Imperial Hotel, Tokyo

This article is about the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo and its history. For the company that owns this and other luxury hotels in Japan, see Imperial Hotel, Ltd.
Imperial Hotel

The Imperial Hotel in Tokyo
General information
Location 1-1, Uchisaiwai-cho 1-chome, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 100-8558, Japan
Management Imperial Hotel, Ltd.
Website
imperialhotel.co.jp/e/tokyo/index.html

The Imperial Hotel (帝国ホテル teikoku hoteru) is a hotel in Tokyo that was created in the late 1880s at the request of the Japanese aristocracy to cater to the increasing number of Western visitors to Japan. The hotel site is located just south of the Imperial Palace grounds, next to the previous location of the Palace moat.[1] The modern hotel overlooks the Palace, the 40-acre (16 ha) Western-style Hibiya Park, and the Ginza neighborhood.[1]

Three main buildings have stood on the hotel site, each of which embodied the finest Western design of its era.[1] Including annexes, there have been at least 10 structures that have been part of the Imperial Hotel, including two designed by Frank Lloyd Wright:

First Imperial Hotel: 1890–1922

The original Imperial Hotel, designed by Yuzuru Watanabe (1890s)

The original Imperial Hotel opened in November 1890[2] on the Northeast corner of what is now the hotel property.[3] The hotel faced roughly North, with parts of the Imperial Palace moats (no longer extant) across streets on the North and East sides of the building.[4]

The hotel was backed by key Japanese leaders, such as Foreign Minister Count Inoue Kaoru and Viscount Shibusawa Eiichi.[1] Shibusawa and Okura Kihachiro submitted an application to form the Tokyo Hotel Co. on November 28, 1887, in order to "build a large hotel in Tokyo and to conduct the business of renting rooms to foreign guests, and for parties and other events...". There were initially 21 investors, with the largest (21.15%) being the Imperial Household Ministry. Site preparation for the hotel started in July 1888, and construction began in the fall of that year. On 7 July 1890 the name was changed to Imperial Hotel Ltd.[5] The hotel was opened in November 1890.[2]

Plans for the hotel were part of the effort to centralize government offices in the Hibiya area. A group of German architects visited Japan and made some preliminary drawings. The initial drawings for the hotel were created by Heinrich Mänz, in the German neo-Renaissance style. In 1886, a group of 20 Japanese were sent to Germany for training. Eventually, Yuzuru Watanabe would be picked to design the 60-room hotel, which would also be known as "Watanabe House". Watanabe used the original layout by Mänz, but because of soil conditions, changed the four story stone structure to a three story wood frame and brick structure, with the exterior painted to look like stone. He also added rooms under the eaves to accommodate more guests.[1][2] Western (French) food had been the official banquet fare of the Imperial Palace since Emperor Meiji hosted a luncheon for the nephew of the king of Italy on 8 September 1873, and the Imperial Hotel followed that tradition.[6]

Japan's first Diet building, just finished on 24 November 1890 in time for the first Diet session, burned down on 20 January 1891. After a week of preparations, the House of Peers reconvened in the ballroom of the Imperial Hotel, where they would meet until March 1.[7]

Business was slow at first, and the hotel lost money. Even after the U.S. annexed the Philippines in 1902 After the Spanish–American and the Philippine–American War, bringing more travelers through Japan, the hotel only averaged 40 guests and 50 restaurant customers. It was not until the start of the Russo-Japanese War in 1904 that the hotel was regularly filled to capacity. In 1906 a 42-room annex was built and the Hotel Metropole in Tsukiji was purchased to increase capacity, allowing the hotel to serve up to 150 resident guests and seat up to 200 for dinner and banquets. The Metropole was torn down in 1910, as planning began for a new building to be completed by 1916.[8][9][10][11]

Watanabe's Imperial Hotel building was destroyed by fire on 16 April 1922, while Edward, Prince of Wales was visiting Japan. The fire broke out during the day, with a full staff on hand and most of the guests out at an Imperial garden party. No lives were lost, but business at the hotel stopped until the South wing of the new hotel could be opened.[11][12]

Second Imperial Hotel: 1923–1968

The iconic entrance courtyard of Wright's Imperial Hotel designed in the Maya Revival Style.

