Hotel National, Moscow

Hotel National, Moscow
General information
Location Moscow, Russia
Opening January 14, 1903
Management Starwood Hotels & Resorts
Design and construction
Architect Alexander Ivanov
Other information
Number of rooms 202
Number of suites 56
Number of restaurants 2
Website
Hotel National, Moscow

The Hotel National, Moscow (Russian: гости́ница «Националь») is a five-star hotel in Moscow, Russia opened in 1903. It has 202 bedrooms and 56 suites and is located on Manege Square, directly across from The Kremlin. The hotel is managed by The Luxury Collection, a division of Starwood Hotels & Resorts.

History

The National was financed by The Varvarinskoe Joint-Stock Company of Householders[1] and designed by architect Alexander Ivanov. Construction began in 1901 and the 160-room hotel opened on January 14, 1903. The hotel's opening is sometimes listed as January 1, because Russia was still using the Julian calendar at the time, which was 13 days behind the Gregorian calendar used in the rest of the world. In 1915 the hotel made plans to add two floors on top of the six-story structure, but shortages caused by World War I meant that the work was never begun.

In the aftermath of the Russian Revolution, the capital of Russia was moved to Moscow. In March 1918, the hotel became the home of the first Soviet government. As the Kremlin had been damaged during fighting in October 1917 and was under repair, Lenin made his home in room 107 at the Hotel National with his wife for seven days. The hotel is today marked with a plaque noting this event. The hotel also accommodated other Soviet leaders, including Trotsky and secret police chief Felix Dzerzhinsky.[2] The building continued to be used by the Soviet government afterwards as a hostel for official party delegates, and was renamed First House of Soviets in 1919.

By 1931 the building was in need of repair and was given a complete renovation to house foreign visitors. It was redecorated with museum-quality furniture and antiques from the palaces of the Tsars and Russian nobility, including Tsarskoye Selo and the Anichkov Palace. The pieces remain in the hotel's collection to this day. The huge mosaic on the hotel's upper corner was replaced with a 120-square meter socialist realist artwork focusing on the industrial might of the Soviet economy. The National reopened under its original name in 1932.[3] The hotel joined Intourist, the state-run tourism monopoly, in 1933.[4]

Huge socialist realist artwork atop the hotel

During World War II the hotel was home to numerous Allied delegations, including the group headed by W. Averell Harriman that visited in September 1941 and British Foreign Minister Anthony Eden in December 1941.

In the late 1960s the Hotel Intourist, a towering, modern glass structure, was constructed adjacent to the National. The Hotel Intourist was merged with the National in 1983 and the hotels operated for a time under joint management. The National had suffered from years of neglect and when a large piece of the facade fell off in 1989, the hotel was closed for reconstruction.

Hotel Intourist, since demolished, towering over Hotel National

The Hotel National was renovated from 1991-1995. It was transferred by the Russian government to the City of Moscow in 1992 and reopened on May 9, 1995 as part of Forte Hotels. When Forte took over Le Méridien Hotels & Resorts in 1996, the hotel was renamed Le Méridien National Hotel. It was further renamed Le Royal Méridien National Hotel in 1998.

On December 9, 2003, a Chechen female suicide bomber detonated herself outside the hotel. It is thought that her target was the State Duma building across the street and that the bomb detonated prematurely. Six people died and 13 were injured in the blast.

The hotel returned to its original name in 2009 when it moved from the Le Méridien Hotels & Resorts division of Starwood Hotels & Resorts to The Luxury Collection division.[5]

In 2011 the National, which had previously been owned by the City of Moscow, was privatized and sold to businessman Mikhail Gutseriev for 4.7 Billion Rubles.[6]

Famous guests

From the start, the hotel was extremely popular with the Russian aristocracy and visiting celebrities and welcomed Anatole France in 1913 and H.G. Wells in 1914. In 1933, it served as the temporary home of the first U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union, William Bullit, until renovation work on the Ambassador's residence at Spaso House was completed. Sergei Prokofiev lived at the hotel for a time in 1933 on his return to the Soviet Union from abroad. Author Mikhail Sholokhov stayed at the hotel frequently in the 1930s.

Pablo Neruda stayed at the National in 1954. American pianist Van Cliburn had one of the hotel's best suites in 1958 during his famous trip to Moscow, and American singer Paul Robeson was also a frequent guest in the 1950s. John Steinbeck stayed at the hotel in 1962 and Armand Hammer made his first of many visits in 1964. Future U.S. president Bill Clinton stayed at the National in 1969 while on a vacation from his studies at Oxford.

Multiple scenes for the 1990 film The Russia House were shot in the hotel in late 1989 with stars Sean Connery and Michelle Pfeiffer.[7] In 1990 several scenes with Frank Whaley, Roman Polanski and Natalya Negoda were filmed inside and outside the hotel for the film "Back in the USSR" (20th Century Fox release, directed by Deren Serafian, written by Ilmar Taska and Lindsay Smith)

In recent years, the hotel has welcomed Jacques Chirac, Kofi Annan, Lech Walesa, Shimon Peres, Madeleine Albright, Plácido Domingo, Ray Charles, Michel Legrand, Pierre Cardin, Catherine Deneuve, Marcello Mastroianni, Alain Delon, Chris Watson, Jack Nicholson, Sean Penn and Peter Ustinov, among many others.

References

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Coordinates: 55°45′24″N 37°36′48″E / 55.7567°N 37.6133°E / 55.7567; 37.6133

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