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The Peak Hotel

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The Peak Hotel
山頂酒店
The Peak Hotel in the 1930s
Map
General information
LocationVictoria Peak, Hong Kong
Opening1888
Closed1936
The Peak Hotel in 1926

The Peak Hotel was a hotel at upper terminus of the Peak Tram in Hong Kong. It started as a bar and restaurant, and a hotel with twenty bedrooms for summer visitors opening about the same time as the Peak Tram, in 1888.[1]

About 13 years earlier, in 1875, N.J. Ede had built a house named Dunheved on the property.[2] In 1881, Alexander Findlay Smith, a Scottish former railway man, had petitioned for the right to introduce a funicular railway to Hong Kong. The Peak Tram was built and began operations in 1888. About the same time, Findlay Smith bought Dunheved from Ede, and opened it as the Peak Hotel. (Ede and his family moved next door.) After the Peak Tram opened, Findlay Smith quickly put the Peak Hotel on the market.

File:Findlay Smith HK April 1909.jpg
Findlay Smith in April 1909

It was sold, and completely rebuilt into an imposing three-story building, reopening in 1890. It boasted of commodious and well-appointed accommodation, and the hotel was deservedly popular. Later, another story was added to make it four stories, and then a two-story annexe with views down to Pok Fu Lam was built. A further addition doubled the size of the annexe and added a third story. The hotel commanded views of the city and the harbour in one direction, and of Pok Fu Lam facing Lamma Island in the other.

In 1922 it was bought by the owners of the rival Hong Kong Hotel[3] for HK$ 600,000. The hotel's poor construction led to further deterioration. It closed in 1936[3] and in 1938 its fate was finally sealed by a fire.[4][5]

References

  1. ^ Reports from the consuls of the United States, Issues 144–147 By United States. Bureau of Foreign Commerce
  2. ^ Hong Kong Public Records Office
  3. ^ a b hshgroup.com Archived 12 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Eric Cavaliero, Grand old lady to turn 110 Archived 22 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine, 24 July 1997
  5. ^ History of the Peak