Llao Llao Hotel

Coordinates: 41°3′27.72″S 71°31′52.02″W / 41.0577000°S 71.5311167°W / -41.0577000; -71.5311167
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Llao Llao
Setting of the Llao Llao hotel
Map
General information
LocationBariloche, Argentina
Coordinates41°3′27.72″S 71°31′52.02″W / 41.0577000°S 71.5311167°W / -41.0577000; -71.5311167
Opening1940
ManagementLlao Llao Resorts S.A.
Technical details
Floor count5
Design and construction
DeveloperAlejandro Bustillo
Other information
Number of rooms205
Number of suites32
Number of restaurants4
Website
www.llaollao.com

The Llao Llao Hotel is located in the tourist resort of San Carlos de Bariloche within the Río Negro, Argentina. This famous hotel is situated in the foothills of the Andes on a hill between the Moreno Lake and Nahuel Huapi lakes.

Information[edit]

The original hotel, designed by Alejandro Bustillo, was made almost entirely of wood and furnished by Jean-Michel Frank and Casa Comte, was destroyed by fire soon after its completion in 1939. A year later Bustillo built a new hotel out of reinforced concrete and stone, with the assistance of the German landscaping architect Hermann Botrich. It closed in 1976 due to lack of funds for maintenance. While it was closed, the hotel was exposed to robbery, vandalism and overall neglect.

It was renovated and reopened in 1993 after ownership was transferred to CEI Citicorp Holdings in compensation for Argentina government bonds.[1] The Argentinian property company IRSA acquired the hotel in 1997 for $13.3 million and later sold 50% of its stake to the Sutton Group. In 1999 the hotel became a member of The Leading Hotels of the World, and has won many important prizes since its re-opening, including "The Best Hotel and Resort in the Argentine Hinterland" in 1999.[1]

The hotel is the site of the annual classical music festival, Semana Musical Llao Llao.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  • ^ Traveler magazine, Third Argentine Pol, San Marco Editora (Publishers), 1999
  • Alberto Bellucci, The Bariloche Style, J. Decorative & Propaganda Arts, Argentine Theme Issue, 1992. El Portal de arte y arquitectura en Internet (in Spanish)

External links[edit]