Hilton San Francisco Union Square
Hilton San Francisco Union Square | |
---|---|
Hotel chain | Hilton Hotels & Resorts |
General information | |
Location | United States |
Address | 333 O'Farrell Street San Francisco, California |
Coordinates | 37°47′07″N 122°24′39″W / 37.7853°N 122.4109°W |
Opening | May 25, 1964[1] |
Owner | Wilmington Trust (In receivership[2]) |
Management | Hilton Worldwide |
Height | Tower I: 150.3 m (493 ft) Tower II: 106 m (348 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | Tower 1: 46 floors Tower 2: 23 floors Tower 3: 19 floors |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | William B. Tabler 1964, John Carl Warnecke and Associates 1985-88[3] |
Other information | |
Number of rooms | 1,919 |
Number of restaurants | 2 |
Website | |
Website | |
[4][5][6] |
The Hilton San Francisco Union Square is a skyscraper hotel located several blocks south-west of Union Square in San Francisco, California. Opened in 1964, the 18-story, 1200-room original building was known as a "motel within a hotel", allowing guests to park directly next to their upper-story rooms.[7] Filling an entire city block, it remains one of the tallest structures representing Brutalist architecture, though it has been extensively altered since its construction. A second 46-story tower was added in 1971, while a third smaller 23-story connecting tower was completed in 1987.[8] Renovated in 2017, it is the largest hotel on the West Coast,[9] with 1,921 rooms.[10]
History
[edit]Opening and unique design
[edit]The hotel opened on May 25, 1964, as the San Francisco Hilton. Built at a cost of $29 million[1] and designed by architect William B. Tabler, the 18-story, 1200-room structure was known as a motel within a hotel[7] due to a design featuring a series of ramps in the middle of the building, allowing guests to drive their cars directly to seven of the hotel's lower floors and park adjacent to their room.[11] Tabler's design also employed a checkerboard facade of windows and decorative panels to disguise the building's earthquake bracing.[12] It was the 60th Hilton hotel in the company's worldwide operations.[1]
In the original building, there was no 13th floor, while the 12th to the 15th floors housed mechanical equipment. Floors 16 to 19 contained guest rooms, overlooking an inner courtyard and garden on the 16th floor, with a landscaped plaza and a swimming pool and cabana-style rooms. There was also a heated garden court and sunbathing areas. There were a number of restaurants and bars on the lobby floor, including a Cafe Bellagio. It also had one of the world's largest ballrooms at the time,[citation needed] which was reached by escalators from the lobby to the floor below, handling a banquet of 2000 or a meeting for 3000. Sliding partitions allowed the space to be divided into nine soundproof rooms, each with lighting and television and projection booths. Thirteen private dining rooms were on the floor above the ballroom, with the entire facility focused on conventions. On the 19th floor were two suites, each with a living room and two bedrooms, with a spiral stairway leading to a penthouse solarium for parties of 100 or more. If the suites were not spoken for, Hilton said it would rent them for $200 a day. Room rates were $12 to $23 a day for singles, and $18 to $27 for doubles. The hotel was built by Cahill Brothers, Inc. in San Francisco, with David T. Williams, Inc. of New York handled the decorating.[1]
The Beatles stayed at the San Francisco Hilton during their 1964 US tour, opening their tour at San Francisco on August 18 after staying the night before at the Hilton Hotel.[13]
The San Francisco Hilton's distinctive parking layout is featured in the 1968 film Petulia, filmed in part at the hotel.[14]
Second tower
[edit]The 46-story, 493 ft (150 m) Hilton Tower addition was completed in 1971, joined to the original wing by a skybridge.[15] Due to the hotel addition's height, this makes it the tallest building in San Francisco to be located outside both the Financial District and the South of Market District.
The hotel was featured in the 1972 screwball comedy What's Up Doc?, where the main characters stay at a Hotel Bristol hosting a music convention. Filming took place in the new 46-story skyscraper hotel, with the lobby, drugstore, ballroom, seventeenth floor, and partly-finished top floor all filling the first hour of the film.[16]
In March 1985, Hilton was refused permission to open a casino property in Atlantic City, with the New Jersey Casino Control Commission in part citing that "reputed members of organized crime had frequented the San Francisco Hilton and had been seen coming and going at the office of Henri Lewin, a Hilton executive vice president....Werner Lewin, a Hilton vice president and general manager of the San Francisco Hilton, asked Hilton employees to destroy records because of a pending Federal antitrust investigation," which had found "associations with individuals of the most alarming type."[17]
Third tower and renovations
[edit]From 1985–1988, the hotel was completely rebuilt at a cost of $150 million,[3] to designs by architect John Carl Warnecke, with the addition of a 26-story 348 ft (106 m) third tower, connecting the two original towers, and rehabilitation of the first five levels of the Hilton Plaza.[3] Tabler's original checkerboard facade was removed and replaced with a more contemporary post-modern facade to match the new wing.
