Hotel Name: | Bristol Hotel |
Location: | Odesa, Ukraine |
Address: | 15 Pushkinska Street |
Coordinates: | 46.4811°N 30.7428°W |
Opening Date: | 1899 |
Architect: | Alexander Bernardazzi & Adolf Minkus |
Number Of Rooms: | 113 |
Website: | Hotel web site |
Bristol Hotel (Ukrainian: Бристоль) is a hotel in Odesa, Ukraine. Built between 1898 and 1899, it is located in the city centre in Pushkinska Street, opposite the Odesa Philharmonic Theater.[1] [2]
This stylish four-star 19th century hotel belongs to the same company as the nearby four-star Londonskaya Hotel which is roughly half the size.[3]
The hotel was designed in a mixed Renaissance Revival and Baroque Revival Victorian style,[2] with Neoclassical statues and white marble columns facing the street. It has 113 rooms and is one of the city's notable landmarks.[1]
The hotel was built between 1898 and 1899 to designs by Alexander Bernadazzi and Adolf Minkus and named the Bristol Hotel. Bernadazzi was an influential architect in Odesa at the time and the style of buildings in Odesa is assigned to him in particular. The name of the Bristol Hotel is thought to emblematic of luxury as another hotel built at that time was named the Hotel London.[4]
After the Soviet revolution, the hotel closed in 1917. It sat vacant for some time, eventually serving as offices from 1922 to 1925. It reopened in 1928, but in the Soviet Union it seemed inappropriate for the hotel to be named after the city of Bristol in England, so it was renamed the Hotel Krasnaya (meaning "Red" in Russian) for the Red banner of the Revolution.[5] The hotel closed in 2002 and underwent a lengthy restoration, reopening under its original name on December 15, 2010.