Davenport Hotel - Spokane, WA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 47° 39.400 W 117° 25.468
11T E 468127 N 5278228
The Davenport, the landmark hotel in Spokane which occupies an entire city block, celebrated its 100th birthday in 2014.
Waymark Code: WMJQ73
Location: Washington, United States
Date Posted: 12/16/2013
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member lumbricus
Views: 6

A National Historic Place for nearly 30 years, the Davenport is number eight on the City of Spokane's Downtown City Drive Attractions list. Known as the place to see and be seen, the hotel's swanky Peacock Room Lounge has been voted Spokane’s best place to have a drink.

Here's their description of the hotel:
Davenport Hotel The Davenport Hotel has been world-famous since its opening in September of 1914. It was the first hotel with air conditioning, a central vacuum system, housekeeping carts (designed by Louis Davenport himself), accordion ballroom doors and the Crab Louis (named for Louis Davenport). After a $38-million top to bottom renovation, the Davenport now revels in its original glory. Re-opened in 2002, it now has a total of 611 guest rooms and suites, thanks in part to the completion of the Davenport Tower in early 2007 and is known as one of “America’s Exceptional Hotels.” Take the hotel’s fascinating walking tour and stay for lunch at one of their restaurants.
On one hand it could be said that The Davenport began with its opening in September of 1914. On the other hand it could be said that The Davenport really began in 1889 as two separate buildings, the Pennington Hotel and Davenport's Restaurant. In 1914, much of the block on which the hotel now stands was razed and the 14 story, 400 room Davenport built, incorporating the Pennington Hotel and parts of the Pfister Block with its magnificent Marie Antoinette Ball Room. This ball room was designed earlier by Kirtland Cutter, the same architect responsible for the Davenport.

The hotel building now occupies two thirds of the block, with the still extant Pennington Hotel, incorporated as part of the Davenport, occupying the east one third of the block. The lower three floors occupy the entire footprint of the hotel, while the upper eleven floors form a "U" shape, facing south toward 1st. Avenue.
From The National Register: On one hand it could be said that The Davenport began with its opening in September of 1914. On the other hand it could be said that The Davenport really began in 1889 as two separate buildings, the Pennington Hotel and Davenport's Restaurant. In 1914, much of the block on which the hotel now stands was razed and the 14 story, 400 room Davenport built, incorporating the Pennington Hotel and parts of the Pfister Block with its magnificent Marie Antoinette Ball Room. This ball room was designed earlier by Kirtland Cutter, the same architect responsible for the Davenport.

The hotel building now occupies two thirds of the block, with the still extant Pennington Hotel, incorporated as part of the Davenport, occupying the east one third of the block. The lower three floors occupy the entire footprint of the hotel, while the upper eleven floors form a "U" shape, facing south toward 1st. Avenue.

Unable to meet local building codes, the hotel was closed in 1985 and came perilously close to demolition when it was bought, in March of 2000, for $6.5 million and a further $37 million was poured into its restoration, culminating in its reopening in September of 2002.

The hotel was entered in the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.
The interior of the hotel is truly amazing. Virtually everything in sight is decorated with busy ornament of cast and painted plaster or terra cotta. English oak stained dark is used extensively. The main lobby, 108 feet by 12 feet, was decorated in the "Spanish Renaissance" style with great neo-Rococo fervor. Its entire twenty foot beamed ceiling was an expansive skylight of "opalescent glass." It is said that parrots in cages hung under the surrounding gallery between each set of supporting piers. There was a profusion of potted palms.

The Isabella Room, also in Spanish Renaissance style but with a "treatment[that] reflects little, if any, of the Moorish influence shown in the lobby", has an arabesque with representations of boys, birds, rabbits, foxes, turtles and other creatures. All the column capitals have bolsters with chimeras — the body of a lion with cloven hoofs and a human head.

There was a total of seventeen ball, banquet, and convention rooms elaborately decorated in a number of different styles. The Hall of the Doges was "strikingly suggestive of the palaces of Italian Doges of medieval times." Its ceilings are vaulted and frescoed with a tracery clerestory. The oak paneled Elizabethan Rooms (A, B, C and D) were in the style of the Tudors "accurately portrayed in every detail."

The oak furniture was "conscientiously copied from the most famous Elizabethan pieces."

Other spaces were known as the Gothic Room, Green Room, Mandarin Room and Arabic Tent Room.
From The National Register
The "Official Tourism" URL link to the attraction: [Web Link]

The attraction’s own URL: [Web Link]

Hours of Operation:
Open essentially 24/7/365


Admission Prices:
Free


Approximate amount of time needed to fully experience the attraction: Half of a day (2-5 hours)

Transportation options to the attraction: Personal Vehicle or Public Transportation

Visit Instructions:

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