Grand Pacific Hotel (Fiji)

The Grand Pacific Hotel is located on the main sea front, on Victoria Parade in Suva, Fiji. It was built by The Union Steamship Company in 1914 to serve the needs of passengers on its transpacific routes. The design of the hotel was to make the passengers think they had never gone ashore, for rooms in the GPH were like first-class staterooms, complete with saltwater bathrooms and plumbing fixtures identical to those on an ocean liner.

Joske's Thumb; Grand Pacific Hotel

The main entrance of the Grand Pacific Hotel in Suva, Fiji.
The lobby of the Grand Pacific Hotel in Suva, Fiji.

It has been a popular place to stay for famous guests such as Sir Charles Kingsford Smith, Somerset Maugham, James A Michener and Queen Elizabeth II.

Sir Charles Kingsford-Smith landed his plane, having flown from California, into Albert Park. His plane was transported to another place for take-off, to complete the flight to Australia. Thus completing the first trans pacific flight from the U.S.A. to Australia.

All rooms were on the second floor, and guests could step outside on a 15-foot (4.6 m)-wide veranda overlooking the harbor and walk completely around the building — as if walking on the deck. When members of the British royal family visited Fiji, they stood atop the wrought-iron portico, the "bow" of the Grand Pacific, and addressed their subjects massed across Victoria Parade in Albert Park. Queen Elizabeth alone is known to have stayed there three different times during different visits[1]. The last members of the Royal Family to stay in the Royal suite were the Duke and Duchess of Sussex during their 2018 visit to Fiji.

The hotel was built on the landing spot for the original Suva village, called Vu-ni-vesi after the trees nearby. There was a hotel on the site previously called Hotel Suva, which was little more than a shack.

Restoration

Fiji's Grand Pacific Hotel was still under construction in October 2012.

The hotel closed in 1992 and changed hands several times. It was restored to a five-star hotel with the help of the government-run Fijian Investment Corporation Ltd (FICL) and re-opened on 24 May 2014, in time for the hotel's 100th anniversary.[2] The 'Grand Old Lady' was reopened as a joint venture between Papua New Guinea's Superannuation Fund, or NASFUND, Fiji National Provident Fund and Lamana Developments of Papua New Guinea. NASFUND has a 50% stake while FNPF and Lamana have 25% stakes each.[3]

References

  1. "The Fijian hotel with royal approval". Stuff. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 26 May 2014. Retrieved 25 May 2014.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. More investments anticipated Grand Pacific Hotel’s 100th anniversary marked in style with hundreds gathered Archived 26 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Fiji Sun, 24 May 2014.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.