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Lord Balfour Hotel, 350 Ocean Drive, Miami Beach, Florida, USA / Built: 1940 / Architects: Anton Skislewicz, Malcolm Berg, Nacho Garcia de Vinuesa / Floors: 3 / Facade Material: Stucco / Frame Material: Masonry / Architectural Style: Art Deco by Urban Florida Photographer

© Urban Florida Photographer, all rights reserved.

Lord Balfour Hotel, 350 Ocean Drive, Miami Beach, Florida, USA / Built: 1940 / Architects: Anton Skislewicz, Malcolm Berg, Nacho Garcia de Vinuesa / Floors: 3 / Facade Material: Stucco / Frame Material: Masonry / Architectural Style: Art Deco

Article written by Ramon Fernandez

The Lord Balfour Hotel was designed in 1940 by the architect Anton Skislewicz and is a fine example of a Miami Art Deco building.

Born in Dubrovnik in 1895, Skislewicz graduated in Architecture from Columbia University in 1929. In 1934, during the Great Depression, he moved to Miami to take advantage of the opportunities offered by the new tourism industry emerging in Miami Beach, which was generating a great demand for new buildings and facilities.

He designed the Hotel Lord Balfour in a U-shape, with a quiet terrace within, overlooked by the interior rooms not facing the street; something novel at a time when other architects were only concerned with the composition of facades.

All Skislewicz-designed hotels share a concern for functionality and an effort to ensure all rooms not facing the street were bright and offered pleasant views. Here, the courtyard becomes the heart of the hotel, and is given continuity with interior spaces through the magnificent terrazzo floor.

Skislewicz was passionate about the world of aeronautics and the motor industry, and this is evident in his designs. He worked with planes and lines and contrasts of full and empty spaces and lines in order to create his accelerated, machine-like designs, rejecting the decorative elements typical of other architects at the time. In the Lord Balfour we can appreciate this in all its glory.

The building is located at an important intersection, of Ocean Drive Avenue and 4th street. In order to emphasize the corner, Skislewicz marks the verticality by means of a façade composition that alternates full and empty spaces. Thus, long narrow windows are contrasted with solid walls. This trait is similar to other Skislewicz designs in Miami which stress the corner as a main element.

In other cases, the entrance was placed at the corner, but here he masterfully moved it to one of the sides, facing the interior courtyard, generating a beautiful play of visual transparency. He also elevated the entrance just thirty centimeters above street level (which is less than the standard for the local hotels), also adding more depth to it. Those thirty centimeters are enough to generate a more intimate space, without losing continuity with the street and a more human scale.

On the ground floor, an impressive, high ledge breaks the verticality of the corner, generating a powerful contrast. On the upper floors, less pronounced ledges are broken to give priority to vertical elements at the corners, with just a small ledge remaining, which in turn highlights the corner windows.

An extension is currently under construction, designed by the interior architect Nacho Garcia de Vinuesa. In line with the idea of an interior terrace, the extension is also U-shaped, facing the existing building and thus continuing the interior terrace in the extension, providing an excellent union between both buildings.

All hotels designed and built between 1930 and 1950 in Miami were named after holiday destinations, exotic places, the sea, or the beach. Even Lord Balfour was run for many years under the name “Wave Hotel”. So why is a hotel located in such a popular tourist destination named after someone like Lord Balfour?

Lord Balfour (Arthur James Balfour) was an important British politician who held a number of positions of responsibility throughout his life, serving as Prime Minister from 1902 to 1905, and greatly influencing 20th-century history.

Throughout his life, he maintained an interest in the study of certain topics that interested him, specifically science and philosophy. In Victorian society, there was an impassioned debate about the relationship between science and religion, which Lord Balfour was no stranger to, contributing several essays.

“Enthusiasm moves the world.” Arthur Balfour

Lord Balfour died in 1930, and the hotel was built in 1940. The reasons why this hotel was originally named after him are still unknown. Malcolm Berg, the architect responsible for the building’s renovation in 2011 and who explored its history in-depth said, “We know exactly who Lord Balfour was, however why the hotel was named after him remains a mystery to us”.

Credit for the data above is given to the following website:
room-matehotels.com/en/blog/lord-balfour-history-design/

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

Lord Balfour Hotel, 350 Ocean Drive, Miami Beach, Florida, USA / Built: 1940 / Architects: Anton Skislewicz, Malcolm Berg, Nacho Garcia de Vinuesa / Floors: 3 / Facade Material: Stucco / Frame Material: Masonry / Architectural Style: Art Deco by Urban Florida Photographer

© Urban Florida Photographer, all rights reserved.

Lord Balfour Hotel, 350 Ocean Drive, Miami Beach, Florida, USA / Built: 1940 / Architects: Anton Skislewicz, Malcolm Berg, Nacho Garcia de Vinuesa / Floors: 3 / Facade Material: Stucco / Frame Material: Masonry / Architectural Style: Art Deco

Article written by Ramon Fernandez

The Lord Balfour Hotel was designed in 1940 by the architect Anton Skislewicz and is a fine example of a Miami Art Deco building.

Born in Dubrovnik in 1895, Skislewicz graduated in Architecture from Columbia University in 1929. In 1934, during the Great Depression, he moved to Miami to take advantage of the opportunities offered by the new tourism industry emerging in Miami Beach, which was generating a great demand for new buildings and facilities.

He designed the Hotel Lord Balfour in a U-shape, with a quiet terrace within, overlooked by the interior rooms not facing the street; something novel at a time when other architects were only concerned with the composition of facades.

