By Expedia, on October 16, 2018

6 of the most amazing hotels never built

Most amazing hotels that don't actually exist
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6 of the Most Amazing Hotels Never Built

It only takes a pen, paper, and an innovative mind to create remarkable architecture. Bringing these to life as buildings you can visit, however, takes a lot more money and work.

While some architects have constructed some of the most ambitious hotels the world has ever seen, others were only left with a drawing. It will never be possible to check in to these unbuilt hotels, but the fact that they remain on paper means their incredible ideas have never been forgotten.

We decided to bring the most amazing imaginary hotels to life with a series of new renderings that show just what could have looked like.
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1. Full Moon Hotel

Baku, Azerbaijan

Work on the Full Moon Hotel has quietly come to a stop, so that Azerbaijan’s own ‘Death Star’ (as it has been nicknamed) will not be blasting rogue planets out of existence any time soon. The Full Moon would have resembled Darth Vader’s planet-sized military complex from one angle, and London’s Gherkin from another, but space cadets and luxury hotel seekers will have to put their fantasies on hold for the time being.
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The Full Moon Hotel, albeit never built, in Baku


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2. The Fourth Grace

Liverpool, England

Will Alsop’s extraordinary design beat drawings from Norman Foster and Edward Cullinan for a prestigious spot next to Liverpool’s famous three waterfront ‘Graces.’ While doubters claimed it was the ugliest hotel design of the bunch, others saw an ethereal cloud or diamond in Alsop’s stilt-bound structure. The project fell apart in 2004 due to financial difficulties, and Alsop sadly passed away earlier this year.
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The Fourth Grace Hotel, which was never constructed


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3. The Hotel Commonwealth

New York, USA

The Commonwealth was to have been the largest hotel in the world, welcoming guests to 2,500 rooms on a plot that took up an entire block on Broadway. “Through its 28 stories,” the publicity read, this proposed hotel would “rise 400 feet in the air in graceful terraces… the flowering plants and shrubs upon each terrace giving the monster hostelry an unusual beauty of architecture, rivaled only by the ancient Hanging Gardens of Babylon.” Despite Utopian intentions, the project ended up mired in legal and financial woes and was finally called off in 1925.
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New york City's Hotel Commonwealth, a hotel that was never realized


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4. Rogers Lacy Hotel

Dallas, USA

Oil millionaire Rogers Lacy commissioned legendary architect Frank Lloyd Wright to build a real gem, and Wright was customarily bombastic with his ideas: he claimed his Shard-like skyscraper hotel would “glisten in the night” and argued that it should be named the Lone Star. But Wright dreamt too big, and the project stalled even before Lacy’s premature death. Wright later recycled some of his unused ideas for the Price Tower in Bartlesville.
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The planned Rogers Lacy hotel in Dallas, Texas


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5. Xanadu Hotel

Las Vegas, USA

Planned to be a 2,000-room Aztec-style pyramid hotel with a 20-story atrium and flaming water feature, the Xanadu would have been an eye-catcher even among the outrageous facades of Tropicana and Las Vegas Boulevard. Unfortunately, a dispute arose over sewer line installations and the project was flushed. The good news is that there are still plenty of Las Vegas hotels with architectural features that surpass expectations.
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Xanadu Hotel - an illustration of one of the would-be amazing hotels


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6. Lunar Hilton Hotel

The Moon, Space

Why build a Death Star when you can have the moon? Barron Hilton was inspired by the buzz of the space race to create a fleet of ‘Orbiter Hilton’ satellite hotels, with a flagship Hilton Hotel under the surface of the moon. Staying in luxury rooms built from lunar soil, the guest’s cuisine, at least, would be a little more mundane: freeze-dried steaks shipped from Earth and warmed up in a “nuclear-reactor kitchen.” Although Hilton’s big ideas sparked a short-lived space-hotel race, the cost per head would have put room prices out of the reach of mortal Earthlings, and the designs were put back in the drawer… for now.
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The most amazing hotel on earth is actually on the moon


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And there you have it. Six of the coolest hotels in the world that didn’t make it past the drawing board.

Here’s a question to end on: What in your opinion makes for the most amazing hotel?

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1000Museums. (2018). Rogers Lacy Hotel, Dallas, TX (project)1000museums.com

Garcia, J. (2015). Almost Vegas: Las Vegas hotels that never were. blog.vegas.com

Hotelier Middle East (2010). Top 10 hotels that were never built. hoteliermiddleeast.com

Oberhaus, D. (2017). The never-ending quest to build a hotel in space. theoutline.com

Patterson, R. (2015). Rogers Lacy and Frank Lloyd Wright. shalemag.com

Ravenscroft, T. (2018). Eight of Will Alsop’s visionary but unbuilt architectural proposals. dezeen.com

Stuff Nobody Cares About (2018). In 1918 New York’s Hotel Commonwealth Was Going To Be The Largest In The World. stuffnobodycaresabout.com

Trotter, K. (2008). Death Star Lunar Hotel in Baku, Azerbaijan. inhabitat.com

University of Nevada. (2018). Paradise Misplaced: Outside the Xanadu. unlv.edu

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