Fairmont Palliser Hotel
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The Fairmont Palliser, (formerly known simply as the Palliser Hotel) is a hotel of the Canada-based Fairmont Hotels and Resorts chain. The historic hotel is located in downtown Calgary, Alberta on 9th Avenue South adjacent to the Calgary Tower and Palliser Square. It is among the city's oldest and most luxurious hotels.
The hotel opened on June 1, 1914. Like all of the flagship Canadian hotels in the Fairmont chain, it was built by the Canadian Pacific Railway and was a property of Canadian Pacific Hotels and Resorts (CP Hotels) until the company purchased Fairmont and changed their name to Fairmont Hotels and Resorts in 1999. The hotel was named after Captain John Palliser, who was an explorer in the region during the 1850s. Architect Lawrence Gotch designed the Edwardian building with a characteristic Chicago look. The building is 12 stories high and contains 405 guest rooms and suites. It has been renovated and expanded a number of times throughout its history.
Along with the Hotel Macdonald in Edmonton, it was one of the first two establishments to be re-issued with a liquor licence by the Alberta Liquor Control Board when Alberta abolished Prohibition in 1924.
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Canada's grand railway hotels |
City Hotels: The Empress | Hotel Vancouver | Hotel Macdonald | Palliser Hotel | Hotel Bessborough | Hotel Saskatchewan | Fort Garry Hotel | Royal York | Château Laurier | Queen Elizabeth Hotel | Windsor Hotel | Place Viger | Château Frontenac | Hotel Nova Scotian | Lord Nelson Hotel | Hotel Charlottetown | Hotel Newfoundland |
Resort Hotels: Jasper Park Lodge | Château Lake Louise | Banff Springs Hotel | Prince of Wales Hotel | Château Montebello | The Algonquin |