Hotel Princess Mundo Imperial

Hotel Princess Mundo Imperial
General information
Location Acapulco, Guerrero, Mexico
Opening 1971
Management Mundo Imperial
Other information
Number of rooms 1011
Website
http://www.princessmundoimperial.com

The Hotel Princess Mundo Imperial is a resort hotel located in Acapulco, Guerrero, Mexico. The hotel features eight tennis courts, including a 6,000-seat stadium court. It is the host of the Abierto Mexicano Telcel, an annual event on the ATP Tour and the WTA Tour.

History and architecture

The hotel was built by billionaire Daniel K. Ludwig[1] and designed by William Rudolph and Leonides Guadarrama to resemble an ancient Aztec pyramid. It opened in 1971 as the Acapulco Princess. In the summer of 1982 a third tower was added.

In 1998 Canadian Pacific Hotels purchased the Princess Hotels situated in Mexico, Arizona, Bermuda and Barbados; and during October 1999 the administrators of the company signed an agreement with Fairmont Hotels, creating the company Fairmont Hotels & Resorts. The hotel was renamed the Fairmont Acapulco Princess. It remained part of the Fairmont chain until September 2015.

Princess Mundo Imperial hotel sits on over 161 acres (0.65 km2) of gardens with palms framing the view of the Sierra Madre in the Acapulco Diamante area. Built in the form of an ancient Aztec pyramid, the hotel contains 1,011 rooms.

The resort features four freshwater pools with waterfalls and one saltwater pool, all overlooking Revolcadero Beach; a golf course; and eight outdoor and two indoor tennis courts.

Howard Hughes

The Acapulco Princess was the final residence of Howard Hughes. On April 5, 1976, Hughes left the penthouse suite of the hotel and boarded his plane. He died shortly thereafter, en route to Houston, Texas.

Administrative dispute

Currently the hotel administration is under a legal dispute. The current owners of the Acapulco Princess, Grupo Autofin,[2] removed Fairmont's staff and installed their own administration.[3] The Hotel is no longer under the operation of Fairmont, references to the Fairmont brand have been removed from the installation, and Fairmont no longer lists this hotel as part of their properties in their webpage. The Hotel operations were not disrupted due to the takeover.

See also

References

Coordinates: 16°47′18″N 99°48′50″W / 16.7884°N 99.8140°W / 16.7884; -99.8140

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.