Maidens Hotel, Delhi
Maidens Hotel | |
---|---|
Hotel chain | Oberoi Hotels & Resorts |
General information | |
Address | Civil Lines, Delhi |
Opening | 1903 |
Website | |
www |
The Maidens Hotel, Delhi, also Oberoi Maidens Hotel, and originally, Maiden's Metropolitan Hotel is a heritage hotel in the Civil Lines section of Delhi, India. Opened in 1903, it was one of the earliest modern hotels in Delhi, and situated in the Civil Lines, where all European style hotels were situated and the officers of British Raj stayed.[1]
History
The original hotel (Metropolitan Hotel) was jointly run by two Englishmen, the Maiden brothers, from 1894 onwards, and in its present location by one of them, J. Maiden, from 1902 onwards. In the early 20th century, the hotel was widely considered to be the best hotel in Delhi. At the time of the 1903 Coronation Durbar held by Lord Curzon to celebrate the coronation of Edward VII as Emperor of India, the Metropolitan Hotel was the most sought after hotel accommodation in Delhi and the most expensive. The hotel is located 200 metres away from the Civil Lines Metro Station. It is lodged in the centre of New Delhi. Its architecture bears testimony to the old, grandiose European tradition.
Today it is part of the Oberoi Hotels & Resorts chain.[2]
Facility
This hotel has dining, lodging, special areas for meetings and events and Discover Delhi, a travel related event for most of its customers. The Graden Terrace, The Curzon Room and the Cavalry Bar are the dining areas and restaurants in the hotel.
Maidens Hotel boasts of 55 luxury suites and rooms. All rooms and suites are centrally air-conditioned, with amenities like mini bars, tea-coffee makers, LCD TVs, satellite channels, personal In-room safes, hair dryers, wireless high speed internet and direct dial telephones.
Its insite facilities include car transfers on request, a doctor on call, on-site parking, valet parking, access to a gym, access to a swimming pool, facilities for the differently abled, currency exchange, porter assistance and luggage rooms.[3]
Notes
- ^ "'Lodged' in the heart of New Delhi". Hindustan Times. August 30, 2011.
- ^ "Other group hotels". Oberoi Hotels & Resorts.
- ^ "Maiden Hotels".
References
- Fanshawe, Herbert Charles (1908). A handbook for travellers in India, Burma, and Ceylon: including the provinces of Bengal, Bombay, Madras, the United Provinces of Agra and Lucknow, the Panjab, the North-West Frontier Province, Beluchistan ... etc (London ed.). J. Murray. p. 535. Retrieved 29 September 2011.
See also
External links