How to Book Large Event Venues with EDGE Venues
Planning a large-scale event comes with its challenges, and finding the perfect venue is often one of the most crucial aspects. Whether you’re organising a...
Like its buildings, the hotel itself will be a mix of old and new.
Along with the original clubhouse, a Mediterranean Revival building designed by Russell T. Pancoast, the property now features three new buildings designed by Richard Meier, whose choice of “discrete classical modernism” gives them the effect of “simultaneously reflecting and disappearing into the changing sky, the beach, and the sea,” the company said in a release.
Like its buildings, the hotel itself will be a mix of old and new.
Along with the original clubhouse, a Mediterranean Revival building designed by Russell T. Pancoast, the property now features three new buildings designed by Richard Meier, whose choice of “discrete classical modernism” gives them the effect of “simultaneously reflecting and disappearing into the changing sky, the beach, and the sea,” the company said in a release.
Like its buildings, the hotel itself will be a mix of old and new.
The Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club is in Surfside, FL, just north of Miami Beach. Opened in 1930,The Surf Club was a private social club that attracted some of the leading lights of stage and screen, including Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Tennessee Williams, and Joan Crawford. The new hotel offers 77 guest rooms; a selection of hotel residences; an onsite restaurant and champagne bar; a private beach; a spa; and three pools, including a future “cabana pool” that will have 40 air-conditioned, fully-furnished cabanas with full bathrooms.
Along with the original clubhouse, a Mediterranean Revival building designed by Russell T. Pancoast, the property now features three new buildings designed by Richard Meier, whose choice of “discrete classical modernism” gives them the effect of “simultaneously reflecting and disappearing into the changing sky, the beach, and the sea,” the company said in a release.
Like its buildings, the hotel itself will be a mix of old and new.
Florida’s fourth Four Seasons hotel has opened on the site of an historic Miami social club that catered to A-list celebrities and socialites.
The Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club is in Surfside, FL, just north of Miami Beach. Opened in 1930,The Surf Club was a private social club that attracted some of the leading lights of stage and screen, including Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Tennessee Williams, and Joan Crawford. The new hotel offers 77 guest rooms; a selection of hotel residences; an onsite restaurant and champagne bar; a private beach; a spa; and three pools, including a future “cabana pool” that will have 40 air-conditioned, fully-furnished cabanas with full bathrooms.
Along with the original clubhouse, a Mediterranean Revival building designed by Russell T. Pancoast, the property now features three new buildings designed by Richard Meier, whose choice of “discrete classical modernism” gives them the effect of “simultaneously reflecting and disappearing into the changing sky, the beach, and the sea,” the company said in a release.
Like its buildings, the hotel itself will be a mix of old and new.
Florida’s fourth Four Seasons hotel has opened on the site of an historic Miami social club that catered to A-list celebrities and socialites.
The Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club is in Surfside, FL, just north of Miami Beach. Opened in 1930,The Surf Club was a private social club that attracted some of the leading lights of stage and screen, including Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Tennessee Williams, and Joan Crawford. The new hotel offers 77 guest rooms; a selection of hotel residences; an onsite restaurant and champagne bar; a private beach; a spa; and three pools, including a future “cabana pool” that will have 40 air-conditioned, fully-furnished cabanas with full bathrooms.
Along with the original clubhouse, a Mediterranean Revival building designed by Russell T. Pancoast, the property now features three new buildings designed by Richard Meier, whose choice of “discrete classical modernism” gives them the effect of “simultaneously reflecting and disappearing into the changing sky, the beach, and the sea,” the company said in a release.
Like its buildings, the hotel itself will be a mix of old and new.