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InterContinental Vienna

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InterContinental Viennamap
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The InterContinental Vienna is a luxury hotel located in the Landstraße district of Vienna, Austria. Opened in 1964, it was one of the first international hotels to operate in the city after the Second World War. The hotel has 458 guest rooms and suites, and offers conference and event facilities covering about 1,200 square metres.[1][2]

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InterContinental Vienna Stadtpark view
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Location

The hotel is a detached building located between the Vienna Stadtpark and the Vienna Konzerthaus. The Stadtpark underground station is located next to the hotel on Johannesgasse.

History

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Construction of the InterContinental Vienna 1963
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InterContinental Wien Lobby 1964

InterContinental Vienna, which opened on March 4, 1964,[3] was the first hotel belonging to an international chain to open in Vienna. Upon completion, there were 504 rooms on 12 levels.

When the InterContinental Vienna opened, it was the twenty-third hotel to become part of the InterContinental Hotels Group, a hotel chain founded by the airline Pan American World Airways.

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Architecture and Construction Method

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Holabird and Root, an architecture firm that had played a major role in the development of the steel-frame skyscrapers in the United States, was commissioned to design the hotel, and in particular, to create a corporate identity for it. The Viennese architect Carl Appel was selected as contact architect.

Client and architect

At the time he was commissioned to design and supervise the construction of the InterContinental Vienna, architect Carl Appel was already an established figure in Austrian postwar architecture. His practice was involved in projects across both the private and public sectors, including office and administrative buildings as well as residential developments. Following the Second World War, Appel, together with contemporaries such as Erich Boltenstern, Max Fellerer and Oswald Haerdtl, contributed to the reconstruction of Vienna, emphasizing efficient building methods suited to the city’s recovery.[4] The hotel's reinforced-concrete facade is clad in Tyrolean sandstone and small-format mosaic stone, an approach noted at the time for its durability and innovative casting process.[5]

Space at a Premium

The InterContinental Vienna is 39 metres high, making it one of the city's first skyscrapers. The original design of the hotel envisioned a height of 50 metres, which was however ruled out due to urban planning constraints: firstly, the famed view from the Belvedere Palace to Vienna's historic centre would have been damaged, and secondly, a building of this height would have increased wind and endangering trees in the neighbouring Stadtpark. In cooperation with the city's building authority, Appel took the context into account and reduced the building height. In order to accommodate the demanding area requirements (504 hotel rooms, rooms for social events, extensive Building Services installations plus 240 parking spaces), he proposed a T-shaped floor plan and reduced the typical storey height to 2.45 metres. The city building authority approved the latter change on the grounds that the hotel was to be fully air-conditioned. The lower ceiling height was not merely an attempt to increase the hotel's floor area, but can also be considered part of a tradition dating back to the early twentieth century, when Adolf Loos developed his Raumplan: the height of a space was determined based on its use.[citation needed]

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InterContinental Wien Lobby
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Literature

  • Friedrich Achleitner: Eine Masse ohne Maß. Neues Bauen kritisch betrachtet: The Vienna InterContinental Hotel. In: Die Presse, 21./22. March 1964, p. 9
  • Gudrun Hausegger: Hotel InterContinental Wien - Internationaler Funktionalismus im Herzen von Wien, May 2011

Sources for the topic 'architecture':

  • Werner Blaser: Chicago Architecture. Holabird & Root. 1880–1992. Birkhäuser Verlag, Basel/Boston/Berlin 1992
  • Carl Appel: Carl Appel: Architekt zwischen Gestern und Morgen. Böhlau Verlag, Wien 1988. ISBN 3-205-05090-8
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References

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