All Content from Business Insider 07月18日 21:01
I stayed at a Florida Gilded Age hotel loved by the Vanderbilts, DuPonts, and Fords. It felt like traveling back in time.
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佛罗里达的贝尔维尤酒店,这座建于1897年、曾是镀金时代精英人士度假胜地的历史建筑,如今以一家35间客房的精品酒店形式重现辉煌。由铁路大亨亨利·B·普兰特建造,它曾是美国总统和显赫家族的下榻之所。虽然原建筑大部分已被拆除,但现存的部分经过精心修复和改造,保留了其19世纪的经典韵味,并融入了现代化的舒适体验。客人在此可以体验香槟迎宾、送餐早餐等贴心服务,并在充满历史氛围的客房中感受时光的沉淀。这家酒店不仅是一个住宿地点,更是一次穿越时空的文化体验,让人们得以一窥美国镀金时代的奢华与风华。

✨ 历史传承与现代融合:贝尔维尤酒店始建于1897年,曾是美国镀金时代的豪华度假胜地,接待过总统及众多名流。如今,虽然大部分原建筑已拆除,但保留下来的部分被精心修复并改造为一家精品酒店,成功地将历史的厚重感与现代的舒适体验相结合,为客人提供独特的住宿感受。

🚂 铁路大亨的远见:酒店由铁路巨头亨利·B·普兰特为吸引游客至其铁路沿线的佛罗里达海湾海岸而建。其优越的地理位置和便捷的铁路交通,使其成为当时精英阶层远离都市喧嚣的理想避世之所,被称为“海湾上的白色女王”。

🏛️ 精心修复与保留:酒店现存部分面积约38,000平方英尺,拥有35间客房。尽管经历了复杂的拆除和搬迁过程,但其内部结构和许多历史元素,如宏伟的楼梯和典雅的装饰,都被精心保留和修复,力求在细节处还原历史风貌,让客人仿佛置身于19世纪的奢华氛围之中。

🥂 体验式服务亮点:入住贝尔维尤酒店,客人可以享受到一系列体现昔日辉煌的服务,包括抵达时赠送的香槟、直接送到房间的早餐篮,以及遍布酒店各处的历史展览和音视频导览。这些细节旨在为客人提供沉浸式的历史文化体验,重现“镀金时代”的尊贵感。

⛳ 附属设施与周边活动:虽然酒店本身不设餐厅或酒吧,但客人可享用酒店内的咖啡馆、健身房,并可通过姊妹酒店Sandpearl Resort体验私人海滩。此外,酒店对面便是佛罗里达最古老的贝尔艾尔乡村俱乐部,为住客提供了高尔夫等休闲活动的选择。

The Belleview Hotel, now a 35-room boutique inn, once hosted visitors such as US presidents and elites like the Vanderbilts, DuPonts, and Fords.

At the height of the Gilded Age, a railroad tycoon opened Florida's Gulf Coast, then a small community, to America's elites.

Opening its doors in 1897, the Belleview Hotel, built by railroad giant Henry B. Plant, hosted the extremely wealthy in an exclusive refuge from their hectic big cities and industry hubs.

The hotel was constructed as a way to attract visitors to the Tampa Bay area, where Plant had expanded a railroad system. Visitors to the hotel arrived directly by rail, and they could disembark the train and immediately check into the resort once nicknamed the "White Queen on the Gulf."

The Belleview Hotel, later known as the Belleview-Biltmore, quickly became a favorite for America's Gilded Age millionaires, hosting families like the Vanderbilts, DuPonts, and Fords and figures as prominent as US presidents.

Its original structure, which hosted 400 rooms, reached over 820,000 square feet and was once believed to be the largest wooden structure in the world.

Today, after years of development drama, only a portion of the historic hotel remains.

I traveled to Belleair — the small community near Clearwater, Florida, where the historic hotel stands — and checked into the renovated 38,000-square-foot inn.

See what it's like to stay at the historic hotel, from receiving a glass of Champagne at check-in to enjoying a hand-delivered breakfast in the morning.

The Belleview Hotel was built in 1896 by railroad magnate Henry B. Plant and opened in 1897.
The late 1800s saw the expansion of railroad systems to developing Florida cities.

The peak of the Gilded Age brought booming developments to Florida, including Henry B. Plant's Plant System of railroads, which connected the previously isolated Tampa Bay area to cities in the Southeast.

As a way to promote the new railroad lines to Florida's Gulf Coast, Plant built two hotels in the Tampa Bay area hoping to attract visitors: the 1891 Tampa Bay hotel in downtown Tampa and the 1896 Belleview Hotel in Belleair, a quiet town near the coastal Clearwater, Florida.

It quickly became a beloved vacation spot for America's elites.
At one point, the hotel was believed to be the largest wooden structure in the world.

Opening its doors to the public in January 1897, the Belleview Hotel was quickly nicknamed the "White Queen of the Gulf" due to its grandiose architecture.

