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27 February 2018

Michelin-starred Alcron Restaurant in Prague - Radisson Blu
src: cache.radissonhotels.com

The Radisson Blu Alcron Hotel is a hotel in Prague on Stepanska, just off Wenceslas Square, the main plaza in the city center.

The Hotel Alcron was constructed by its owner/architect Alois Krofta, a local businessman, and opened in 1932. Krofta named the hotel after himself, taking the first two letters of his first and last names and adding an "n" to match the Alcron, a boat from Greek mythology. Guests before the war included Charlie Chaplin and Winston Churchill, while Joachim von Ribbentrop and Karl Hermann Frank stayed in the hotel during the German occupation of Czechoslovakia. In 1948, the Alcron was seized by the communist government.

Following the fall of communism, the hotel closed in 1990 and the Krofta family filed claims for restitution in 1992. A legal battle ensued between two of Krofta's ex-wives and one of their daughters. The three women were eventually each given 1/3 ownership, which they each sold in 1995 to an Austrian-based firm, Crown WSF Ltd. In 1996, the new owners contracted Radisson SAS Hotels to manage the hotel upon its reopening. It was completely rebuilt and modernized at great expense, with the historic public rooms restored to their original Art Deco grandeur. It reopened on August 1, 1998 as the Radisson SAS Hotel Prague. Crown secured the right to use the Alcron name two years later, and the hotel was renamed Radisson SAS Alcron Hotel. The hotel was again renovated in 2008. It was again renamed Radisson Blu Alcron Hotel in 2009, when the Radisson SAS partnership ended.


Video Radisson Blu Alcron Hotel



References


Maps Radisson Blu Alcron Hotel



External links

  • Hotel official website
  • Restaurant official website

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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