Park Hyatt Toronto | |
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The original south tower of the Park Plaza
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Location in Toronto
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Hotel chain | Hyatt |
General information | |
Architectural style |
Art Deco/Chicago School - south modern - north |
Location | 4 Avenue Road Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5R 2E8 |
Coordinates | 43°40′8.25″N 79°23′40.7″W / 43.6689583°N 79.394639°WCoordinates: 43°40′8.25″N 79°23′40.7″W / 43.6689583°N 79.394639°W |
Opening | 1936 1956 - north |
- south
Owner | Hyatt |
Height | 52 metres (170.6 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 17 - south 14 - north |
Design and construction | |
Architect |
Hugh H. Holman - south Peter Dickinson - north |
Other information | |
Number of rooms | 336 |
Number of suites | 45 |
Number of restaurants | 2 - Annona and Morton's Steakhouse |
Parking | underground via Park Hyatt North wing |
Website | |
parktoronto |
The Park Hyatt Toronto is a Hyatt hotel in the Yorkville area of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Long the independent Park Plaza Hotel it is one of the most venerable hotels in the city.
The hotel is located at the northwestern corner of Bloor Street and Avenue Road. The first known building on the site was a small wayside inn built in 1820 and named Tecumseh Wigwag. Then a considerable distance from the city it served travellers on their way north out of town. The inn was demolished around 1875.
Originally planned to be called the Queen's Park Plaza it was designed by Hugh G. Holman. Construction began in 1928 and was due to be completed in 1929; however, the stock market crash and the beginning of the Great Depression caused its builder to go out of business. The steel framed structure was left partially completed for several years as various attempts to restart it failed. It was finally completed and opened for business in 1936, with rooms costing $3 per night and up. It was expanded with a second tower added to the north, the new building being a modernist structure designed by Peter Dickinson.
Located across the street from the University of Toronto the hotel became especially known as one of the centres for Canadian literature, authors and opera singers, especially the rooftop patio that has existed since it opened. As a result the hotel has appeared in works by a number of Canadian writers including Margaret Atwood, Morley Callaghan, Mordecai Richler, and Hugh Garner. Near Queen's Park, it was also a popular site for many provincial government officials, with the Premier Bill Davis government's "Big Blue Machine" holding frequent meetings there.