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By 1991, Peacock Alley, a spot for socializing and "to see and be seen," situated on a wide corridor on the main level extending along the west side of the hotel, was replaced by the elegant restaurant Wilfrid's. This new restaurant offered impressive views of the Parliament Buildings, the Rideau Canal locks and the Ottawa River. [2]
In 2023, the lobby was moved to the ground level as part of renovation work, while the Peacock Alley tea lounge will take the vacated space on the 23rd floor. Rooms and meeting space were also updated. [23] [31]
The main corridor was nicknamed "Peacock Alley" by the New York press. [77] The corridor and foyer were treated with pilasters and columns of Sienna marble and a color scheme on the walls and ceilings of salmon-pink, with cream-color and pale-green. The capitals of the columns and pilasters were gilded of solid brass or lacquered.
Phil Mutz. Price: from $75/person Address: 18 W 56th St. (Midtown) “The Whitby offers a bright, gorgeous space for afternoon tea. I was able to enjoy my tea in the beautiful back room behind the ...
Started by a peckish Duchess one afternoon in 1840, this tradition of snacking on an elegant spread of tea and treats became a centuries-long English tradition that's still valued by people around ...
Peacock Alley may refer to: Peacock Alley, a black-and-white silent film; Peacock Alley, a black-and-white sound film; Peacock Alley (connection), the connection between Waldorf and Astoria in The Waldorf-Astoria Hotel and the name of a restaurant there; Peacock Alley (jazz club), one of St. Louis's most important jazz clubs in the 1950s
The owners of the sourdough bread spot and wine bar didn’t draw enough morning coffee drinkers or lunchtime office workers in a downtown dominated by hotels, tourists and steakhouses.
The original station concourse and ticket office were roofed over to provide a bar and lounge area, named Peacock Alley, which incorporates the station clock. [4] The hotel's fine dining restaurant, The Pompadour, [ 4 ] was refurbished in 2021 and reopened under the name Dean Banks at The Pompadour. [ 17 ]