Orange Court Hotel Explained

The Orange Court Hotel was a historic Spanish Revival Orlando hotel constructed in 1924. It was demolished in 1990. The hotel features on historic postcards and is depicted in a mural in downtown Orlando. It was located at 650 North Orange Avenue. G.A. Miller of Tampa constructed the building on a design by architect G. Lloyd Preacher of Atlanta. The hotel had 275 rooms, vine-covered balconies around a Spanish garden with more than 500 varieties of tropical plants, and a small orange grove where guests could pick fruit. The hotel was one of the first in Orlando with a steam-heated swimming pool.[1]

The hotel closed in 1960 but reopened in 1962. It was put up for sale in 1985 for $5.5 million, and at the time it hosted both permanent residents and nightly guests.[2] The owners could not find a buyer and ended up evicting all of the tenants in November 1989.[3] The hotel site was finally sold in 1997 for $2.38 million.[4]

External links

28.5521°N -81.3796°W

Notes and References

  1. Steve Rajtar https://books.google.com/books?id=3cZfqYU1B4cC&dq=orange+court+hotel&pg=PA154 page 154 A Guide to Historic Orlando
  2. Web site: Old Orange Court Hotel up for sale. Jack. Snyder. April 3, 1985.
  3. Web site: It's checkout time for hotel residents. S. Renee. Marshall. November 30, 1989.
  4. Web site: New Life for Historic Site?. Jack. Snyder. December 20, 1997.