Hotel Name: | Sheraton Grand Tel Aviv |
Location: | Tel Aviv, Israel |
Address: | 115 Hayarkon Street |
Opening Date: | March 12, 1977 |
Architect: | Werner Joseph Wittkower, Yaakov Rechter |
Number Of Rooms: | 318 |
Floors: | 22 |
Height: | 81m |
The Sheraton Grand Tel Aviv is a large hotel on Hayarkon Street in Tel Aviv, Israel.
The first Sheraton-Tel Aviv Hotel was located 1 mile north of today's hotel, on the north side of Independence Park. The hotel was originally designed in 1948 as the Nordau Plaza Hotel, and construction was 80 percent completed in 1952, when it was halted.[1] The incomplete shell was acquired by Chicago-based investors in 1957, who planned to complete it, but that project collapsed.[2] It was finally bought by a Milwaukee-based group, which completed the $4,500,000, 220-room, 7-story hotel.[3] It opened in March 1961[4] as the Sheraton-Tel Aviv Hotel, the first Sheraton hotel outside the US and Canada. The 16th Chess Olympiad was held at the Sheraton-Tel Aviv in 1964.[5] A 136-room wing was added to the hotel in November 1970. The Sheraton was renamed in 1974 and demolished in 1991.[6] The site remains vacant today, but the adjacent beach is still known locally as Sheraton Beach.
The current hotel was built by Ignatz Bubis[7] and Emilio Bruns, and designed by Werner Joseph Wittkower (who had also designed the 1961 hotel) and Yaakov Rechter.[8] It opened on March 12, 1977[9] as the Tel Aviv-Sheraton Hotel and was later known as the Sheraton Tel Aviv Hotel & Towers and then the Sheraton Tel Aviv Hotel. It was extensively renovated in 2022[10] and was renamed the Sheraton Grand Tel Aviv in 2023.
A structure known as the Red House previously stood on the site of the current hotel. It was constructed in 1926 and served as the seat of the city council, and later the headquarters of the Haganah and the Mossad LeAliyah Bet, which coordinated the smuggling of illegal Jewish immigrants into British Mandatory Palestine.[11] During the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, the Red House served as the headquarters of David Ben-Gurion and the supreme command of the Israel Defense Forces.[12] After the war, it was briefly the seat of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The Red House was demolished to build the hotel. A plaque at the entrance to the hotel commemorates its history.