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World's first fashion hotel set for city opening

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Published Date: 06 March 2009
IT is so exclusive, even the staff will be wearing Italian designer outfits.
Edinburgh's first "fashion hotel" is set to open this summer as part of a multi-million-pound development on the site of the former council offices on the corner of the Royal Mile and George IV Bridge.

It has been created through a partnership be
tween the renowned Italian fashion and homewares brand Missoni and Belgian hotel giant Rezidor.

It has been revealed that the 100-plus staff are to wear uniforms from the Missoni range, with some key staff to wear outfits worth several hundred pounds.

The hotel owners also want to make an impact on the street outside and passers-by will get a hint of the glamour within the building with two handmade four-foot mosaic vases marking the entrance to the building.

The economic downturn and recent decline in hotel occupancy figures in Edinburgh have not put Rezidor off the project. It expects fans of the designer label to converge on the city from around the globe – especially from Italy – to catch a glimpse of the Missoni-designed hotel.

Gordon McKinnon, executive vice-president of brands at Rezidor, said that bookings for the summer were already going well – even although the 136-room hotel does not open its doors until late May.

"We don't want this to be elitist," he said. "It will be high quality but we hope it will be fully accessible to a lot of people.

"The restaurant and bars will play a part and you'll be able to get a bowl of pasta and a bottle of wine for £30 or £40, although you could easily spend three or four times that if you wanted to."

Mr McKinnon and Ms Missoni first started working on their partnership three years ago and then set about finding a location from Rezidor's development pipeline.

They settled on the £34 million Bank of Scotland project on the site of the former Lothian Regional Council offices. A second hotel is also to be created in Kuwait and it is expected that up to 30 will be open or in development by 2012.

It is just the latest stage of the ongoing development of the Missoni brand, which started as just a fashion label but has since branched out into homewares, fragrances and even garden furniture.

"It is one of the few brands that is truly unique," said Mr McKinnon.

"When you see Missoni you know it is Missoni.

"I think there will be a lot of people throughout the world who will want to come and see this. The hotel industry throughout the world will want to see it as well.

"We do expect a lot of interest from Italy as well.

"Italians will always be loyal to their own country and for them what better combination could you get than Missoni and whisky?"

As well as the hotel, the project will also see the creation of a flagship Bank of Scotland branch – which will become the first bank branch with a Royal Mile address – as well as retail space.

A Bank of Scotland spokesman confirmed that the company remained committed to the site.

He said: "It's always been part of our plans to improve our branch presence in that part of Edinburgh.

"We don't expect to open until the autumn."





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  • Last Updated: 06 March 2009 11:32 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Life and Style
 
1

Sister Morag,

Lasswade 06/03/2009 12:13:43
A bowl of pasta and a bottle of wine for £30 or £40? Is he 'avin' a laugh?
2

Mallory,

Edinburgh 06/03/2009 12:16:18
I thought that the Bank of Scotland used to have branch at the junction with North Bridge - of course they flogged that off as an hotel years ago.

BOS staff used to wear 'designer' uniforms (created by a senior manager's wife I understand)in the good old dayas before iut started to help bankrupt the nation.
3

JT,

06/03/2009 12:25:32
We don't want this to be elitist," he said. "It will be high quality but we hope it will be fully accessible to a lot of people. Charging £30-£40 a bottle of house wine and thats not elitist!

"although you could easily spend three or four times that if you wanted to." Just the right thing to say when a recession is on. Come on CEC stop allowing hotels to be built we dont need them, we need good quality shops and facilites and not a blooming tram!
4

LUVMACITY,

IN THE LOBBY 06/03/2009 12:25:36
2* Correct. There was also a B of S in the Canongate not to mention a bank at the junction with Cockburn Street.
5

alfonsa pedrosa,

embra 06/03/2009 12:32:14
You would need to win the lottery to dine their,no thanks i am not a poser.
6

nSyratzcGlaw,

06/03/2009 12:34:18
"although you could easily spend three or four times that if you wanted to."

Nah , you're okay mate. I'm sure theres a few dafties in the world but I'm not one of them and I'm not giving you my cash.
7

L,

Edinburgh 06/03/2009 13:07:14
That better be some bowl of pasta. A bucket of pasta maybe.
8

Bill MacD,

06/03/2009 13:26:10
Wow, really! What, several HUNDRED pounds for designer uniforms. How on earth can they afford this on their multi-million pound budget? What a story!! Stop the presses.

Great recycling of cynical press release fodder by the Evening News, in its much loved role as a free advertising rag, pretending it's news.
9

Angus R,

06/03/2009 14:24:44
#5 it's 'there' and if you only win a tenner then that's not much good.
10

elayne,

06/03/2009 14:30:05
£40 for a bottle of wine????kiss my a**e!!!!!
11

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 06/03/2009 15:35:29


elayne ~10,

Thats not very 'lady like' although I could say,.,.,....'Yes Please'!
What I won't be saying is, 'Yes Please' to is this new Hotel, I bet they charge about £400 a night for B&B.

12

elayne,

06/03/2009 16:48:49
#11 no its not ladylike,even if i did drink(which i dont) £40 for bottle of wine is a bit cheeky,,its probably "blue nun"or "lambrini"poured into a fancy bottle
13

tumshie heid,

06/03/2009 17:03:27
Failed and closed within two years. Edinburgh does not welcome this sort of pretentious tosh.
14

elayne,

06/03/2009 17:46:37
#13 what about all these pretentious places in george st? and the city cafe,it was always full of poser types
15

Kitti Kat,

Newtown Square 06/03/2009 20:42:05
30 0r 40 pounds for pasta and wine? Get real! Pasta is cheap and I can't for the life of me think what would make a bowl of it that expensive--even with wine. My husband is Italian and is extremely fussy about his pasta but even he would not pay that much. Think of all the homeless or hungry people you could feed if you paid 40 pounds for many boxes of pasta and gravy. (gravy is what Italians in Philadelphia call spaghetti sauce)
16

Ian down under,

Musselburgh 06/03/2009 20:51:08
MSP expenses going this way?
17

Buttress,

06/03/2009 21:58:13
Is this the ugly lump of a building by Allan Murray? The one with the Pizza Express as part of the block?
18

tumshie heid,

06/03/2009 23:47:16
Elayne I think that this project is in a much higher league of egotastical idiocy than even the worst that George Street has to offer.
#15 Thanks for that entirely uncalled for and completely boring lecture regarding the eating habits of Philadelphia's Italian community.
19

COLINTON.MAINS,

Oakville Ontario 07/03/2009 00:16:21
those.vases.bolt.them.down.and.made.of.steel

 

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