HOTEL JOBS 2017 - 18
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LIST OF HOTELS
- Château Laurier, Ottawa
- Chelsea Hotel, Toronto
- Drake Hotel, Toronto
- Duke of York Inn, Toronto
- Fairmont Royal York, Toronto
- Ford Hotel, Toronto
- Four Seasons Hotel Toronto, Toronto
- Gladstone Hotel, Toronto
- Guild Inn, Toronto
- Hotel Waverly, Toronto
- Inn on the Park, Toronto
- InterContinental Toronto Centre, Toronto
- John Finch's Hotel, Toronto
- King Edward Hotel, Toronto
- Lord Elgin Hotel, Ottawa
- Lord Simcoe Hotel, Toronto
- Marriott Niagara Falls Hotel Fallsview & Spa, Niagara Falls
- Marriott on the Falls Hotel, Niagara Falls
- Miller Tavern, Toronto
- Neill-Wycik, Toronto
- New Broadview House Hotel, Toronto
- New Edwin Hotel, Toronto
- Old Mill Inn & Spa, Toronto
- Ottawa Marriott Hotel, Ottawa
- Park Hyatt Toronto, Toronto
- Regal Constellation Hotel, Toronto
- Rossin House Hotel, Toronto
- Russell House, Ottawa
- Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel, Toronto
- Sheraton on the Falls, Niagara Falls
- Spadina Hotel, Toronto
- Westin Harbour Castle Hotel, Toronto
- Windsor Arms Hotel, Toronto
Canadian Pacific Hotels was a division of the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) that operated a series of resort hotels across Canada. Most of these hotels were originally built and operated by the railway's hotel department, while a few were acquired from Canadian National Hotels. Today, they are operated under the Fairmont name, and remain some of Canada's most exclusive hotels.The CPR built two types of hotels: urban hotels and rural resort hotels. The urban hotels were located near a city's major passenger station and were intended for use by elite passengers of CPR trains. These hotels served businesspeople and visitors to the respective city, as well as passengers requiring overnight accommodation between connecting trains. The rural resort hotels were located in areas served by the CPR which had unique scenery, allowing these properties to be marketed as tourist destinations for passenger train travellers. Some of these resort hotels also served as "stationary dining cars", where en route passengers were fed and housed, without the train having to carry heavy dining and kitchen cars over difficult terrain.
The hotels were architecturally different in appearance, but materials such as granite walls and copper roofs were common elements. Many of these structures were constructed to look somewhat similar to European castles. One of the unique CPR hotels is the Chateau Montebello, which was for many years the world's largest log building. The Tudor style Algonquin in St. Andrews, New Brunswick also stands out as it was one of the few Canadian Pacific Hotels that was not constructed by CPR itself. The original hotels were built in the Rocky Mountains to attract tourists from eastern Canada, incorporating local attractions such as exceptional scenery and therapeutic mineral hot springs.
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