Sokos Hotel Viru

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Sokos Hotel Viru in May 2012.
A standard double room at the hotel, in summer 2012.

Sokos Hotel Viru is a hotel in Tallinn, Estonia. Originally owned by Intourist and called Viru Hotel, it was first opened on 5 May 1972. The hotel building was the first high-rise building in Estonia and an inseparable part of the Tallinn cityscape. Nowadays, the hotel is connected to the shopping centre, Viru Keskus and is owned by Sokos Hotels.

The Soviet Union gave the project of Viru Hotel to the construction company Repo Oy from Savonlinna, Finland in 1969 and construction of the hotel started in July. However, the construction company went bankrupt in the middle of construction after a fire broke out on the top floors of the hotel in December 1970. So the state had to find another construction company, and financial backing for the project. The new construction company Haka Oy finished the hotel in May 1972. The project paid off, because it resulted in a new construction project in Pääjärvi that same year, and later new construction projects in Enso and Kostamus (all these being in the Republic of Karelia).[1]

During the Soviet era, the 23rd floor of the hotel housed a KGB radio centre, used to eavesdrop and spy on the hotel guests. Sixty of the hotel rooms had concealed espionage devices, and even some of the tables in the restaurant had microphones. The KGB left the hotel in a hurry right before the independence of Estonia in August 1991, but the secret rooms were not found until 1994. The former radio centre is now a museum.[2]

In 2003, the hotel was sold to the S Group, a Finnish retailing cooperative organisation. It now has 516 rooms.[3]

Further reading[]

  • Nupponen, Sakari: Aikamatka hotelli Viruun. Ajatuskirjat, 2007. ISBN 978-951-20-7472-3.

References[]

External links[]

Coordinates: 59°26′12″N 24°45′18″E / 59.43667°N 24.75500°E / 59.43667; 24.75500

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