Boulevard Hotel

Last updated
Boulevard Hotel
Former namesCuscaden House Hotel (1968–1974)
General information
Location28 Cuscaden Rd, Singapore
Opening1968 (as Cuscaden House)
ClosedApril 30, 2000;24 years ago (April 30, 2000)
Other information
Number of rooms210

Boulevard Hotel was a hotel on Orchard Boulevard in the Orchard Planning Area in Singapore. Opened on Cuscaden Road in 1968 as the Cuscaden House Hotel, it closed down in 1974 before being acquired by Hotel Malaysia Limited, who reopened it as the Hotel Malaysia in 1976. In 1983, the hotel received an extension, after which its main entrance was shifted to Orchard Boulevard. It was also renamed the Boulevard Hotel. The hotel closed down in 2000 before being demolished to make way for a condominium complex.

History

The Cuscaden House Hotel, owned by the Singapore Land Group, was opened on Cuscaden Road in early 1968. In November of that year, it was reported that the hotel had "so far produced some encouraging results", despite having only been in operation for nine months. [1] The hotel's discotheque, The Eye, closed on 31 August 1972. It was the second hotel discotheque to have been closed in the past three months. [2] The hotel was closed on 31 May 1974. In August, it was acquired by Hotel Malaysia Limited, a subsidiary of the Goodwood Group, for $14 million. The company announced there were plans were made to renovate the building for $5 million to $6 million, after which it would be reopened in February of the next year as the Connaught Hotel. The renovations would increase the number of rooms to a total of 300. [3] However, it was announced in June 1975 that the renovations had been "temporarily shelved" as a result of "problems in planning." [4]

In February 1976, Hotel Malaysia Limited announced that the hotel would reopen in the next few months under the name Hotel Malaysia after minor renovations at the hotel were completed. [5] It reopened in April as a "tourist class" hotel. [6] At its reopening, it featured 210 rooms, a 24-hour coffee house, a "restaurant-cocktail lounge-bar", a conference room and a swimming pool. [7] The hotel's La Ronde restaurant received a lightly positive review from Violet Oon of the New Nation in January 1977, who wrote: "As for the food, it is high quality but just misses hitting the top class mark through attention to detail. In fact, this can be said of the restaurant too." [8] Margaret Chan of The Straits Times wrote a positive review of the restaurant in November 1982, giving it a rating of 9/10. She wrote: "For the non-expense wage-earner like me, La Ronde spells an evening of grand eating at affordable prices." [9]

In February 1980, Hotel Malaysia Limited received the approval of the local authorities for a $63 million extension hotel. The 16-storey tall extension, which was to be completed by July 1984, would add an additional 371 rooms to the hotel, making it the largest hotel to be owned by the Goodwood Group. As the extension was to be built behind the existing hotel, its main entrance would be shifted from Cuscaden Road to Orchard Boulevard, making it the only hotel to face that street. Local company Building and Engineering Enterprises was awarded the contract for the project. [10] The extension was to include a five-storey car park, a 160-seat coffee house, a 140-seat restaurant and a cocktail lounge with a capacity for 90 people. Furninshing of the extension was to cost $20 million while renovations on the original buildings were to cost $10 million. [11] The extension was to feature an interior designed by Israeli designer Dora Gad, who produced over 500 individual pieces of sculpted aluminium, including the tallest cast aluminium sculpture in Singapore. Placed in the atrium, it was 15-storeys tall and measured 1 sqm. The project was Gad's first in Southeast Asia. [12]

The La Ronde restaurant, as well as the Coctail Lounge and Residents' Club Bar were to make way for a specialty restaurant. It was estimated that the extension would result in the total number of staff at the hotel to increase from 300 to 700. [11] Each of the rooms in the new extension were to include a kitchenette, a first in Singapore, as well as facilities for making tea and coffee. It was also to feature a health centre, two swimming pools and 10 food and beverage outlets. The newly-renovated hotel was to be a four-star hotel. It was renamed the Boulevard Hotel Singapore on 15 October 1983, prior to the extension's completion as the previous name was "not an established one." [13] The extension was opened in August 1984, featuring a coffee house, a cocktail lounge, a shopping gallery, function and conference rooms, a centre for businessmen, an exclusive lounge and a fitness centre. [14] In March 1985, the hotel spent over $500,000 on the installation of a computer system for its front and back office operations. [15]

The Goodwood Group put the hotel up for sale in February 1997, with an asking price of $550-600 million, claiming that the hotel "generates a gross operating profit of about $16 million a year." The Straits Times noted that several developers interested in the property "balked" at the "steep" price. [16] In March, the asking price was lowered to $450 million. [17] The site was acquired for $410 million in the following month by the Hong Leong Group, [18] who announced that they intended to redevelopment the building into "prestigious condominiums or a hotel or a combination of the two." [19] In September 1998, the company announced that while it had received approval from the local authorities to rezone the site for "permanent residential use", the hotel would remain open for the next two years at least. [20] The hotel closed down at the end of April 2000, after which it was demolished to make way for the condominium complex Cuscaden Residences. [21] [22]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hilton Singapore Orchard</span> Hotel in Orchard Road, Singapore

