Hotel Windsor (Melbourne)

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Hotel Windsor
The Windsor.jpg
Hotel Windsor from Parliament Station
General information
Location 100–150 Spring Street, Melbourne, Victoria
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Opening 1884 (Grand Hotel)
1888 (Grand Coffee Palace)
1897 (Grand Hotel)
1920 (Windsor Hotel)
2008 (Hotel Windsor)
Owner Halim Group
Management Halim Group
Technical details
Floor count 5
Design and construction
Architect Charles Webb
Other information
Number of rooms 180
Number of suites 20
Number of restaurants 1
Parking off-site
Website
http://www.thewindsor.com.au

The Hotel Windsor is a luxury hotel in Melbourne. The Windsor is notable for being Australia's only surviving grand 19th century city hotel and only official "grand" Victorian era hotel. The Hotel Windsor has a 5-star rating and is considered one of the grandest hotels in Melbourne.[1]

The Windsor is situated on Bourke Hill in the Parliament Precinct on Spring Street, and is a Melbourne landmark of high Victorian architecture. The hotel has a significant role in the history of Australia as the place where the Constitution of Australia was drafted in 1898.[2] For much of its 20th Century life the hotel, dubbed the Duchess of Spring Street, was one of the most favoured and luxurious hotels in Melbourne. It has hosted many notable national and international guests.

The hotel is currently planning a major renovation which was required by permit to begin by January 2015.

History

File:Windsor hotel melbourne in 1883.jpg
The original Grand Hotel in 1883 from Treasury Place

The original hotel was built by shipping magnate George Nipper and designed by Charles Webb in a broadly Renaissance Revival style and was completed in 1884, and named "The Grand". However, Nipper soon sold the building, in 1886, to the a company headed by James Munro and James Balfour. Munro was a politician and the leader of the temperance movement in Victoria, who famously burnt the hotel's liquor licence in public and operated the hotel as a Coffee Palace, now renamed the "Grand Coffee Palace". The building was soon more than doubled in size in 1888, by adding the central section and the north wing, matching the original building, the now internal north wing, and extending the rear wing, all designed again by Charles Webb. Notable features of the expanded hotel included the Ballroom, the impressive main staircase, the distinctive twin mansard roofed towers in the Second Empire style, and the stone sculpture, attributed to John Simpson Mackennal, over the main entrance with male female figures known as 'Peace and Plenty' reclining over the English and Australian Coat of Arms.[3]

File:Windsor hotel melbourne 1906.jpg
Grand Hotel and Spring Street in 1906

Munro was declared bankrupt in February 1893, and a new owner of the hotel took over in 1897. The hotel was amalgamated with the neighbouring Old White Hart Hotel, re-licensed, and its name was changed back to the Grand Hotel. In March 1898, the Constitutional Convention met at the hotel to finalise the final draft of the Constitution of Australia.[2]

In 1920, the hotel changed hands again, was refurbished, and renamed "Windsor Hotel", in honour of the British Royal Family. For much of the 20th century, the hotel dubbed the Duchess of Spring Street was one of the most favoured and luxurious hotels in Melbourne, hosting many notable national and international guests.[4]

Decline and demolition proposal

With the construction of modern 'international' hotels, starting with the Southern Cross in 1962, the Windsor declined in popularity. In a bid to regain marketshare, the Windsor expanded, purchasing the four storey White Hart Hotel on the Bourke Street corner. The White Hart was demolished and a new classically inspired extension became the Windsor's north wing designed by the office of Harry A. Norris.[3]

By the mid-1970s, the Windsor was run-down and the last of the major historic 19th century hotels in Australia still operating. The other major hotels, the Menzies (1867–1969) and the Federal (1888–1972) in Melbourne, and the Australia (1890–1971) and Metropole (1890–1969) in Sydney, had all been demolished.

