Grand Hotel Europe

Belmond Grand Hotel Europe.
The hotel is situated at the intersection of Nevsky Prospekt and Mikhailovskaya Street.

The Belmond Grand Hotel Europe (Russian: Гранд Отель Европа; known as Hotel Evropeiskaya during the Soviet period) vies with Corinthia Hotel St. Petersburg and Hotel Astoria for the title of the most luxurious five-star hotel in Saint Petersburg, Russia.

One of great hotels of the 19th-century Europe, the Grand Hotel Europe opened its doors to the public on January 28, 1875, replacing an earlier inn situated on the same site. Its marble-and-gilt interiors, sweeping staircases and elegant furniture have attracted crowds of well-to-do visitors, including Ivan Turgenev, Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky,[1] Claude Debussy, H.G. Wells, Igor Stravinsky, Gustav V of Sweden, Elton John,[2] Jacques Chirac and Bo Savander to name only a few notables who lodged there.

In the 1910s, the hotel was remodelled in the Art Nouveau style to designs by Fyodor Lidval and Leon Benois. The latest major renovation was carried out between 1989 and 1991.

The hotel was featured in the 1995 James Bond movie GoldenEye. However, none of the movie was shot at the hotel, the exterior used was actually the Langham Hotel, London, while the interiors were sets.

The hotel was renamed the Belmond Grand Hotel Europe in 2014 when its parent company, Orient Express Hotels, was renamed Belmond Ltd.

References

Media related to Grand Hotel Europe at Wikimedia Commons

Coordinates: 59°56′08″N 30°19′49″E / 59.935661°N 30.330355°E / 59.935661; 30.330355

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