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A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Italian Wikipedia article at [[:it:Piazza San Giovanni (Firenze)]]; see its history for attribution. You may also add the template {{Translated|it|Piazza San Giovanni (Firenze)}} to the talk page. For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
In 1991, the hotel was converted into a luxury apartment building, and a new 19-story wing complete with a rooftop pool was built to resemble the original 10-story Beaux-Arts-style hotel. In 1997, the apartments were vacated, and the property reopened as a luxury hotel.
Alla morte di Niccolò il palazzo passò quindi ai monaci della Certosa, che lo possedettero fino alla soppressione degli ordini monastici all’inizio dell’Ottocento. [2] Venne messo in vendita e passò in diverse mani, tra le quali i Burresi Pettini furono gli ultimi, che ancora lo posseggono e lo usano in parte per un’attività alberghiera.
He quickly gained a great deal of popularity with the Naples public with opera serias like Il gioiello (1835), Odda di Bernaver (1837), and Il conte di Chalais (1839). The pinnacle of his success came with his only opera comica, L’osteria di Andujar, which premiered in Fondo on 30 September 1840. After 1840, Lillo composed several more operas ...
It was built for the mendicant order, the Servi di Maria, but is today a hotel. The north side of the piazza is defined by the Basilica della Santissima Annunziata, the Basilica of the Most Holy Annunciation. Though the building is much older, the facade was added in 1601 by the architect Giovanni Battista Caccini.
The Atlanta Biltmore Hotel and Biltmore Apartments is a historic building located in Atlanta, Georgia. The complex, originally consisting of a hotel and apartments, was developed by William Candler, son of Coca-Cola executive Asa Candler, with Holland Ball Judkins and John McEntee Bowman. The original hotel building was converted to an office ...
The hotel was completed in 1910 as part of a construction boom in Atlanta and helped expand the city northward along Peachtree Street. In 1913 the hotel was said to have cost $300,000, have 119 rooms and 59 individual baths, offering both the American and European plans. [ 4 ]
Oglethorpe Hotel postcard depicting the front of the hotel. The Oglethorpe Hotel, located in downtown Brunswick, Georgia, was designed in 1888 by architect J. A. Wood and named after James Oglethorpe. [1] It was built on top of the previous Oglethorpe House, which was burned during the Civil War. [2] It was constructed of brick and had three ...