The second Imperial Hotel was built from 1919-1923, and officially opened on 1 September 1923. This hotel was the best-known of Frank Lloyd Wright's buildings in Japan. It was designed roughly in the shape of its own logo, with the guest room wings forming the letter "H", while the public rooms were in a smaller but taller central wing shaped like the letter "I" that cut through the middle of the "H".[1]

Preliminaries

In 1911, Frank Lloyd Wright was recommended to Aisaku Hayashi of the Imperial Hotel by Frederick W. Gookin, a fellow collector of Japanese art. By 1912, Wright was corresponding directly with Hayashi, but the death of Emperor Meiji put a hold on discussions. When discussions resumed, Wright traveled to Japan, leaving the United States on 11 January 1913. During his stay, Wright examined the site and drew some preliminary plans. He returned to the United States in May confident that he would get the commission. In early 1916, Hayashi, his wife, and Japanese architect Tori Yoshitake traveled to the United States, arriving in Taliesin in February. In addition to going over plan details before submitting them to the Hotel Board of Directors for final approval, the trip seems to have been made for Hayashi to see some of Wright's work in person, and to see how American hotels were run. Hayashi and his companions were back in Japan by mid-April, and the board had approved the plans in time for Wright to sail for Japan on 28 December 1916.[3]

The purpose of the 1917 visit (Wright arrived on January 9 and left on April 21) was to prepare for construction—examine the site more thoroughly, make arrangements for materials, and hire draftsmen to make the working drawings. Wright was back at Taliesin by mid-May. Initial working drawings were all done at Taliesin, and Wright would not return to Japan until 17 November 1918 to supervise the start of construction.[3]

Construction

In late 1919 when work had just begun on the new hotel, the 1906 Imperial Hotel annex burnt to the ground.[8] Work on the new hotel was stopped while Wright designed a temporary annex, which was opened 5 months later.[8] The Frank Lloyd Wright annex (one of six Wright designs for Japan that was actually built) was destroyed in the Great Kantō earthquake on 1 September 1923, though by that time it was no longer in use.[11]

On 26 April 1922, the worst earthquake in decades struck Tokyo. While many buildings in the area were destroyed and the remains of the first Imperial Hotel were toppled, the hotel itself—while shaken—stood completely undamaged.[13] Wright was working on the upper floor of the building at the time, and feared the worst when he heard a huge crash, but this turned out to just be the five chimneys from the first Imperial Hotel, which had burnt down just 10 days prior.[14]

The North wing of the new hotel and a partially completed center section opened on 2 July 1922, in time to host the reunion of the Annapolis class of 1881. At this point, estimates were that it would only take about 6 weeks to complete the hotel, and since the South wing was a mirror image of the North, Wright decided that he could leave the completion to be supervised by Arato Endo. Wright left Japan on July 22, never to return. The hotel took another 14 months to complete, and officially opened on 1 September 1923.[3]

Architecture

Final perspective drawing by Wright. Over 700 drawings were created for this project.[15]

The Frank Lloyd Wright version was designed in the "Maya Revival Style" of architecture. It incorporates a tall, pyramid-like structure, and also loosely copies Maya motifs in its decorations. The main building materials are poured concrete, concrete block, and carved oya stone. The visual effect of the hotel was stunning and dramatic, though not unique; in recent years, architectural historians have noted a marked similarity with the Cafe Australia in Melbourne, Australia (1916), designed by Prairie School architects Marion Mahony and Walter Burley Griffin.

The architecture heavily influenced the style of the Kōshien Hotel, which was constructed by Wright's apprentice Arata Endo.

1923 Great Tokyo Earthquake

The hotel (left) shortly after the 1923 earthquake (on the right burning is the Kangyō Bank)
Shortly after the earthquake (the Imperial is seen in the top right)

The structure famously survived the Great Kantō earthquake on September 1, 1923 (7.9 on the Moment magnitude scale (Mw)). A telegram from Baron Kihachiro Okura reported the following:

"Hotel stands undamaged as a monument of your genius hundreds of homeless provided by perfectly maintained service congratulations[.] Congratulations[.]"[16]

Wright passed the telegram to journalists, helping to perpetuate a legend that the hotel was unaffected by the earthquake. In reality, the building had been damaged; the central section slumped, several floors bulged,[16] four pieces of stonework fell to the ground,[17] fans fell from the balcony, and electric ranges in the kitchen were toppled, starting a kitchen fire that was fairly quickly extinguished.[18] It was also not the only building to survive, or the least damaged. On the insurance company damage scale (1-5), it was in the second best (light damage) category. According to the Tokyo Building Inspection Department, about 19% of the brick buildings and 20% of the steel and reinforced concrete buildings in the city were categorized in the best category (no damage) and thus performed better than the Imperial.[19]

The building's main failing was its foundation. Wright had intended the hotel to float on the site's alluvial mud "as a battleship floats on water".[16] This was accomplished by making it shallow, with broad footings. This was supposed to allow the building to float during an earthquake. However, the foundation was an inadequate support and did not prevent the building from sinking into the mud to such an extent that it had to be demolished decades later.[16] Furthermore, alluvial mud, such as that at the hotel's site, amplifies seismic waves.[20]

