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It has a curved plan, and is in three storeys. Near the centre is a circular drum containing the entrance, the hotel has a curved south end, at the north end is a circular glazed café, and there are balconies along the rear. [53] [54] II* Wall and piers, Midland Hotel
Poulton-le-Sands is one of three small villages that combined to create Morecambe, Lancashire, England, the other two being Torrisholme and Bare. A local board of health was established in 1852, which, taking its name from Morecambe Bay , became the borough of Morecambe in 1902.
Midland Hotel staircase with Eric Gill's Neptune and Triton Medallion. The Midland Hotel was built to replace two earlier hotels: the North Western Hotel built in 1848 by the "little" North Western Railway, which had been renamed the Midland Hotel in 1871 when the Midland Railway took over the North Western Railway; and another hotel at Heysham, the Heysham Towers, which was converted from a ...
Midland Hotel, Morecambe (1933 – present) Midland Hotel, Morecambe (1871–1932), originally named North Western Hotel, Morecambe (1848–1871) Midland Grand Hotel at St Pancras station, London, now known as St Pancras Renaissance London Hotel; Midland Hotel, adjacent to Mansfield railway station, Nottinghamshire
Serves Vivere Hotel Alabang and Festival Alabang: 24.707: 15.352: Corporate Avenue: Serves South Station, Filinvest Corporate City, Crimson Hotel and Festival Alabang: 24.956: 15.507: N411 (Alabang-Zapote Road) / Market Street: No left turns: 25.099: 15.596: N1 (Manila South Road) / N142 (Montillano Street) / East Service Road: Eastern terminus.
The North Western Hotel in Morecambe, Lancashire, England, was built in 1847–48. It was designed by the Lancaster architects Paley and Austin for the "Little" North Western Railway. [2] Including furnishings, it cost £4,795 (equivalent to £600,000 in 2023). [3] It was a two-storey building containing 40 bedrooms.
In 2002, Hongkong Land announced a 1 billion dollar plan—The Landmark Scheme—to renovate The Landmark. The whole scheme included extending the existing shopping atrium to 3/F and 4/F of the building, introducing a department store Harvey Nichols and a hotel The Landmark Mandarin Oriental Hotel, and the redevelopment of The Landmark East into a new 14-floor office tower named York House.
Eric Gill produced several works for the hotel. These were two seahorses, modelled as Morecambe shrimps, for the outside entrance, a round plaster relief on the ceiling of the circular staircase inside the hotel, a decorative wall map of the north west of England, and a large stone relief of Odysseus being welcomed from the sea by Nausicaa. [3]