Fox Glacier Hotel
Fox Glacier Hotel is a hotel in Fox Glacier, on the West Coast of New Zealand's South Island. Completed in 1928 for the Sullivan brothers, the building was granted historic place category 2 status by Heritage New Zealand in 1989.
Context
In the 1920s, a concerted effort was made to promote the West Coast, and the glacier region in particular, as a tourist destination. At Fox Glacier village, then known as Weheka, the Sullivan family had used their farm homestead as tourist accommodation, but increased demand saw the Sullivan brothers, Mick and John, decide to construct a purpose-built hotel, and they established a sawmill to mill local rimu for the project.Architecture
The hotel was built in 1928, at a cost of approximately £20,000, and was officially opened on 20 December 1928. Although a two-storey building, the hotel was described as have a bungalow style, owing to the generous upper-floor verandahs. The hotel was built with 40 bedrooms, designed to accommodate up to 100 guests, as well as four parlours and a large dining room for up to 70 diners. The building measured by, with a height of, and was constructed of heart rimu timber framing and weatherboards on a concrete foundation, with a corrugated steel roof. A large portico at the main entrance provided shelter for arriving and departing guests. Upholstery for the hotel was completed by Caliari and O'Connell of Hokitika, while the tiling, mantling and furnishing were completed by James Duncan Jr, assisted locally by Robert Emmett Clarke.Electricity for the hotel was supplied from a small hydro-electric plant built by the Sullivans away. Outbuildings included a separate staff accommodation wing with eight bedrooms, a billiard room, and a garage measuring by.