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The Pfister Hotel is a luxury hotel in downtown Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States. The Pfister Hotel is a member of Historic Hotels of America, the official program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Owned by Guido Pfister and his son, Charles F. Pfister, it was opened in 1893 at a cost of over $1 million ($33.9 million in 2023).
In June 2020, Marc Corporation permanently laid off 79 workers at the Hilton Milwaukee City Center [8] In December 2024, the hotel was renamed Hilton Milwaukee, as part of a $40 million renovation. [9] Hilton Milwaukee is a member of Historic Hotels of America, an official program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. [10]
Neighborhood of houses and churches near the industrial area along the Rock River, including the 1848 Lathrop-Munn cobblestone house, [22] the late-1840s Selvy-Blodgett house, [20] the 1858 Italianate-style Parker house, [23] the 1877 Gothic Revival-styled Norwegian Lutheran Church, [24] the 1889 Queen Anne/Stick-style Anderson house (pictured ...
Sheboygan, Wisconsin (2004–2011 as operator of Blue Harbor Resort; never carried any Great Wolf Lodge branding) [20] Locations under construction: Mashantucket, Connecticut [21] Bicester, Oxfordshire, England [22] - A proposal to build a Great Wolf Lodge location in Chesterton near Bicester, Oxfordshire was submitted in 2019.
Hotel Loraine, also known as The Loraine, is a ten-story hi-rise built as a hotel in 1924 a block southwest of the capitol in Madison, Wisconsin. It was the city's leading hotel from the time of construction to 1968. In 2002 it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. [2] Walter Schroeder was a Milwaukee businessman who inherited ...
The Knickerbocker on the Lake bills itself a boutique hotel, with suites decorated in styles varying from Victorian to French Country. [4] The majority of the rooms are now owner-occupied. [citation needed] From 1994 to 2011, the hotel housed the Osterio del Mondo, which had been rated a top hotel restaurant by Zagat/USA Today. [5]
The horizontal lines of the Edgewater Apartments and Hotel at 642 Wisconsin Avenue (1946) are emphasized with bands of windows with continuous sills and lintels at each floor, corner windows, and parapets at the tops of the walls. [3] The rounded 11-story tower of the 2014 addition to the Edgewater seen from Lake Mendota
Train service to Oconomowoc was initiated in the same year, allowing wealthy families from Chicago and Milwaukee to tour "Lake Country" on weekends. [6] In 1878, the Giffords converted their property into the Gifford Hotel, a 100-acre (0.40 km 2) luxury summer retreat for Milwaukee's elite. When the hotel closed in 1910, it had lured many well ...