The Met Hotel Explained

Hotel Name:The Met Hotel
Location:King Street, Leeds, West Yorkshire, England
Coordinates:53.7967°N -1.5503°W,
Opening Date:1899
Architect:Chorley and Connon
Website:https://www.phcompany.com/principal/leeds-met-hotel/

The Met Hotel is a Grade II listed building situated on King Street in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. Designed by Leeds-based architects Harry Sutton Chorley and J.W. Connon, the hotel opened in 1899[1] as the Hotel Metropole. The Principal Hayley Group renovated the hotel in 2005, at a cost of £6 million, and changed the name to the trendier sounding 'The Met'. It has four stars and it has 120 rooms.

The Hotel Metropole is a listed building, principally because of its rare and remarkable Victorian terracotta facade. The cupola on the roof was taken from the demolished 4th White Cloth Hall, built in 1868 on the same site.

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External links

53.7971°N -1.5506°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: Grand Hotels: Reality and Illusion. 9781861891211. Denby. Elaine. 2002.