Melbourne - Battle Of The Best Hotels
By David Ellis with John Rozentals
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Melbourne - Windsor Hotel |

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There may only be a few CBD blocks separating Melbourne’s Adelphi
and Windsor hotels, but in terms of style they might as well be in
different galaxies — and both very desirable galaxies at that.
The
Adelphi, in Flinders Lane, just a hop from Federation Square, City
Square, Flinders Street Station and the Yarra, exudes cool. It’s arty
and hip, its decor still edgy nearly 20 years after its construction.
Stainless
steel, varnished ply and bright leather combine artfully in the guest
rooms, though occasionally, as with the angular sofas, a tad of comfort
has been sacrificed to design. Those minor shortcomings are about to be
corrected during a major refit.
The avant garde flows through
the public areas as well, especially on to the rooftop, with its modern
decking, bright chairs and an amazing 25-metre lap pool, which at one
end has a glass bottom and juts out over Flinders Lane, nine storeys
below. If you’re going skinny dipping, can we suggest backstroke?
Even
the reception area offers plenty of interest. At the moment it’s home
to a couple of pieces from the private collection of Damien Hodgkinson,
one of the hotel’s directors: a metre-tall ceramic stature of Chairman
Mao (one of many churned out in China during the 1970s) and a car from
an old carousel at St Kilda’s Luna Park.
The Adelphi was
designed by award-winning local architects Denton Corker Marshall and
its construction within the confines of an old inner-city warehouse
hailed as a prime example of urban renewal.
How appropriate,
because the Adelphi preceded and sits just a stroll away from
Federation Square, which in the late 1990s arose phoenix-like next to
the Yarra on the site of the old Jolimont Rail Yard.
It’s one of
Australia’s most exciting cultural and recreational precincts, home to
the futuristically designed National Gallery of Victoria’s Ian Potter
Centre, the equally striking Australian Centre for the Moving Image,
and on a slightly less cerebral note, Abbaworld.
There’s ample
shopping and eating, plus a state-of-art children’s playground and
bike-hire facilities that make nearby Kings Domain and the Royal
Botanic Gardens just so accessible.
Within easy walking distance
across the historic Princes Bridge are the Arts Centre, the National
Gallery of Victoria International and the Melbourne Theatre Company’s
cutting-edge MTC Theatre.
If ready access to this golden mile of culture is high on your list of priorities, so, too, should be the Adelphi.
Less
than a kilometre to the north-east, the Hotel Windsor is a very
different animal that represents a bygone era among Australian hotels.
It
was built in the early 1880s, amid the great land boom that followed
Victoria’s gold rushes. The developer was shipping magnate George
Nipper and, as with the Adelphi, an eminent architect was involved ...
this time Charles Webb, who had designed the Melbourne Church of
England Grammar School and the South Melbourne Town Hall.
Nipper
went bust and work was completed by the Honourable James Munro and the
Honourable James Balfour, who added the Grand Ballroom, the Grand
Staircase and the cupola-topped towers. For a while it was a “dry”
hotel, known as the Grand Coffee Palace.
‘The Duchess of Spring
Street’ became a mixing pot for politicians and businessmen, and in
1898 the Australian Constitution was drafted there.
And if you
stay there, it could well be in a room once occupied by Lauren Bacall,
Katherine Hepburn, Gregory Peck or Rudolf Nureyev.
To stay in
one of the suites — complete with stained-glass door, entry hallway,
substantial sitting room, and a dining room that can be set for 10 from
its antique sideboard packed with classy crockery, cutlery and
glassware — is an exhilarating experience.
So, too, is to wander
through hallways restored to their original grandeur, complete with
gold-leaf decoration, panelling and chandeliers, and to relax in the
elegant restaurant for traditional high tea and champagne, with, of
course, cucumber-and-cress sandwiches. Well in advance bookings are
essential.
And the Windsor’s location is completely appropriate
... right opposite what must surely be Australia’s grandest Parliament
House, and handily close to Treasury Gardens, Fitzroy Gardens, Captain
Cook’s Cottage, and Carlton Gardens with its World-Heritage-listed
Royal Exhibition Building.
It’s a different side of Melbourne to
Federation Square, but it’s equally satisfying.s
Book either hotel
through travel agents.
More on what to see and do in Melbourne
A lot more Hotels in Melbourne
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