
More than forty years after the construction of a skyscraper in one of the capitals of the world, a novel about the hotel’s life appeared: “The Decade’s Dream is London novels” by Afshin Rattansi, a former producer of the BBC Today program.
The location of the novel is the London Hilton skyscraper in Park Lane, completed in 1963 and designed by architects William B. Tabler. The main character, the working class of the working class of the 1980s, is a millionaire, but what about the others who decided to live in hotels and not buy real estate?
In New York: The Carlyle - “Although the residents of the hotel come in different shapes, sizes and ages, the population tends to tend to old age and to a high tax bracket,” said Marcy Lieberman, manager of the hotel in Carlyle. Usually it is a man of the upper echelon. “People are used to a certain convenience and like living in an environment where these things are available,” she said.
Combine this with the right amount of pampering, and you have the answer to the prayer of the hotel salesman - everything ends in convenience. For example, the Ritz-Carlton in Central South Park offers inclusive and a la carte services for any situation where you do not need a massage that requires diamonds in an instant. "(Daniel Bubbeo, Newsday)
In London: “John Petch, boutique hotel group sales director, GLA Hotels (owned by Lancaster in Paris and Hotel Cadogan in London) began his career in the Savoy group in the early 1980s. But in the early 1990s, he said:, the density of hotels was dying out.
But the wave turns; Both Lancaster and Cadogan have three permanent residents who use hotels as their urban bases. “People are returning to hotels because of security and service,” says Petch. Boutique hotels also succeed in creating a homely atmosphere, backed by personalized service. “If you have an apartment, you can have one person who will take care of you,” he says. "(Tracy Hoffman, Financial Times)" You have all of our staff on call.
Hotel and Residential Names:
Geri Halliwell - The Lanesborough, London
Bobby Hashemi, founder of the Coffee Republic - Claridge, London
Ruud Gullit - Malmaison, London
Chris Evans - Longham Hilton, London
Richard Harris - Savoy, London
Pleasure Rupert Murdoch with Wendy Dan - The Mercer Hotel, New York
Ken Home - Dorchester, London
Peter Sellers and Britt Eckland; Richard Burton and Liz Taylor -
Dorchester, London.
Coco Chanel - Ritz, Paris
Marlene Dietrich - Hotel Lancaster, Paris
Greta Garbo - Fairmont Miramar, Los Angeles
Howard Hughes - Desert Inn, Las Vegas
Salvador Dali - Hotel Marise, Paris
Peter Bogdanovich - Hotel Stenkhop, New York
Claude Monet - Savoie, London
Cate Blanchett - Covent Garden Hotel, London
Christina Ricci - Covent Garden Hotel, London
Diane von Furstenberg - Carlisle, New York
Frank Sinatra - The Waldorf Towers, New York
Cole Porter - Waldorf Towers, New York
Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald - Lowell Hotel, New York
Madonna - Carlisle, New York
Madonna - House, London
William Burrows - Beat Hotel, Paris
William Burrows - Chelsea Hotel, New York
Sid Vicious - Chelsea Hotel, New York
Dylan Thomas - Chelsea, New York
Arthur C Clarke - Hotel Chelsea, New York
Bob Dylan - Chelsea, New York
Tim Burton - Portobello Hotel, London
Francis Ford Coppola - Portobello Hotel, London
John Lennon - Hilton, Amsterdam
The title novel in the quarter-finals of The Dream of the Decade may end in alarming circumstances, but you only need to look at the tragedies of famous people who died in hotels to find out that this is not uncommon. the ends

