InterContinental San Francisco
Description
The US$200 million hotel was designed by Patri Merker Architects, and Hornberger + Worstell with Webcor Builders as primary contractors and with Architectural Glass and Aluminum serving as the Glazing Contractor. At night, the tower's southern facade is illuminated, lighting the corner of Howard and 5th Streets, and is visible throughout the city and from miles away. The curtain wall system consists of glass and metal panels. A restaurant is located at street level and a health club including a swimming pool is located on the sixth floor. A series of terraces provides open space areas, outdoor activities and separation from adjacent buildings allowing natural light and ventilation to reach the north side of the building.
Alberto Bertoli of Patri Merker Architect explained that he had designed the building with its surroundings in mind, in particular the nearby Moscone Center: "We wanted to break down the rhythm, but also have a component of the building related to the mass of the Moscone." The San Francisco Chronicle's architecture critic John King reported generally adverse reactions to the building after its opening, which he explained by its "aesthetics [being] wrong for San Francisco" and more suitable for the Las Vegas Strip. Nevertheless, King defended it as "a slender building with clean lines and a relaxed presence - and a sharp-looking curtain wall."
The building, with its 550 rooms, was the largest hotel to open in San Francisco since the 1,500 room San Francisco Marriott inaugurated in 1989. With the InterContinental open, the hotel operator was planning to apply for LEED Certification. The InterContinental San Francisco received an Award of Merit in the Hospitality category of the Best of 2008 Awards from California Construction.
Amenities
The hotel offers a Michelin-starred restaurant, Luce, and a companion bar, Bar 888, that spotlights Grappa tastings and cocktails, and 24-hour in-room dining.
Other amenities include a fitness center, an indoor lap pool, Jacuzzi, a business center, and pets are allowed with fee and weight restriction in some rooms. The conference center contains two large ballrooms, an executive board room and 21 meeting rooms.
See also
- Four Seasons Hotel
- W Hotel San Francisco
- St. Regis Museum Tower
- InterContinental Mark Hopkins San Francisco
- List of tallest buildings in San Francisco
References
- ^ Sarah Duxbury (2008-02-08). "$200M Hotel Joins Inn Crowd InterContinental Boosts SoMa". The San Francisco Business Times. Retrieved 21 August 2010.
- ^ "Emporis building ID 208597". Emporis. Archived from the original on March 7, 2016.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "InterContinental San Francisco". SkyscraperPage.
- ^ InterContinental San Francisco at Structurae
- ^ "Continental Development Corporation Building a 550 room InterContinental Hotel Near San Francisco's Moscone Convention Center". Hotel-online. Retrieved 2007-09-26.
- ^ David Armstrong (August 25, 2007). "InterContinental readies new hotel for downtown San Francisco". The San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 21 August 2010.
- ^ "InterContinental San Francisco, California". Webcor Builders. Archived from the original on 1 December 2010. Retrieved 21 August 2010.
- ^ Viracon Projects Website, "InterContinental Hotel San Francisco", Retrieved 20 August 2015
- ^ King, John (2008-03-25). "New, blue kid on block: the Intercontinental". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2016-09-17.