Westin Harbour Castle Hotel

The Westin Harbour Castle Toronto is a large hotel opened in 1975 on the waterfront of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is part of the Westin Hotels chain within Marriott International.

The Westin Harbour Castle Toronto
The Westin Harbour Castle
General information
Location1 Harbour Square
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
M5J 1A6
Coordinates43.640641°N 79.375716°W / 43.640641; -79.375716
Opened1975
Technical details
Floor count33
Other information
Number of rooms977
Website
Official website

History

The hotel was built by the Campeau Corporation, after Canadian real estate tycoon Robert Campeau was given permission by the city of Toronto in 1972 to turn industrial land on the city's waterfront into a 30-acre residential and commercial development.[1] The 38-story[2] twin-towered 963-room hotel opened in April 1975[3] as the Harbour Castle Hotel. Cut off from the city by the Gardiner Expressway,[4] the hotel was at first unsuccessful, with an occupancy rate of only 46.2% in its first year and an even lower rate in its second.[5] Hilton International assumed management in 1977, and the hotel was renamed the Toronto Hilton Harbour Castle.[6]

Hong Kong business magnate Li Ka-Shing purchased the hotel from Campeau in 1981.[7] In a complicated management swap in 1987, Hilton Hotels traded operation of the property for the Westin Hotel on University Avenue. The Harbour Castle became the Harbour Castle Westin, while the former Westin became the Toronto Hilton.[8] Li sold the property to Westin Hotels in 1990.

Westin sold the hotel to the Public Sector Pension Investment Board in 2005, as part of a portfolio of five Canadian Westin hotels in Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton and Ottawa. PSP resold the five hotels to Starwood Capital Group in 2013 for C$765 Million, at which point the Harbour Castle was valued in land registry documents at C$146 million.[9] Starwood Capital put the Harbour Castle up for sale in January 2016.[10] When they sold their remaining Canadian Westin properties in 2018, it was reported that the Harbour Castle had sold for nearly C$400 million.[11]

The twin-towered 34-storey building sits along Toronto Harbour and now offers 977 rooms after a renovation in 2007. The hotel features three restaurants, including The Mizzen, Toula and The Chartroom. The hotel also features the Harbour coffee bar, and Savoury, a private chef's table. Toula, a rooftop restaurant located on the southeast tower, once revolved, but this ceased in 2001.[12] The restaurant offers a view of the lake and can see Rochester, New York on a good day.[12]

A convention centre building is attached to the hotel on the north side of Queens Quay and is accessible via an elevated glass walkway. The convention centre offers 31 rooms, including the 2,300 square feet (210 m2) Grand Metro Ballroom. The hotel is also connected to Harbour Square condos with a glass walkway.

The hotel is located along the Yonge Street slip and shares space with the semi-retired island ferry Trillium and is adjacent to the Jack Layton Ferry Terminal.

The Westin Harbour Castle Hotel has been used for several ceremonies, including the presenting of the 32nd Genie Awards.[13]

gollark: Datacentre-grade ones manage *petabytes* in total.
gollark: "equal to 390GB per day for 5 years"
gollark: Crucial's 1TB BX500, a well-known drive I've not-very-randomly picked, is rated for 360TB total writes.
gollark: So basically rewriting a tenth of the drive's capacity per day. They list this in the specs. As I said, it's generally more, and measured over 3-5 years generally.
gollark: 0.1 DWPD for a 1TB drive would be 100GB/day.

References

Media related to Westin Harbour Castle Hotel at Wikimedia Commons

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