The Queen Anne-style wooden structure reached over 820,000 square feet and was believed to be, at one point, the largest wooden structure in the world, per the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

Visitors arrived at the 400-room resort via train thanks to Plant's railroads, which connected directly to the property.

Expanding over the following decades to include a 18-hole golf course and a country club on the property, the Belleview attracted wealthy visitors such as the Fords, the DuPonts, and the Vanderbilts and prominent figures like Thomas Edison, Babe Ruth, and US presidents Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter, as reported by the National Trust for Historic Preservation's Historic Hotels of America.

Today, only a small portion of the original structure remains.
In 2015, 90% of the original structure was demolished, with the remaining tenth being preserved as the boutique inn where I stayed.

By the 1980s, the hotel's grandeur had started to decline as the challenges of maintaining its iconic wooden structure grew and competing nearby hotels began shifting tourism patterns.

Following a series of acquisitions and renovations throughout the 1990s, portions of the hotel fell into disrepair. Then, in the summer of 2004, the wooden structure sustained severe damage during the hurricane season.

By 2009, after years of talks about demolishing the "White Queen of the Gulf," the hotel officially announced its closure. By then, the cost to renovate the hotel would have been over $200 million, requiring room rates as high as $600 nightly to balance the renovations, the Tampa Bay Times reported.

In 2015, 90% of the original structure was demolished, and the resort's waterfront property was sold. Townhomes were built in what was once the Intracoastal view from the hotel.

After the demolition, the preserved portion of the building was rotated 90 degrees and moved nearly 400 feet east of its original foundation to make way for the townhome and condo developments built throughout Belleview's original estate. These developments now surround the inn in a gated complex that includes the inn, country club, and residences.

Visitors to the Belleview Inn can enjoy the preserved lobby and stay in the original rooms.
Today, visitors check in on the same lobby that once welcomed elites and industry leaders.

In the preserved portion of the hotel, which has operated as a small inn since 2018 under new ownership, visitors can step into the past.

Checking in, I felt transported. The original wooden floors and grand staircase welcome visitors into a uniquely immersive historical experience.

The lobby showcased white paneled ceilings, dazzling glass chandeliers, and classic decor, as well as a majestic grand piano.

As I walked in, my footsteps echoed throughout the quiet lobby. At the reception desk, I rang a bell to signal to the inn's small staff that I had arrived.

Renovated interiors and old-fashioned hospitality keep the hotel's legacy present.
The hotel interiors are carefully kept while maintaining the original structure.

The staff is friendly and knowledgeable about the hotel's long history, which is displayed everywhere — framed historic paintings and illustrations of the Belleview line its walls.

My room was located on the second floor, and walking up the stairs up to my room felt like stepping into one of the many artworks on display.

While the hallways have been renovated and modernized many times since the hotel's 1897 opening, with the most recent being prior to its 2018 reopening, the interior structure of the hotel remains, with the wide walkways and central staircase reflecting the hotel's history.

Today, the inn hosts visitors in just 35 of its original rooms.
Nightly prices at the hotel go from $260 for a standard king bedroom to $350 for a premium suite.

At $260 for one night — or $230 for Florida residents, plus a $25 nightly resort fee — the standard king bedroom offers a comfortable and luxurious accommodation.

Despite booking a standard bedroom, I was given a complimentary upgrade to a junior suite, as the hotel had light occupancy during my stay. The room I was placed in costs $325 a night, or $275 for Florida residents.

I had a view of the hotel's pool, as well as the surrounding townhomes. My room had a large sofa, a lounge and a reading chair, a full-size desk and closet, and a separate "parlor area" with a coffee machine and mini refrigerator.

The room also had two separate TVs, one facing the bed and another facing the living space.

While mostly renovated, the room's wall details and window sashes appeared to nod to the hotel's history. The decoration, albeit modern, paid homage to the classic elegance of its past, with dark leather chairs and shiny metal details throughout the room.

Hotel staff presented me with a glass of Champagne on my arrival.
The hospitality at the hotel felt like echoes of a luxurious past.

I sipped a glass of Champagne as I walked upstairs and explored my room. The gesture made me feel like a member of an exclusive club of Gilded Age elites.

Guests have access to the hotel's pool and outdoor areas.
The pool is fenced off and requires room key access to enter.

From my room, I got a full view of the pool, which hotel guests can access throughout the day. The pool is overlooked by surrounding condos, offering a not-so-private experience.

While the current pool was added during the 2018 renovation, based on pre-demolition photographs, Belleview's pools date back to 1899, when Henry B. Plant's son, Morton Freeman Plant, who ran the hotel after his father's death, built an Olympic-sized pool lined with Italian tiles, according to the hotel's website.

Downstairs, guests can visit a café stocked with a wide variety of drinks and snacks.
The café offers a variety of drinks, snacks, lunches, desserts and hotel souvenirs.