However, the hotel had several design features that minimized potential earthquake damage:

After the earthquake and subsequent fire, the Hotel temporarily hosted the American, British, French, and Italian embassies, as well as the Chinese and Swedish Ministers. The Grill Room, as well as some exterior space behind the hotel, was allocated to storage of relief supplies. The front entrance to the new South wing was given over for use by public utilities, and the press was given the banquet hall entrance and the promenade leading to the banquet hall. Until electric and water were restored, cooking was done outside, first on campfires, then on charcoal grills. For the first four days after the earthquake, the hotel fed all comers for free, feeding up to 2,500 people twice daily. After that, the hotel charged only cost until the emergency was over. Electricity was restored to the hotel in September 4, and water on September 5. Relief supplies from other countries started arriving in Tokyo, and to the hotel, on September 3 with the arrival of the destroyer USS Stewart.[18]

In 1930, the Kōshien Hotel was constructed under the plans of Arata Endo, a disciple of Wright. The design was inspired by the Imperial Hotel.

World War II

By 1936, Japan was preparing for the 1940 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, and there was serious talk of replacing Wright's Imperial Hotel with a building more suited to the needs of the time. With only 280 rooms, the hotel was no longer financially viable. World War II intervened to cancel the Olympics and save the hotel from the wrecking ball.[21]

During World War II, the South wing of the hotel was gutted by incendiary bombs on 25 May 1945, and the Peacock room was destroyed. The hotel asked Wright to come back and design the repairs to the hotel, but Wright refused. The hotel was commandeered for a period by the Occupation forces and managed by the U.S. Government, under the supervision of Lieutenant J.Malcolm Morris 1945 to 1952, and some of the damage was repaired during this time.[22][23][24]

Postwar

As part of the land reform instituted by the occupying forces under General Douglas MacArthur, Okura Kishichiro and all of his family had to give up their shares in the Imperial Hotel. The same applied to the Imperial Household Agency, ending the financial involvement of the Imperial family in the hotel.[25]

The hotel was returned to its owners on 1 April 1952, and full repairs could be made. As the guest wings of the Wright building were only three stories tall, it actually had relatively few guest rooms. Once the war damage had been repaired, a new annex was constructed directly behind the North wing of Wright's building, opening on 1 December 1954 and adding 200 guest rooms to the hotel. Construction for a second annex of 450 guest rooms started on 17 November 1956, with the annex opening in June 1958.[26]

Demolition

Entrance Hall, which was reconstructed in the Meiji Mura Museum

The hotel eventually slipped into decay as time took its toll. In a controversial decision, it was decided in 1967 to demolish the old hotel and replace it with a high-rise structure. Reasons given for the demolition include the damage to the banquet section and South wing during World War II, uneven settling of the building on its floating foundation (some parts of the building had sunk as much as 1,100 mm (43 in)), and damage to the decorative oya stone that was causing pieces to fall off. The second Imperial Hotel was closed on 15 November 1967, and demolition started shortly after.[27]

Surviving portion

The entrance courtyard of Wright's Imperial Hotel, as recreated near Nagoya in the Meiji-Mura Museum

While most of Wright's building was destroyed, the iconic central lobby wing and the reflecting pool were disassembled and rebuilt at The Museum Meiji-mura,[28] a collection of buildings (mostly from the Meiji Era) in Inuyama, near Nagoya, where they are open to the public.[29]

Because the building structure was brick and concrete and could not be disassembled, as much of the oya stone as possible, tiles, and other finishing materials were preserved. Demolition of the hotel was completed and materials stored at Meiji-mura by March 1968. A site for the reconstruction was chosen in February 1970, and exterior reconstruction started in March, taking 6 years to complete. Interior reconstruction started in November 1983 after a 7-year pause, and was completed in October 1985, more than 17 years after the demolition.[30]

Third Imperial Hotel: 1968–present

The current Imperial Hotel

The third (and current) main building is a 17-story hotel tower with 772 guest rooms, which was constructed on the site of Wright's building and opened on March 10, 1970.[31]

Context and construction

Although there had been talk of replacing the Wright hotel since before the planned 1940 Olympics, the first serious mention of plans for a new building was in 1963 when board minutes show that Takahashi Teitaro had been sent to the United States to look at hotels and start planning. At the October 16, 1966 board meeting, a plan to build a new hotel, to be completed in time for Expo '70 in Osaka, was unanimously approved.[30] Ground was broken for the new building on February 28, 1968, just after demolition of the Frank Lloyd Wright building was completed.[32] The 10 story parking garage just south of the annexes was completed before the new hotel, in 1969.[31]