Between 2011 and 2017, the hotel underwent a $130 million overhaul, including noise-canceling windows and doors in guest rooms.[18] The renovation was finished in 2017, with updates in Tower Two. It is[when?] the largest hotel on the West Coast.[10]
Surrender of building
[edit]In 2023, Park Hotels & Resorts (an investment trust spun off from Hilton Worldwide in 2017) surrendered the building and the nearby Parc 55 San Francisco to its lender JPMorgan Chase, citing San Francisco's "record high office vacancy; concerns over street conditions; lower return to office than peer cities; and a weaker than expected citywide convention calendar."[19] In December 2023, the two hotels were placed into court-appointed receivership, under the control of Hotel Value Asset Enhancement for Wilmington Trust, the entity representing the mortgage lenders.[20]
2024 strike
[edit]In September 2024, employees at the Hilton San Francisco Union Square hotel went on strike.[21][22] As of October 21, 2024, the strike remains ongoing.[23][24]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "New Hilton Opens In San Francisco Tomorrow", The New York Times, Lawrence E. Davismay, 24, 1964
- ^ "This company is taking over two of S.F.'s largest hotels. The goal: sell them within 11 months". The San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2023-12-24.
- ^ a b c "Hilton San Francisco Union Square", cahill-sf.com
- ^ "Emporis building ID 118781". Emporis. Archived from the original on March 6, 2016.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "Hilton San Francisco Union Square". SkyscraperPage.
- ^ Hilton San Francisco Union Square at Structurae
- ^ a b "William B. Tabler Sr., Architect of Hilton Hotels, Dies at 89", David W. Dunlap, The New York Times February 10, 2004
- ^ "Parachuters jump off Union Square hotel", Curbed San Francisco, Brock Keeling, March 1, 2017
- ^ "Largest Hotel on West Coast Completes Renovation". www.meetingsnet.com. 18 April 2018.
- ^ a b "Hilton San Francisco Union Square Completes $26 Million Room Renovation in Tower Two", Hotel Online, April 19, 2017
- ^ "The hotels: Time to stop and rest (Fortune, 1963)", Fortune, August 12, 2012
- ^ Dunlap, David W. (10 February 2004). "William B. Tabler Sr., Architect of Hilton Hotels, Dies at 89". www.nytimes.com.
- ^ "The Beatles I know", Sue Ferrel, Datebook magazine Summer 1965
- ^ "Petulia Motel Check-In", Reel SF, November 1, 2010
- ^ "The San Francisco Hilton (1971)", Flirckr
- ^ "What's Up Doc? (1972)", World Film Locations: San Francisco, author Jez Conolly, editor Scott Jordan Harris, Intellect Books, 2013, ISBN 9781783200283
- ^ "HILTON REJECTED FOR LICENSE TO OPERATE A JERSEY CASINO", Donald Janson, The New York Times, March 1, 1985
- ^ "New and renovated SF hotels ready for summer season", San Francisco Chronicle, Jeanne Cooper, May 5, 2017
- ^ Barmann, Jay (2023-06-05). "Owner of SF's Largest Hotel, the Hilton Union Square, Is Walking Away, Surrendering It to Lender". SFist. Archived from the original on 2023-06-05. Retrieved 2023-06-06.
- ^ https://www.sfchronicle.com/sf/article/s-f-largest-hotels-taken-over-18450839.php [bare URL]
- ^ Manoukian, Elize (September 23, 2024). "Over 1,500 San Francisco Hotel Workers Strike in 2nd Walkout This Month". KQED. Retrieved October 21, 2024.
- ^ Waechter, Ted (September 22, 2024). "Hilton, Hyatt, and Marriott Hotel Workers Strike in San Francisco". UNITE HERE. Retrieved October 21, 2024.
- ^ "More Hotel Workers Strike, Others Settle Contracts as Strikes Continue to Roil U.S. Hotel Industry". UNITE HERE. October 21, 2024. Retrieved October 21, 2024.
- ^ Hari, Amanda (October 21, 2024). "San Francisco hotel workers go on strike for better wages, workloads, healthcare". CBS San Francisco. Retrieved October 21, 2024.