The hotel's café — its solution to the lack of on-site restaurant and bar — offers a variety of snacks, drinks, desserts, and Belleview Inn souvenirs.

I found the service a bit confusing, as I never saw employees near the café. Nancy Cimney, the regional director of sales and marketing for Opal Collection, which runs the inn, told Business Insider its small staff is cross-trained, and while there isn't a member of staff solely focused on working at the café, team members are always available to help customers.

The hotel was quiet during my weeknight stay, making it feel a bit like a ghost town at times. Cimney said weeknights during the summer months tend to be some of the inn's quieter periods, with occupancy peaking during the winter months and over spring break.

I wondered what it would've been like staying in the same room a hundred years prior, during the heyday of the resort.

Guests can also take advantage of an in-building gym and a small conference room.
The gym was a bit smaller than the room I was staying in.

The hotel's small gym offered a limited selection of cardio and weight-lifting equipment to guests.

Although the hotel is no longer on the waterfront, guests have access to a private beach at a sister hotel in Clearwater.
At the Sandpearl Resort, Belleview Inn guests can enjoy access to a private beach and dining.

While the Belleview Inn is now presented as a golf-forward property farther inland, guests looking to experience the white sand beaches of the Florida Gulf Coast can head over to the Sandpearl Resort, a sister hotel, and enjoy its private beach.

I took a 15-minute Uber to check out the beach and eat at the resort's on-site restaurant. Unlike the quiet surroundings of the Belleview Inn, the Sandpearl Resort is located on a very touristy area of the Clearwater beach.

Back at the hotel, the grand piano offers guests entertainment on some nights, but not during my stay.
The piano in the historic lobby is often the star of entertainment at the hotel.

During select summer Fridays, the Belleview Inn hosts piano nights in its lobby, with a dedicated pianist playing for hotel guests and members of the public.

However, during my weeknight stay, the hotel remained quiet at night. Without a restaurant, bar, or spa on-site, the Belleview Inn felt more like a place to sit back, indulge in its rich history, and relax.

In lieu of entertaining areas for guests, the hotel holds a room dedicated to its history.
The room displays artifacts from the Belleview's past and has a moody atmosphere.

One of the rooms open to guests at the Belleview Inn is a history room showcasing different artifacts from the resort's past. The moody room has dark wood and leather details and is filled with pictures, paintings, and objects transporting guests through the hotel's history, almost serving as a museum.

The next morning, I was greeted by a breakfast basket delivered straight to my door.
The baskets are delivered each morning to every guest, and are one of the inn's signature hospitality gestures.

After a long and restful night of sleep, a breakfast basket hand-delivered by hotel staff waited at my door.

The baskets, delivered to guests each morning, are one of the inn's signature gestures and are included in the cost of the stay.

Inside the basket, a small breakfast waited for me.
The basket includes Florida orange juice, an apple, and a fresh-based croissant made in-house.

The basket included a freshly baked croissant made in-house, a bottle of Florida orange juice, an apple, and a packet of jam and butter.

While the hotel doesn't offer a traditional continental breakfast, the breakfast basket gave me the fuel I needed to start my day.

Eating on the wrap-around porch gave me a quiet, reflective moment to contemplate the location's history.
The porch, expanding the front and rear of the hotel, is sun-lit throughout the day.

While the pool offered a nice place to splash and sunbathe, the porch was where I found my spot to lounge.

Having my breakfast basket on one of the many chairs and side tables alongside the extensive porch — which extends the length of the hotel in both the front and back — gave me the opportunity to contemplate the rich history of the wooden structure.

Across the street, the Belleair Country Club welcomes members and hotel guests alike.
Once a part of the Belleview Resort, the Belleair Country Club is the oldest golf club in Florida.

The exclusive country club and its 18-hole golf course — which is also the oldest golf club in Florida, dating back to the Belleview Hotel's opening in 1897, as reported by Links Magazine — sit across the street from the historic hotel.

The golf course, which originally featured six holes and was part of the Belleview resort, was expanded under Morton F. Plant's ownership. It was operating as the Belleview Country Club by 1909, when it was lauded as one of the top golf locations in Florida, as reported by Historic Hotels of America.

Today, guests at the Belleview Inn can enjoy the amenities at the country club, which include a restaurant, bar, golf courses, and spa.

Staying at the Belleview Inn felt like stepping into a museum, and I'd do it again.
Artworks depicting the hotel in its heyday line the hotel walls.

Departing in the early morning, I left the Belleview Inn reflecting on its history, which was nearly impossible to escape as every wall — including inside my bathroom — displayed memories of the hotel's past.

I had basked in the experience, listening to the audio tours shown in QR codes alongside custom paintings as I explored the hotel.

Even after a complicated history of renovations, relocations, and demolitions, the hotel preserves its classic, 19th-century soul.

If anything, I wish my stay would've lasted longer, and that I had packed an extravagant period dress, just for the thrill of it.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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