Jump to content

Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi

Coordinates: 21°01′32″N 105°51′20″E / 21.0255°N 105.8555°E / 21.0255; 105.8555
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Sofitel Legend Metropole)
Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi
Hotel entrance, 15 Ngo Quyen Street
Map
General information
LocationHoan Kiem District, Hanoi, Vietnam
Address15 Ngô Quyền
Coordinates21°01′32″N 105°51′20″E / 21.0255°N 105.8555°E / 21.0255; 105.8555
Opening1901
OwnerS.E.M Thong Nhat Metropole Hotel Company Limited
ManagementSofitel Legend, Accor
Design and construction
DeveloperAndré Ducamp and Gustave-Émile Dumoutier
Other information
Number of rooms364
Number of restaurants6 (Le Beaulieu, Spices Garden, angelina, Le Club, Bamboo Bar, La Terrasse)
Website
Official website

Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi is a five-star historic luxury hotel, opened in 1901 as Grand Métropole Hotel in Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam. It is today one of the most important buildings of Vietnam in the French colonial style. The hotel today has 364 rooms.

History

[edit]

1900s

In 1899, Gustave-Émile Dumoutier files a request to convert the buildings on his land at the corner of boulevard Henri-Rivière into a hotel. The extra capital of 500,000 francs is provided by businessman André Ducamp. The Grand Métropole Hôtel is opened in August 1901 by André Ducamp and Gustave-Émile Dumoutier,[1] operated by the Cie Française Immobilière. 
On 2 August in 1904 Gustave-Émile Dumoutier, partner of Andre Ducamp, dies.
The hotel is managed by the professional manager, Frenchman Edouard Lion. It is regarded by visitors as ‚a luxurious, though expensive abode‘.[2]

1910s

By 1916, the Metropole becomes the first venue in Indo-China to show motion pictures.

1930s

During 1930 and 1934 the global economic slump strikes the colony. By that time the Métropole company Française Immobilière had grown in to a hotel chain operating properties in Tam–Dao (Hôtel de la Cascade d’Argent), in Doson (Grand Hôtel de Doson), the ‘Wagons-restaurants des trains directs’ between Hanoi and Vinh – Hue –Tourane, the Grand Hôtel de Chapa (at 1,750m altitude, 325 km from Hanoi in the ‘Pyrénées Tonkinoises’) and the Hôtel des Trois Maréchaux at Langson (Tonkin).

1940s

In 1946 the French owners sold the Métropole to a Chinese businessman named Giu Sinh Hoi.

Ho Chi Minh used the Metropole on several occasions as a meeting place. In 1946 he hosted talks in the conference room with General Etienne Valuie and Vietnams politician Nguyễn Hải Thần, in the small wing where the lobby bar is located today. He occasionally used the hotel for meetings again in 1960.[3]

1950s

Following Vietnamese independence in the 1950s, the Metropole was renamed the Thong Nhat Hotel (Reunification Hotel) by the Communist government in 1954, and was used as the official government guest house.

1960s

Hotel Metropole in colonial Hanoi

In 1964, with American air raids imminent, hotel managers built a bomb shelter in the courtyard of the hotel to protect guests.[4] It had a 1m thick concrete ceiling and could accommodate 30 to 40 people. Hotel-staff received a military training course. 

From 1969 to 1981 the Thong Nhat Hotel was home to several embassies and UN agencies, due to reconstruction of almost all public buildings all over Hanoi, the hotel accommodated different diplomatic representatives from a variety of countries and coalitions.

1980s

Metropole wing, Ngo Quyen Street
Opera wing, Ly Thai To Street

After the Vietnam War was over, several ideas were evaluated to restart tourism and to operate the hotel. In 1987, the Pullman Hotels chain entered into a joint venture with the Vietnamese government to restore the hotel to international standards.

1990s

Hotel façade at night

The hotel was completely rebuilt, regaining the name Metropole and reopening on 8 March 1992, as the Pullman Hotel Metropole. The hotel later is handed over to the Sofitel chain, and finally becomes the Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi.

The new 135-room Opera Wing was added from 1994 to 1996, along with the Metropole Center office tower. The offices were converted to additional hotel rooms in 2008.[5]

In 1997 former senior officials from the Vietnam War era including Robert McNamara, Nicholas Katzenbach, Dang Vu Hiep, Nguyen Co Thach, and Nguyen Dinh Phuong met at the hotel to retrospectively discuss the war. [6]

2000s

During 2005, major renovations included guest rooms in the historical wing as well as the main entrance and the lobby. As of 2007, the hotel was owned as an equal joint venture between the Hanoi tourist Corporation and the Indotel Limited private equity firm.