The Hilton Singapore Orchard is a 1080-room five-star hotel located at 333 Orchard Road in Singapore.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">MacDonald House</span> Historic building on Orchard Road, Singapore

The MacDonald House is a prominent building and monument in Singapore, located at Orchard Road in the Museum Planning Area, within the Central Area of the country. Built in 1949, it was the first building to be fully air-conditioned in Southeast Asia. Located a short distance from the Istana, it was the last remaining office building in facing brick in the central area.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Goodwood Park Hotel</span> Hotel in Singapore

The Goodwood Park Hotel is a heritage hotel in Singapore, situated in a 6-hectare landscaped garden on Scotts Road. It was first built as the club house for the Teutonic Club serving the expatriate German community in Singapore, and later converted into a hotel.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Millennium Downtown New York Hotel</span> Hotel in Manhattan, New York

The Millennium Downtown New York is a hotel in Lower Manhattan, New York City, located at the southeast corner of Fulton Street and Church Street. The hotel is adjacent to 195 Broadway, with which it shares the block, and is located across Church Street from the World Trade Center. The building is 55 stories tall, with a total of 471 guest rooms and 98 suites.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Singapore Conference Hall</span> Multi-purpose building in Singapore

The Singapore Conference Hall, formerly the Singapore Conference Hall and Trade Union House, is a multipurpose building in Shenton Way, Singapore. Designed in modernist style, the SCH is five stories tall and capped with a cantilevered V-shaped roof. The SCH houses the Singapore Chinese Orchestra (SCO); the concert hall has a capacity of 831 people. It was the first post-colonial building to be gazetted as a national monument.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Scarlet Singapore</span>

The Scarlet Singapore is a luxury boutique hotel located at Erskine Road, Chinatown, Singapore. Opened in 2004, The Scarlet Singapore contains 80 rooms and is managed by Singapore-based hospitality management group Grace International.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Yue Hwa Building</span> Department store located in Chinatown, Singapore

Yue Hwa Building is a historic building located at the junction of Eu Tong Sen Street and Upper Cross Street in Chinatown, Singapore, next to Chinatown MRT station. Built by Swan and Maclaren in 1927, it was then the tallest building in Chinatown and was known as Nam Tin Building (南天大厦), owned by Lum Chang Holdings. The building housed the six-storey Great Southern Hotel, along with a few shops and cabarets that were popular among Chinese travellers. In 1993, Lum Chang Holdings sold the building to Hong Kong businessman Yu Kwok Chun, who converted it to the first Yue Hwa Chinese Products department store in Singapore in 1994. The renovation process, which conserved the exterior while adding features such as an atrium and waterfall to the interior, won the building the Architectural Heritage Award by the Urban Redevelopment Authority in 1997.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Voco Orchard Singapore</span>

Voco Orchard Singapore is a voco hotel in located at Orchard Road, Singapore. It is the first voco-branded hotel by InterContinental Hotels Group in Southeast Asia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Orchard Point</span> Shopping mall in Orchard Road, Singapore

Orchard Point is a shopping centre in Singapore.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Infrastructure of Changi Airport</span> Air and passenger facilities at Singapore Changi Airport

Changi Airport is Singapore's primary international airport and a major aviation hub in the Asia-Pacific region. It is one of the commercial airports in Singapore, the other being Seletar Airport. Since the rankings for the World's Best Airport by Skytrax began in 1999, the airport was classified as the world's best twelve times, including for eight consecutive years from 2013 to 2021.

Violet Oon is a Singaporean chef, restaurateur, and food writer known for her food columns, cookbooks, and restaurants specializing in Peranakan cuisine. She has been the food ambassador of Singapore since 1988.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">City Developments Limited</span> Singaporean real estate organisation

City Developments Limited (CDL), sometimes also known as CityDev, is a Singaporean multinational real estate operating organisation. Founded in 1963, CDL first developed projects in Johor Bahru, Malaysia, as well as in Singapore. Due to geo-political changes, CDL was making a loss before being controlled by Hong Leong Bank via shares acquisition in 1969. Since then, CDL has developed many types of properties from shopping malls to integrated developments. CDL is currently headquartered in Republic Plaza, Singapore. Kwek Leng Beng is its current chairman and Sherman Kwek, Kwek Leng Beng's son, is its current chief executive officer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Penang Mutiara Beach Resort</span> Hotel in Pulau Pinang, Malaysia

The Penang Mutiara Beach Resort is an abandoned luxury hotel on the “glowing bay” beachfront in Teluk Bahang, Penang, Malaysia. The 15-storey high-rise building has an estimated height of 56.64 m. Ownership is by Tradewinds Corp Bhd, formerly known as Pernas International Holdings Bhd. Famous guest were the Sultan of Selangor and the former prime minister of Malaysia, Mahathir Mohamad.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chatterbox (restaurant)</span> Restaurant in Singapore

Chatterbox is a restaurant located in Hilton Singapore Orchard. The restaurant opened on 1 August 1971 at The Mandarin Singapore and has since undergone several relocations and renovations. It is known for its Hainanese chicken rice, which was introduced to Chatterbox's first menu by German executive chef Peter Gehrmann.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Grand Hyatt Singapore</span>

