Midland Hotel, Manchester, Grand hotel in central Manchester, England
The Midland Hotel is a large hotel in central Manchester, England. The red brick and terracotta facades with granite details reflect the Edwardian Baroque style designed by architect Charles Trubshaw.
The Midland Railway Company built this structure between 1898 and 1903 to serve Manchester Central railway station. Construction costs exceeded one million pounds, making the project one of the most expensive hotel developments of its era.
The name connects the building to the Midland Railway, whose reception halls welcomed travelers from across the world. Today the building continues to receive guests in the same formal style that the railway company cultivated more than a century ago.
The building sits beside the Manchester Central exhibition center and near Bridgewater Hall. The interior spreads across several floors with guest rooms, conference spaces, two restaurants, and a wellness area.
Charles Rolls and Henry Royce met here for the first time in 1904 and later founded the Rolls-Royce automobile brand. The French restaurant inside earned one of Britain's first Michelin stars in 1974.
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