A 31 story mixed-use tower with 363 guest rooms on the top 12 floors, 14 floors of offices, and four floors of shops replaced the 1954 and 1958 annexes in 1983. The annexes were torn down in 1979, construction on the tower started on December 25, 1979, and the tower was opened on March 13, 1983.[33]

Notable events

Princess Sayako (the third child and only daughter of Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko of Japan, now Sayako Kuroda), was married here in 2005.[34][35]

In a reference to the three Edo era branch houses of the Tokugawa clan, the Imperial Hotel, Hotel Okura Tokyo, and Hotel New Otani Tokyo are often referred to as one of the three great hotels (御三家 gosanke) of Tokyo.

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 IMPERIAL HOTEL--A Legend in Pictures. Imperial Hotel, Ltd. 2003.
  2. 1 2 3 Imperial Hotel (1990), p. 39.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Smith, Kathryn (June 1985). "Frank Lloyd Wright and the Imperial Hotel: A Postscript". The Art Bulletin. College Art Association. 67 (2): 296–310. JSTOR 3050913. (registration required (help)).
  4. Kanazawa, Ryota (1892). "Shinsen Tokyo zenzu". Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  5. Imperial Hotel (1990), p. 33.
  6. Imperial Hotel (1990), pp. 46–48.
  7. Imperial Hotel (1990), pp. 43–44.
  8. 1 2 3 "Window on Wright's Legacy in Japan: Buildings: Imperial Hotel Annex, Tokyo, 1920". wrightinjapan.org. Severns/Mori. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  9. Imperial Hotel (1990), p. 70.
  10. Tiltman (1970), pp. 5–7.
  11. 1 2 3 Tiltman (1970), pp. 13–16.
  12. Phillips, Sir Percival (1922). The Prince of Wales' Eastern book, a pictorial record of the voyages of H.M.S. "Renown", 1921-1922 (1922) (PDF). New York: Hodder and Stoughton, limited. pp. 192, 193. Retrieved 28 December 2013.
  13. Szolginia, Witold (March 1974). "Genialne idee "szalonego architekta"". Młody Technik: 38–45.
  14. Secrest, Meryle (1998). Frank Lloyd Wright: A Biography. University of Chicago Press. p. 272.
  15. McCarter, Robert (2006). Frank Lloyd Wright. Reaktion Books. p. 104.
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 Bryce Walker (1982). Earthquake. Planet Earth. Time Life Books. p. 153. ISBN 0-8094-4300-7.
  17. 1 2 Bryce Walker (1982). Earthquake. Planet Earth. Time Life Books. p. 154. ISBN 0-8094-4300-7.
  18. 1 2 Tiltman (1970), pp. 17–27.
  19. Reitherman, Robert King (1980). "Frank Lloyd Wright's Imperial Hotel: A Seismic Re-evaluation" (PDF). Proceedings of the Seventh World Conference on Earthquake Engineering. 4: 145–152. Retrieved 3 January 2014.
  20. Robert W. Christopherson (1992). Geosystems - An Introduction to Physical Geography. MacMillan. p. 347. ISBN 0-02-322443-6.
  21. Tafel, Edgar (1979). Years with Frank Lloyd Wright: Apprentice to Genius. Courier Dover Publications. p. 107.
  22. Tiltman (1970), pp. 36–45.
  23. The Wise Bamboo. Tonbridge Printers Limited. 1 January 1954.
  24. "Art: Made in Japan, U.S.-Designed". time.com. Time Inc. 24 September 1945. Retrieved 28 December 2013. (subscription required (help)).
  25. Imperial Hotel (1990), pp. 172–173.
  26. Tiltman (1970), pp. 3–45.
  27. Tiltman (1970), pp. 51–55.
  28. "The Museum Meiji-mura: Architectures List". Meiji-mura. Retrieved 31 December 2013.
  29. "About The Museum Meiji-mura". Meiji-mura. Retrieved 31 December 2013.
  30. 1 2 Imperial Hotel (1990), pp. 223–231.
  31. 1 2 Imperial Hotel (1990), pp. 232–241.
  32. "Imperial Hotel Demolition Near". google.com. Gettysburg Times. 20 February 1968. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  33. Imperial Hotel (1990), pp. 266–268.
  34. Grace, Francie (15 November 2005). "Japan Loses A Princess". cbsnews.com. CBS News. Retrieved 3 January 2011.
  35. "Japanese princess weds commoner". cbsnews.com. Daily Mail. 15 November 2005. Retrieved 3 January 2011.

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Coordinates: 35°40′20″N 139°45′30″E / 35.67231°N 139.75822°E / 35.67231; 139.75822

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