Grand Hotel Riccione

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StatusCompleted
TypeHotel
Architectural style
LocationViale Antonio Gramsci 23, Riccione, Italy
Grand Hotel Riccione
The façade of the Grand Hotel Riccione, c.1932
Interactive map of the Grand Hotel Riccione area
General information
StatusCompleted
TypeHotel
Architectural style
LocationViale Antonio Gramsci 23, Riccione, Italy
Coordinates44°0′5.78″N 12°39′42.67″E / 44.0016056°N 12.6618528°E / 44.0016056; 12.6618528
Construction started28 September 1928 (1928-09-28)
Opened
  • 15 August 1929; 96 years ago (1929-08-15) (main building)
  • 1934; 92 years ago (1934) (Torre 900)
CostLit. 4 million (main building)
OwnerMarebello SpA
Technical details
Floor count10 (3 in the main building, 7 in the Torre 900)
Design and construction
Architects
EngineerGaleazzo Pullè
Other information
FacilitiesSwimming pool
Website
www.grandhotelriccione.it (in Italian)

The Grand Hotel Riccione is a luxury hotel in Riccione, in the region of Emilia-Romagna, northern Italy.[1]

Inaugurated in 1929, the hotel was founded by Milanese entrepreneur Gaetano Ceschina [de],[1] and designed by architect Rutilio Ceccolini.[2] In 1934, it was expanded with the Torre 900, a tower annexe designed by Renato Camus.[3] The hotel was used by foreign dignatories visiting Benito Mussolini, Italy's fascist dictator, during his stays in Riccione,[4] while the tower annexe was used as an operational control and security centre by his private secretariat.[2][3] After the Second World War, the hotel symbolised Riccione's growth as an upmarket seaside resort, hosting extravagant parties.[5][6] The hotel closed in 2010 following an inheritance dispute.[7] It partially reopened in July 2023,[8] but its management company was declared bankrupt two months later.[9][10]

The original building's architecture is the Liberty style variant of Art Nouveau,[9][10] inspired by Gino Coppedè,[2][11] with sober and elegant lines that subdue Coppedè's eccentricism. It is constructed of predominantly white materials.[11] The hotel's rooms are decorated with crystal chandeliers of Bohemia and Murano.[1] It numbers 300 beds.[12] Previous guests at the hotel include Francesco Cossiga, President of Italy, Princess Haya bint Hussein of Jordan, and Emmanuel Milingo, excommunicated Archbishop of Lusaka.[8]

Construction

See also

References

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