Station Hotel, Perth

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Station Hotel
Station Hotel Perth logo.png
5. Perth Station copy.jpg
A 1970s view of the hotel, looking northwest from beyond the entrance to Perth railway station
General information
Architectural styleFlemish Gothic
Location1 Leonard Street
Perth
Scotland
Coordinates56°23′33″N 3°26′20″W / 56.392635°N 3.438870°W / 56.392635; -3.438870Coordinates: 56°23′33″N 3°26′20″W / 56.392635°N 3.438870°W / 56.392635; -3.438870
Completed1888; 134 years ago (1888)
Governing bodyHistoric Environment Scotland
Design and construction
ArchitectAndrew Heiton
John Murray Robertson
Website
http://www.perthstationhotel.co.uk/

Station Hotel is an historic building in Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland. Located on Leonard Street, it is a Category B listed building[1] built in 1888.[2] It opened for business in August 1890.[2] One of the hotel's first managers was Arthur Foster.[3]

The hotel faces Perth railway station, for which it is named.[1] It is also close to Perth bus station. The hotel was formerly owned and managed by the Highland, North British and Caledonian Railway companies.[4]

The building, made of cream and red sandstone, was designed by Perth's city architect Andrew Heiton, who assumed his role some thirty years earlier.[1] He worked with another local architect, John Murray Robertson, on the project.[1] The hotel is a notable example of Scottish baronial architecture.[5]

Queen Victoria was a regular visitor to the hotel. She had breakfast there on her final visit to Perth in May 1900,[6] eight months before her death. She was in a wheelchair on that day.[6]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d Leonard Street, Station Hotel, Including Gate PiersHistoric Environment Scotland
  2. ^ a b About us – Perth Station Hotel
  3. ^ Official Guide to Perth and Its Neighbourhood by the Tramway Car Routes – Perth Town Council (1907)
  4. ^ History – Perth Station Hotel
  5. ^ Yorke, Trevor (2021). Victorian Railway Stations. Newbury: Countryside Books. p. 88. ISBN 978 1 84674 335 1.
  6. ^ a b The Historical Journal of the More Family (1901), p. 112

External links[]

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