In 2009, Le Spa du Metropole opens.

In 2011, the ‘Bunker’, the hotel's air raid shelter, is rediscovered under the Bamboo Bar. Blind light bulbs and yellowish painted walls survived decades of flooding by ground water. It was restored and can now be visited by hotel guests and tourists.[7]

The hotel was also used as a venue for the second meeting between US President Donald Trump and North Korean Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un on 27 and 28 February 2019.[8]

Rooms and suites

[edit]

The hotel has 364 rooms, which are divided into two wings. The historic Metropole Wing dating back to 1901 was inspired by classic French architecture blended with local Vietnamese style. The Metropole wing has 106 guest rooms.

Restaurants and bars

[edit]

The hotel has three restaurants and three bars.

Notable residents and guests

[edit]
The 2019 North Korea–United States Hanoi Summit meeting at the hotel between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un

Managers in History

[edit]
  • 1901 Edouard Lion
  • 1905 Perrichel
  • 1933 Jean Boeuf
  • 1934. Paul Varenne-Caillard
  • 1936 Brunelière
  • 1940 Louis Blouet
  • 1942–46 Jean Melandré
  • 1946 Giu Sinh Hoi
  • 1954 Cam
  • 1955 Luu Dinh Dien
  • 1969–1972 Luu Thien Ly
  • 1991 Ricardo Perran
  • 1996 Richard Kaldor
  • 2000 Franck Lafourcade
  • 2005 Philippe Bissig
  • 2005 Gilles Cretallaz
  • 2008 Kai Speth
  • 2013 Franck Lafourcade
  • 2017 William J. Haandrikman

Literature

[edit]
  • Augustin, Andreas, Hotel Metropole Hanoi (1998), The history of; 160 pages, Classic Edition: The Most Famous Hotels in the World
  • Augustin, Andreas, The Amazing Tale of the Fabulous Hotel Metropole – the Sofitel Legend of Hanoi (2019) ISBN 978-3-900692-21-6
  • William Warren, Jill Gocher (2007). Asia's legendary hotels: the romance of travel. Singapore: Periplus Editions. ISBN 978-0-7946-0174-4.
[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "The Making of the History of the Hotel Metropole in Hanoi by Andreas Augustin | Famoushotels.org". famoushotels.org.
  2. ^ Augustin, Andreas (2019). The Amazing Tale of the Fabulous Hotel Metropole. Vienna: The Most Famous Hotels in the World. p. 48. ISBN 978-3-900692-21-6. Retrieved 31 August 2020.
  3. ^ Augustin, Andreas (2019). The Amazing Tale of the Fabulous Hotel Metropole. Vienna: The Most Famous Hotels in the World. p. 108+117. ISBN 978-3-900692-21-6. Retrieved 31 August 2020.
  4. ^ "Vietnam War bunker reopened under luxury hotel - CNN.com". CNN. 23 March 2015.
  5. ^ Hotel Metropole Hanoi Legend, Vietnam luxury french hotel - Sofitel Legend
  6. ^ David K. Shipler. "Robert McNamara and the Ghosts of Vietnam". The New York Times.
  7. ^ Status of the war bunker at Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi
  8. ^ a b Karla Cripps (27 February 2019). "Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi: A tour of the historic Hanoi hotel where Trump and Kim are meeting". CNN.
  9. ^ a b c "ZEIT ONLINE | Lesen Sie zeit.de mit Werbung oder im PUR-Abo. Sie haben die Wahl". www.zeit.de.
  10. ^ a b c d "This Is the Hanoi Hotel Where Trump and Kim Will Meet". Time. 27 February 2019.
  11. ^ Kalmusky, Katie (18 March 2018). "Inside The Historic Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi". Culture Trip.
  12. ^ "Metropole Hanoi: Vietnam's Enchanting, Historic Hotel". TravelPulse.
  13. ^ "A peek into Francois Hollande's hotel room". VOV - VOV Online Newspaper. September 5, 2016.
  14. ^ a b c "The Sofitel Legend Metropole". The Telegraph. November 9, 2015 – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
  15. ^ a b Mananquil, Millet M. "True stories at Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi". Philstar.com.