Great Western Hotel, Newquay

The Great Western Hotel is the oldest purpose built hotel in Newquay, Cornwall. The hotel was originally designed by the Cornish architect Silvanus Trevail and first opened in April 1879. The hotel is built in a prominent position overlooking Great Western Beach.

Great Western Hotel
Front of the hotel
Location within Cornwall
Alternative namesThe Great Western
General information
Architectural styleArt-Deco (1931)
AddressGreat Western Hotel, 36-37 Cliff Road, Newquay, Cornwall, TR7 2NE
Town or cityNewquay, Cornwall
Coordinates50°24′59″N 5°04′31″W
Construction started1878
CompletedJanuary 1879
Opened7 April 1879
Renovated2007
Renovation cost£1.1 Million
Owner
Design and construction
ArchitectSilvanus Trevail
Architecture firmF.C West (1931)
Renovating team
ArchitectNova Design Partnership
Other information
Number of rooms66
Website
https://www.greatwesternnewquay.co.uk/

The hotel has 66 rooms, some with sea-views.[1]

History

It was decided in 1878 that a hotel would be built because of the ever increasing Great Western Railway passenger service to Newquay. In September 1878, Mr. Whitefield, solicitor, applied for a licence for it to be called Great Western.[2] The Great Western Railway gave £2,000 towards the building of the hotel. The architecture of the hotel was by Silvanus Trevail, who later designed the Headland Hotel.[3] In January 1879 the hotel was completed and it officially opened on 7 April 1879.[4] The original 1879 building resembled a large country house with pitched roofs, gable ends and attic windows.[3]

Original Great Western Hotel, Newquay taken between 1906 - 1930. Major alterations took place in 1931.

"The Great Western Hotel, at Newquay, opened for business on Monday, the 7th instant. The situation is all that can be desired, commanding magnificent views of the headland, harbour, and the coast up to Trevose Head. It is said there are fifty rooms. The architect was Mr. Silvanus Trevail. Doubtless the establishment will be appreciated by visitors to this delightful coast."[5]

Trevail's Great Western Hotel was the first in a string of hotels designed to appeal to renewed interest in Cornwall as a winter resort for the middle classes.[6]

The hotel was described in a Newquay holiday guide as having "Spacious Billiard & Coffee Rooms". The Hotel was the first to have en-suite rooms. The first owners of the hotel were basket makers and bathing machine proprietors. In 1909, the first generation of the Hooper family took over the hotel.[7] In 1931 the original modest two storey gabled building was altered beyond recognition to its art-deco style.[3]

An early interior of the Great Western Hotel.

St Austell Brewery purchased the property in 1985 and in 2007 a £1.1 million refurbishment project commenced. This included extensive ground floor alterations, complete external painting, replacement of windows, bedroom refurbishment and landscape gardening of outside areas to create an extensive “al fresco dining” terrace.[1]

The hotel and the owning family is mentioned in Emma Smith's 2008 memoir, The Great Western Beach, describing her childhood in Cornwall between the two World Wars.

References

  1. "Great Western Hotel Newquay" (PDF).
  2. Harper, Sheila (2013-11-15). Newquay Through Time. Amberley Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-1-4456-1326-0.
  3. Ronald, Perry (29 November 2008). Silvanus Trevail: Cornish Architect and Entrepreneur. United Kingdom: Francis Boutle. p. 7. ISBN 978-1903427439.
  4. "Great Western Hotel Newquay 1909 (The Common Room) Page 4 RootsChat.Com". www.rootschat.com. Retrieved 2019-12-06.
  5. "The Intelligence". The West Briton & Cornwall advertiser. April 24, 1879.
  6. bwdeacon (2020-07-07). "Tourism: cure or curse?". Cornish studies resources. Retrieved 2020-08-03.
  7. Smith, Emma (2008). The Great Western Beach. United Kingdom: Bloomsbury. pp. 38. ISBN 978-0-7475-9591-5.
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