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covered with green slates and hips, ridges and dormers in zinc. An archway to through to an internal courtyard, at the centre of which was a glass dome covering a billiard room below, later used as a lounge. The interior was decorated in opulent French style, with 230 guest rooms and many function
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A second wing opened in 1882, when the hotel became the largest in London, accommodating up to 480 guests, with a second dining room for another 250 people, and rooms for 150 staff.
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Sir
Polydore de Keyser had no children. His hotel was sold to a limited company in 1897, and a nephew Polydor Welchand de Keyser took over the management.
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190:. Renamed "Adastral House", the first building to bear that name, it was the London headquarters of the Royal Flying Corps until it moved to
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A new hotel building with five storeys and two basements was opened at the same site on 5 September 1874, designed by the
English architect
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rooms, including a dining hall 110 by 40 feet (34 m × 12 m) with space for 400 people. Furniture was imported from Paris.
140:. The foundation stone was laid by the daughter of the Belgian Vice-Counsul. The new building had a long curved façade facing the
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in 1921, and it became their London headquarters. The hotel building was demolished in 1931 to make way for the construction of
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Anita McConnell, ‘Keyser, Sir
Polydor de (1832–1898)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
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The Royal Hotel was founded before 1845 by
Constant de Keyser, an immigrant to England from
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The owner of the hotel claimed compensation, leading to a legal case on the power of the
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129:. It was a high-end hotel, catering mainly to visitors from continental Europe. His son
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Unilever House, De Keyser’s Royal Hotel and the
Drinking Fountain Association
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building that opened in 1883. The exterior was in an
Anglicised form of the
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Private
Property, Government Requisition and the Constitution, 1914-1927
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replaced the royal prerogative, and that compensation was due under the
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The hotel never reopened. The building was sold to
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in 1918. For a short period it was occupied by the
216:Attorney-General v De Keyser's Royal Hotel Limited
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238:Unilever House, built on the site of De Keyser's
48:but its sources remain unclear because it lacks
346:Demolished buildings and structures in London
341:Buildings and structures demolished in 1931
274:, A London Inheritance, 28 September 2014
118:. The location was formerly the site of
79:Learn how and when to remove this message
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336:Demolished hotels in the United Kingdom
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278:The British Architect, 9 October 1874
284:HC Deb 12 August 1919 vol 119 c1114W
156:, faced by white Suffolk bricks and
95:De Keyser's Royal Hotel, London 1887
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16:Former hotel in Blackfriars, London
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174:Following the outbreak of the
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225:Defence of the Realm Act 1914
148:and near the site of the new
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102:was a large hotel on the
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307:51.5117944°N 0.1057583°W
219:. The case reached the
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261:accessed 8 Dec 2016
154:Second Empire Style
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36:list of references
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