Hotel Torni
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Sokos Hotel Torni | |
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Hotel chain | Sokos Hotels |
General information | |
Location | Kamppi, Helsinki, Finland |
Address | Yrjönkatu 26 FI-00100 Helsinki |
Coordinates | 60°10′04″N 24°56′18″E / 60.16778°N 24.93833°E |
Opening | 1931 |
Height | 69.5 m (228 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 14 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Jung & Jung |
Other information | |
Number of rooms | 152 |
Number of suites | 14 |
Number of restaurants | 4 |
Website | |
www.sokoshotels.fi |
Hotel Torni (lit. 'Hotel Tower') is a historical hotel located in Kamppi, Helsinki, Finland, and a part of the Sokos Hotels hotel chain. When opened in 1931, it became the tallest building in Finland, a position it maintained until the completion of the new Neste headquarters in neighboring Espoo in 1976. It remained the tallest building in Helsinki until it was overtaken by Itäkeskuksen maamerkki in 1987. The interior of the building was completely renovated in 2005. It is located in central Helsinki, in the so-called Helsinki Design District.
History
[edit]The hotel was designed by architects Jung & Jung in 1928, and has 14 stories. It is allegedly the place where the murder of the Mata Hari-like Minna Craucher was planned in 1932.
The hotel served the needs of air defense during the Second World War, when members of the Finnish women's paramilitary organization Lotta Svärd used it as a watchtower to spot Soviet bombers. Immediately after the cessation of the war, Hotelli Torni served as the headquarters of the Allied Control Commission monitoring Finnish compliance with the obligations of the Moscow Armistice. It became known as a center of culinary excellence.
Lee Harvey Oswald, who would later assassinate John F. Kennedy, stayed in the hotel from 10 to 11 October 1959, while on his way to defect to the USSR.[1]
Restaurants
[edit]In Hotel Torni, there are several restaurants including Ravintola Torni (dining), Ateljee Bar (top of the tower with view over downtown Helsinki, known especially for the toilets which have scenic glass walls to the outside), American Bar (American style bar), and O'Malley's (Irish bar). The Ateljee Bar provides a monthly changing art exhibition featuring Finnish artists.