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Tower Hotel (Niagara Falls)

Coordinates: 43°04′44″N 79°04′56″W / 43.078947°N 79.082084°W / 43.078947; -79.082084
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(Redirected from Konica Minolta Tower)

Tower Hotel
The tower before the 2010 renovations
Map
General information
Address6732 Fallsview Blvd
Town or cityNiagara Falls, Ontario
CountryCanada
Coordinates43°04′44″N 79°04′56″W / 43.078947°N 79.082084°W / 43.078947; -79.082084
GroundbreakingMarch 15, 1961
OpenedJuly 1, 1962; 62 years ago (1962-07-01)
Renovated2010 (most recent)
Website
www.niagaratower.com
Konica Minolta Tower in the mid-1980s (aerial view), before construction of surrounding hotels and Fallsview Casino (which was built on the footprint of the building in the lower-right)
Konica Minolta Tower in the mid-2000s surrounded by hotels and casinos in the Fallsview area

The Tower Hotel,[1] opened in 1962, is located in the Fallsview district of Niagara Falls, Ontario and was the first of the contemporary observation towers built near the brink of the Falls. It features an indoor observation deck, restaurant, and hotel.[citation needed] The tower is 99 metres (325 feet) tall above street level and 160 metres (520 feet) above the falls.[citation needed] The tower assumed its present name in 2010 as a result of its most recent renovation;[citation needed] as Minolta was the longest-tenured sponsor of the building, tourists and locals may still call it the Minolta Tower.

History

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Previous towers

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For more than 100 years, there had been various smaller towers built throughout the area with most of them being wooden structures.[citation needed] Two notable towers were the wood construction tower located at the top of Drummond Hill on Lundy's Lane behind the historic Drummond Inn, and Street's Pagoda on Cedar Island.[citation needed]

Construction

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Construction began in 1961, and was reportedly the first using of the slipform construction method in North America.[citation needed] One minor fire occurred on the roof on September 2, 1961, due to spillage of hot-mix concrete igniting a tarp and causing several propane tanks to explode.[citation needed] Damage was minimal, estimated at "a few thousand dollars", and nine people suffered minor injuries battling the blaze.[citation needed]

Aerial Photo featuring Tower Hotel taken 1978

The tower opened for business on July 1, 1962.[citation needed]

Changing skyline

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Panasonic Tower, August 1976.

When the tower and surrounding area was first designed prior to groundbreaking on March 15, 1961, it was to be the centrepiece of a proposed hotel/convention centre.[citation needed] Due to finances, the accompanying hotel buildings were not built, and it would be over forty years before hotels began to rise adjacent to the tower.[citation needed]

During the 1970s and 1980s, the surrounding land was occupied by an aquarium to the north, and the Waltzing Waters attraction to the south.[citation needed] The Waltzing Waters site was moved across the street in 1995 to allow for site planning of the current Marriott hotel.[citation needed] The Waltzing Waters, a light and water show synchronized to music, disappeared altogether by 2000. The aquarium was dismantled in 1996 to allow for further site expansion.[citation needed]

The 2000s boom in large hotel construction on Fallsview Boulevard, such as the Fallsview Hotel, Hilton Hotel, and Embassy Suites by Hilton, as well as the nearby Oakes Hotel and Radisson, has diminished the Tower Hotel's prominence as a landmark. All of these hotels strive to give their guests as good a view of the Falls as possible by taking advantage of their position of the height on land above the falls, once dominated solely by the Tower Hotel. In contrast, the airspace around the Skylon Tower remains fairly open, thanks to its position further down the Niagara River away from the American Falls and Horseshoe Falls.

Naming

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The Tower Hotel was originally called the Seagram Tower, named after the House of Seagram business in Montreal, Quebec. Over the years, due to multiple bankruptcies and ownership changes, tower names changed between Heritage Tower (1969), Royal Inn Tower (1971), Royal Centre Tower (1972), Panasonic Tower (1973), Minolta Tower (1984), and Konica Minolta Tower Centre (2003) with the merger of Konica and Minolta in 2003. The tower underwent renovations again in 2010, resulting in its colour reverting to the original white, the banner displaying Konica Minolta being replaced by the title Tower Hotel, and the removal of the exterior clocks.

Features

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Observation deck

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Located on the 25th floor, this deck features a panoramic view of the falls and Niagara River in addition to floor-to-ceiling windows treated with a non-glare finish designed to enhance photography. There are many historical photos and news articles about the construction of the tower mounted around the deck in addition to pay-per-use telescopes. The observation deck is now closed and only available for weddings.[citation needed]

Restaurants

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The restaurant has an International House of Pancakes location on the 26th floor, previously home to Marilyn's Bistro & Lounge, a restaurant themed after Marilyn Monroe in honour of the film, Niagara, in which she starred. The tower's original, award-winning gourmet Pinnacle Restaurant had been located there for many years.[citation needed]

Hotel

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In 2002, the tower re-opened after extensive renovations to include the four-star Ramada Plaza Fallsview. This franchise was lost and the hotel has operated without the Ramada flag since 2011 choosing to instead go by the new name The Tower Hotel.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "TOWER HOTEL". niagarafallstourism.com. Niagara Falls Tourism. Retrieved August 19, 2023.
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