Grand Hyatt Singapore, formerly known as Hyatt Regency Singapore and the Singapore Hyatt Hotel, is a hotel on Scotts Road in the Central Area of Singapore.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Copthorne Orchid Hotel</span> Hotel in Singapore

Copthorne Orchid Hotel was a hotel at the corner of Dunearn Road and Dunkirk Avenue in Singapore. Opened as the Orchid Inn in 1970, it was renamed the Novotel Orchid Inn in 1972. In 1998, it was renamed the Copthorne Orchid Hotel when the hotel's owners, City Developments Limited, acquired the Copthorne chain of hotels. It was demolished in April 2011 to make way for a condominium.

Ladyhill Hotel was a hotel on Lady Hill Road in Tanglin, Singapore. Completed in 1968, it was owned by the Goodwood Group, which was owned by prominent banker and hotelier Tan Sri Khoo Teck Puat. It was closed in 1999 and demolished to build a condominium.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Warehouse Hotel</span> Hotel at Havelock Road, Singapore

The Warehouse Hotel is a boutique hotel housed in a row of three adjoining historic warehouses on Havelock Road within the Singapore River planning area. Completed in 1895, the building, which is "one of the oldest independently standing warehouses in Singapore", previously housed the Warehouse Disco, the country's largest discotheque.

Yen San Building, later known as 268 Orchard Road, was an office building on Orchard Road in the Orchard Planning Area of Singapore. Completed by the Asia Motor Company in 1973, it housed the United States Trade Centre in Singapore. It was demolished in 2011.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Katong Park Hotel</span>

Katong Park Hotel was a prominent hotel on the corner of Meyer Road and Arthur Road in Singapore. Opened as the Embassy Hotel in 1953, it was the "biggest" hotel in Malaya to have been opened following the end of World War II at the time. The hotel closed in the middle of 1960 and reopened as the Hotel Ambassador later that year under new management. It was again sold to new owners in 1982, after which it was renamed the Duke Hotel. After an unsuccessful attempt to sell the property in 1990, then-owner Teo Lay See sold the hotel to the Chui family of Malacca in 1992, when it was renamed the Katong Park Hotel. There were initially plans to demolish the hotel and replace it with another larger, four-star hotel before it was again sold. In 1999, the hotel was sold off to First Capital Corporation, which closed it down for good and subsequently demolished the hotel building, which then made way for a condominium project.

References

  1. "Spore Land profit up". The Straits Times . Singapore. 29 November 1968. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  2. "Cuscaden's Eye will close on Thursday". New Nation. Singapore. 29 August 1972. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  3. "$6m TO RENOVATE CUSCADEN". The Straits Times . Singapore. 6 June 1974. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  4. "'Planning problems' so new look for hotel put off". The Straits Times . Singapore. 20 June 1975. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  5. "Hotel back in business with a new name". The Straits Times . Singapore. 4 February 1976. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  6. "Cuscaden reopens as Hotel Malaysia". The Straits Times . Singapore. 13 April 1976. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  7. "An April opening". New Nation. Singapore. 10 February 1976. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  8. Oon, Violet (21 February 1977). "You'll get a round of dining and dancing here". New Nation. Singapore. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  9. Chan, Margaret (14 November 1982). "Elegant dining that's affordable". The Straits Times . Singapore. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  10. "Hotel Malaysia extension". The Business Times . Singapore. 19 November 1981. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  11. 1 2 Wong, Mai Yun (19 November 1981). "Hotel Malaysia will be Goodwood's largest". The Straits Times . Singapore. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  12. Yeow, Mei Sin (24 June 1984). "Israeli architect completes Boulevard Hotel's tall order". Singapore Monitor. Singapore. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  13. "New name and image for Hotel Malaysia". The Straits Times . Singapore. 30 July 1983. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  14. "New wing to open in August". The Business Times . Singapore. 22 March 1984. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  15. "Boulevard Hotel invests $500,000 in computerisation". The Business Times . Singapore. 21 March 1985. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  16. Rashiwala, Kalpana (14 February 1997). "Khoo Teck Puat puts Boulevard Hotel on the market again". The Straits Times . Singapore. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  17. Lam, Jenny (6 March 1997). "Boulevard Hotel price lowered to $450m". The Business Times . Singapore. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  18. Oon, Diana; Ang, Wan May (30 April 1997). "Hong Leong buys Boulevard Hotel site for $410 m". The Business Times . Singapore. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  19. Rashiwala, Kalpana (30 April 1997). "Hong Leong group bags Boulevard Hotel for $410 m". The Straits Times . Singapore. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  20. Ang, Wan May (30 September 1998). "Boulevard, Ladyhill hotels get nod for re-zoning". The Business Times . Singapore. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  21. Rashiwala, Kalpana (30 March 2000). "Boulevard closes end-April". The Business Times . Singapore.
  22. "The Boulevard Hotel at Cuscaden Road". Roots. National Heritage Board . Retrieved 8 June 2024.