Several proposals were put forward which included the demolition of the Windsor. A 1974 proposal for a 38 storey tower on the corner of Spring and Bourke Street was opposed by the state government and the National Trust. The Rupert Hamer-led state government purchased the building in 1976 to ensure its preservation and in 1980 leased it to The Oberoi Group.[4]

New owners and restoration

Melbourne Windsor Hotel Lobby after the restoration in 2008

Oberoi undertook a major restoration of the hotel in 1983 costing USD$6.6 million, reinstating the decorative 19th century colour schemes to the lobby, stairhall, and especially the Grand Dining Room, where huge brass chandeliers were reproduced from photographs.[5] This was one of the first major private historic restorations in Melbourne, and won a Victorian Architect's Institute award.[6] Its position as a leading five-star hotel and a major Melbourne landmark was then firmly re-established. The cricketer's bar, afternoon tea in the grand dining room, and the top-hatted doorman all resumed their status as Melbourne institutions. The John Cain II state government sold the hotel to the Oberoi Group giving the company freehold possession in 1990. In 2005, Oberoi sold the hotel to the Halim family based in Indonesia.[7]

2000s – Redevelopment proposals

Hotel Windsor looking towards the Spring Street entrance

The Halim group first proposed to redevelop the Windsor in 2008 shortly after acquiring remaining shares from the Oriental Pacific Group and rebranding as "Hotel Windsor",[8] with a $45 million redevelopment which proposed to modernise many of the interiors although they would not disclose whether the hotel was running at a loss or making a profit. The plan was approved by Heritage Victoria and the government after significant negotiations with the owners which included reducing the heritage impacts of the proposal. However development did not commence due to the Financial crisis of 2007–2010.

In July 2009, the Halim group proposed a new $260 million refurbishment project[9] which would add 152 rooms to the hotel. This would involve demolition of the hotel's 1960s-era North wing, and replacing it with a contemporary building with facilities expected by guests staying in a five star hotel. A thin curtain wall tower designed by Denton Corker Marshall was proposed be built at the rear of Windsor Place. The architects proposed that the fritted wavy glass of the facade was a solution to minimise the visual impact of the tower. The application submitted to Heritage Victoria included restoration of the 1880s facade facing Spring and Little Collins Streets.

The National Trust of Australia (Victoria), opposed to the development[10][11][12] responded with a campaign named 'Save the Windsor'.[13] and concerned that that the proposed tower would dominate the front heritage wing of the hotel, and would breach established height controls for the Bourke Hill precinct initially put in place to protect vistas towards Parliament House and low-rise nature of the area.

Windsor at dusk

In late February 2010, a news leak occurred which erupted in a government scandal surrounding the redevelopment of the Windsor Hotel.[14] A document prepared by a senior media advisor to Planning Minister Justin Madden was sent by email to the ABC Newsdesk. It detailed plans by the Victorian Government to run a sham community consultation process in a bid to reject the plans. In response to public outcry, a probity officer was appointed to oversee the decision making process.

On 18 March 2010, the hotel refurbishment and redevelopment plans including the tower were approved by then Planning Minister, Justin Madden.[15]

The Senate of Australia has officially recognised the national significance of the Windsor Hotel.[16][17] The National Trust lost an appeal against the proposed refurbishment and redevelopment when it took the Hotel to the Supreme Court of Victoria.

Heritage Permits were resolved in January 2012 and this delay meant the hotel owners needed to take the 2010 planning permit to VCAT to seek an extension to its expiry date. This was granted by VCAT in August 2012.

The hotel owners later again sought an extension to the expiry date of the 2010 planning permit, but VCAT refused the request in August 2014. The 2010 planning permit will therefore expire if the development described in the permit has not commenced by 10 January 2015.

Notable guests

The Hotel Windsor from Parliament House, Spring Street

Notable guests at the Windsor have included Margaret Thatcher, George VI of the United Kingdom and Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon (as Duke and Duchess of York), Meryl Streep, Anthony Hopkins, Gregory Peck, Laurence Olivier, Vivien Leigh, Katharine Hepburn, Basil Rathbone, Lauren Bacall, Douglas Fairbanks, Byron Sharp, Claudette Colbert, Robert Helpmann, Rudolph Nureyev, Dame Nellie Melba, Dame Joan Sutherland, Dame Margot Fonteyn, Michael Dukakis, Muhammad Ali, Barry Humphries, Don Bradman and the Australia national cricket team as well as Australian prime ministers Sir Robert Menzies, Malcolm Fraser, Bob Hawke, Paul Keating and John Howard.[2][18][19][20]

References

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  3. 3.0 3.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Duchess:The storey of the Windsor Hotel, Chrystopher J Spycer, Loch Haven Books, 1993
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. Walking Melbourne – A guide to the Historic and Architectural Landmarks of Melbourne, National Trust of Australia (Victoria)[1]
  7. [2]
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  16. THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA. JOURNALS OF THE SENATE No. 120 TUESDAY, 11 May 2010
  17. [3]
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  20. The Movers Behind Labor's Document For Success. The Age. Saturday 1 April 2000

External links