Category Archives: Hotels

A Pittsburgh “Urban” Suprise!

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette advertisement

October 28, 1929 advertisement for the Urban Room in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

 

While recently attending a conference in Pittsburgh I received a very pleasant surprise. The site of the conference was the Omni William Penn Hotel, a historic downtown Pittsburgh hotel that first opened in 1916. The majority of the hotel is typical nineteen-teens decor, with an ornate lobby and public spaces.

 

The William Penn Hotel

The exterior of the William Penn Hotel, opened in 1916.

 

 

Through the teens and the 1920’s the William Penn became the première hotel in Pittsburgh. As the 1920’s reached its climax the hotel expanded onto Grant Street. Included in the expansion plans an ultra modern night club would open on the 17th floor. Legendary designer, Joseph Urban would be responsible for bringing New York sophistication to Pittsburgh. Urban had already designed sets for the Ziegfeld Follies, Ziegfeld Shows such as Show Boat and Rio Rita and the Metropolitan Opera.

 

Joseph Urban

Joseph Urban, circa 1925 – image from Columbia University Rare Book Library

 

Urban worked on the Urban Room of the William Penn Hotel concurrently with the redesign of New York’s Central Park Casino. The Urban Room opened on May 9, 1929. The following day the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported:

                                          Dinner, Dance End New Hotel Annex Opening

                                     More than 1,500 are present at the William Penn Fete

Last night, for the first time, the Urban room, connecting the seventeenth floor addition to the ballroom, was thrown open. The interior was designed by Joseph Urban, New York, famous for his stage settings, and is done in a motif of gold and black.

The decoration is carried out in the colors of Pittsburgh from top to bottom, with the chandelier particularly unusual. An immense garden is at one end of the room and , when completed, six setting of flowers, greens and rocks will convert the space into the appearance of an outdoor bower.

The Urban Room

The Urban Room in Pittsburgh’s colors of black and gold.

 

The Pittsburgh Press had this to say of the Urban Room in its June 23, 1929 edition:

                                                        Up Above The World So High

Like a gem in the social sky, shines the newly opened Urban Room of the William Penn Hotel. There amid the gold and ebony splendor of Joseph Urban’s latest and most artistic work, in the topmost corner of the new addition we are going to lunch, dine and dance this summer. It’s delightful how cool it is there and how little competition there is between the soft strains of the orchestra and the great outside. And it will be smarter than sun tan this summer to be seen here with your friends, particularly your out-of-town friends, who demand the best in town. Now our hunger for a cosmopolitan touch to our city can be satisfied by this lovely place presented at just the right time to fill Pittsburgh’s needs.

 

The walls of the Urban Room are alternating painted panels that continue the ceiling mural down to the floor and black Carrara glass (Vitrolite). The effect is striking if a bit subdued.

 

 

The delight that Pittsburgh felt about this new restaurant can be seen in this article from the Pittsburgh Press on June 30, 1929:

 

Urban Room article.

Pittsburgh Press article about the Urban Room, June 30, 1929.

 

With so much of Joseph Urban’s work demolished you can imagine my surprise when I entered the room encountering this high Art Deco space. It is amazing to me that the Urban Room has remained basically unchanged for nearly ninety years. The flowers, greens and rocks mentioned in an article above are gone, but everything else is intact. I initially missed the Historic Landmark wall plaque outside of the Urban Room, so I was unprepared for what I saw. After a few minutes of looking around it seemed to me to be a Joseph Urban design, especially the ceiling mural. I was told about the plaque later and I made sure to get a photo of it.

 

Urban Room Wall Plaque.

The Historic Landmark Wall Plaque outside the Urban Room.

 

As noted in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette article of 05/10/1929 the “particularly unusual chandelier” is still the centerpiece of the room. A large circular, bronze piece with “sun rays” shooting off it in all directions, hanging from the ceiling by cascading bronze tubes. It is very striking.

 

Should you happen to be visiting Pittsburgh and you like Art Deco, try to see the Urban Room, you won’t regret it.

 

Anthony & Chris (The Freakin’, Tiquen’ Guys)

 

If you enjoyed this blog post you might also enjoy these earlier posts:

Vanished New York City Art Deco: Stewart and Company / Bonwit Teller

The Central Park Casino, Joseph Urban’s long, lost New York City Night Club

 

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The Hotel Edison – Art Deco refuge in Times Square

Plaque outside the 47th Street entrance.

Bronze Plaque outside the 47th Street entrance. The image of Edison is a replica of the one used on a medallion created by Julio Kilenyi.

So much of Times Square’s history has either been torn down or is buried under a generic world of themed restaurants and stores that it is a pleasant relief that Hotel Edison remains. It’s lobby, is a place to sit and catch your breath in a wonderful Art Deco setting. In the early 1990’s the lobby was given an Art Deco face lift, while not a restoration of it’s 1931 appearance there are enough surviving original details that can make you feel that you have stepped back into the 1930’s. The six murals that line the lobby are sensitive 1990’s creations that evoke the of WPA murals of the late 1930’s.

The Hotel Edison, designed by Herbert J. Krapp, formally opened on January 17, 1931. Thomas Edison, turned on the lights in the 26 story hotel, by pressing a telegraph key in his home in Llewellyn Park, Orange, New Jersey. One of the features of the Edison, that was mentioned in all the advertisements, was that each of the 1,000 rooms featured a radio, a novelty at the time. Over the years, the Edison was used in at least two period films, the south entrance way can be seen in The Godfather and Bullets Over Broadway.  Below are some photos of the interior Art Deco details of the lobby.

 

Up until the late 1980’s the Edison was a prominent building in the Times Square skyline, now it is completely hidden by all the tall buildings that have been constructed along Broadway. Here are some photos of the exterior details of the hotel.

So the next time you visit Manhattan, and you find yourself in the Times Square area, and you want some relief from the present day, step in the Edison and back into the 1930’s.

 Chris & Anthony

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