Jump to content

Hotel Ilves

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Sokos Hotel Ilves)
Sokos Hotel Ilves
Hotel Ilves
Hotel Ilves is located in Finland
Hotel Ilves
Location within Finland
Hotel chainSokos Hotels
General information
LocationTampere, Finland
AddressHatanpään valtatie 1, FI-33100 Tampere
Coordinates61°29′46″N 023°46′00″E / 61.49611°N 23.76667°E / 61.49611; 23.76667
Opening1986
Height63 m (207 ft)
Design and construction
Architect(s)Maunu Kitunen
Other information
Number of rooms336
Number of suites9
Number of restaurants5
Website
www.sokoshotels.fi

Hotel Ilves (officially Sokos Hotel Ilves) is an 18-storey hotel in the centre of Tampere, Finland. It was designed by architect Maunu Kitunen and was completed in 1986.[1] The hotel has a total of 336 guest rooms and five restaurants. At 63 metres (207 ft) tall, the hotel is one of the tallest buildings in Finland outside Helsinki metropolitan area. Hotel Ilves is part of the S Group's Sokos Hotels chain.

History

[edit]

The S Group, a large Finnish co-operative company, first proposed the idea of building a new hotel in central Tampere in the 1970s. The site chosen was an old redbrick baize-factory situated near the Tammerkoski rapids. Two redbrick buildings and the base of an old factory chimney next to the hotel are the only surviving remnants of the large industrial premises.

In 1983 the S-group's design team travelled to the United States to see how some of the world's most famous hotels, such as the Grand Hyatt, Marriott and Hilton, were built. The project architect Maunu Kitunen completed the design in March 1983, creating a highly visible landmark in the centre of the city. The architect's idea for the shape of the building came from a matchbox.[2]

The hotel was completed in 1986 and named Ilves (lynx) following a public competition.[2]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Emporis.com: Hotel Ilves[usurped]
  2. ^ a b Raimo Seppälä, Valovoimainen Ilves, ISBN 952-92-1151-1
[edit]
Bill Clinton in Sokos Hotel Ilves, spring 2006