Baltimore Architecture:
Then and Now


Belvedere Hotel, 1-5 East Chase Street
image info
Architect:
1903 Parker and Thomas
Two substantial houses - #1029 and #1031 North Charles Street - and their
outbuildings covered this site from ca. 1875 to ca. 1900, when they
were demolished by a syndicate of Baltimore investors who projected a
large modern hotel for the Mount Vernon neighborhood and hired the Boston
architectural firm of Parker and Thomas to design it for them. The
sixteen-story, U-shaped structure - the U opens to the south - was patterned
after McKim, Mead, and White's Plaza Hotel in New York City, which had
opened in 1890. When it opened in December 1903 as the Belvedere Hotel
- the name commemorates John Eager Howard's house, Belvedere, which stood
until 1875 slightly east of the hotel's site - its 320 rooms made it the
largest hotel in Baltimore and its Mount Vernon location made it the highest
man-made structure in the city.
The establishment's socially prominent backers
worked hard to make it the focus of activity for the city's "400" and
the hotel received an early boost from the destruction of so many of
its downtown competitors in the 1904 Baltimore Fire. Emphasis on the
quality rather than the quantity of the Belvedere's guests, however,
made it something less than a gold mine for its owners, of which it
already had had five by the time it was sold to Col. Charles H. Consolvo
of Virginia in 1917. The Colonel ran it as part of his chain of
hotels until 1935, after which it passed to his creditors. Thereafter,
its longest owner was the Sheraton Corporation, which purchased it in
1946 and ran it for 22 years as the Sheraton-Belvedere. Between 1968
and 1976 a large part of it was rented out as dormitory space to local
colleges; only after its serendipitous purchase in 1976 by local businessman
Victor Frenkil did it again operate as a true hotel, and then only until
1992. Since then, it has been run as an apartment condominium, although
its most popular features, like its top floor cocktail lounge and its
famous "Owl Bar," continue in operation.
The building plan is configured
in a shallow "U" shape, with the opening to the south. The structure
is slightly asymmetrical with the west wing (Charles Street side) being
fifteen feet broader than the east wing. The main entry lobby is on
Chase Street, centrally located. The exterior facades are constructed
using a warm mellow brownish pink masonry with quoins and other embellishment
of terra cotta. There is a cornice at the third floor level and a heavy
two-floor cornice below a thirty-five foot high mansard roof covered
with slate. Very ornate dormer windows project from the mansard roof.
Image information
left: Baltimore, Hotels, Inns, and Taverns, Belvedere
Hotel, ca. 1904 (PP71.28, Henry Rinn Collection, MdHS).
right: Photo by John Orrick, 2000.
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Baltimore
Architecture - Homepage
Site Contents
1 Masonic Building
2 Enoch Pratt House
3 Graham-Hughes House
4 American Brewery
5 Belvedere Hotel
6 Camden Station
7 Alex Brown Building
8 Williams-Small House
9 Timanus Mill
10 The Pembroke Apartments
11 Merchant's Exchange
12 Old B and O Building
13 Denny & Mitchell Building
14 Guardian Trust Building
15 Old Post Office Building
16 St. Joseph's R.C. Church & Washington Firehouse
17 The Maryland Casualty Building
18 Church of the Redeemer Building
19 The Popplein Family Mansion/Marlborough
Apartments
20 Samuel Hoffman, later the Dr. William Osler Mansion
21 Cohen Brothers, later the Dr. Robinson Building
22 Saint Peter's Catholic Church 1770
23 The Baltimore Humane Impartial Society Building
24 Baltimore and Susquehanna Railroad Calvert Station
25 The Richmond Market Building Site
26 Dr. Charles Howard's Site and Mount Vernon Place M.E. Church
27 The Stephen Broadbent Mansion "The Glen Mary"