened oriel windows and modernistic chevrons. The building is topped by a steep copper chateauesque roof, which, William Lyon Mackenzie King apparently urged the architects to include to reflect the Parliament buildings copper roof.