All Skislewicz-designed hotels share a concern for functionality and an effort to ensure all rooms not facing the street were bright and offered pleasant views. Here, the courtyard becomes the heart of the hotel, and is given continuity with interior spaces through the magnificent terrazzo floor.

Skislewicz was passionate about the world of aeronautics and the motor industry, and this is evident in his designs. He worked with planes and lines and contrasts of full and empty spaces and lines in order to create his accelerated, machine-like designs, rejecting the decorative elements typical of other architects at the time. In the Lord Balfour we can appreciate this in all its glory.

The building is located at an important intersection, of Ocean Drive Avenue and 4th street. In order to emphasize the corner, Skislewicz marks the verticality by means of a façade composition that alternates full and empty spaces. Thus, long narrow windows are contrasted with solid walls. This trait is similar to other Skislewicz designs in Miami which stress the corner as a main element.

In other cases, the entrance was placed at the corner, but here he masterfully moved it to one of the sides, facing the interior courtyard, generating a beautiful play of visual transparency. He also elevated the entrance just thirty centimeters above street level (which is less than the standard for the local hotels), also adding more depth to it. Those thirty centimeters are enough to generate a more intimate space, without losing continuity with the street and a more human scale.

On the ground floor, an impressive, high ledge breaks the verticality of the corner, generating a powerful contrast. On the upper floors, less pronounced ledges are broken to give priority to vertical elements at the corners, with just a small ledge remaining, which in turn highlights the corner windows.

An extension is currently under construction, designed by the interior architect Nacho Garcia de Vinuesa. In line with the idea of an interior terrace, the extension is also U-shaped, facing the existing building and thus continuing the interior terrace in the extension, providing an excellent union between both buildings.

All hotels designed and built between 1930 and 1950 in Miami were named after holiday destinations, exotic places, the sea, or the beach. Even Lord Balfour was run for many years under the name “Wave Hotel”. So why is a hotel located in such a popular tourist destination named after someone like Lord Balfour?

Lord Balfour (Arthur James Balfour) was an important British politician who held a number of positions of responsibility throughout his life, serving as Prime Minister from 1902 to 1905, and greatly influencing 20th-century history.

Throughout his life, he maintained an interest in the study of certain topics that interested him, specifically science and philosophy. In Victorian society, there was an impassioned debate about the relationship between science and religion, which Lord Balfour was no stranger to, contributing several essays.

“Enthusiasm moves the world.” Arthur Balfour

Lord Balfour died in 1930, and the hotel was built in 1940. The reasons why this hotel was originally named after him are still unknown. Malcolm Berg, the architect responsible for the building’s renovation in 2011 and who explored its history in-depth said, “We know exactly who Lord Balfour was, however why the hotel was named after him remains a mystery to us”.

Credit for the data above is given to the following website:
room-matehotels.com/en/blog/lord-balfour-history-design/

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

Wave Hotel, Broadbeach QLD by Point 'n Shoot

© Point 'n Shoot, all rights reserved.

Wave Hotel, Broadbeach QLD

Room Mate Lord Balfour, 350 Ocean Drive, Miami Beach, Florida, U.S.A. Completed: 1940 / Renovations Completed: 2016 / Style: Moderne Late Art Deco by Urban Florida Photographer

© Urban Florida Photographer, all rights reserved.

Room Mate Lord Balfour, 350 Ocean Drive, Miami Beach, Florida, U.S.A. Completed: 1940 / Renovations Completed: 2016 / Style: Moderne Late Art Deco

The 64-room Streamline Moderne boutique hotel, originally built in 1940 and named for the former British Prime Minister, opened its doors at the end of June after a two-yearlong, multi-million dollar overhaul.

Formerly The Wave Hotel from 1999 to 2010, Lord Balfour is back with design nods that tell a story, balancing the old (original terrazzo flooring, an ornate, hand-stenciled golden fresco elevator door with porthole window) with the new (a colorful tattoo motif, free WiFi in every room, and contemporary art installations).

Lord Balfour is the last descendant of a British aristocratic, very conservative and traditional family.

His rebellious and progressive spirit, his passion for the sea, the warm climate and his curiosity to get to know another way of life led him to leaving the British countryside in search of the American Dream, and setting up his home in South Beach.

Having spent all his life in the family castle, he felt fascinated by the interesting and energetic Latin influence present in Miami. His home is now a temple of rest, relaxation, and also, why not say so, fun. Lord Balfour is faithful to his habits, for example 5 o´clock tea, and enjoying Gin Tonics while watching the sun sink into the horizon.

His favorite time of the day is dawn, when he goes jogging on Ocean Drive beach, one of the liveliest in the world and which is located only a few steps from his home.

Facts courtesy of: lordbalfour.room-matehotels.com/en/hotel-center-miami-beach

www.miami.com/miami-hotel-spotlight-south-beach039s-lord-...

err 2 by feeblefolk

© feeblefolk, all rights reserved.

err 2

As for my people, children are their oppressors, and women rule over them. O my people, they which lead thee cause thee to err, and destroy the way of thy paths.

Isaiah 3:12 King James Version

role.bandcamp.com/album/err-2

Wave Hotel (Barcelona) by agustiam

© agustiam, all rights reserved.

Wave Hotel (Barcelona)

Wave Hotel - Arch. Ricard Bofill (Barcelona) by agustiam

© agustiam, all rights reserved.

Wave Hotel - Arch. Ricard Bofill (Barcelona)

Wave Hotel by warmheartcold

© warmheartcold, all rights reserved.

Wave Hotel

Pattaya, Thailand 2014

Butlins Wave Hotel Collage by ChezMummy

© ChezMummy, all rights reserved.

Butlins Wave Hotel Collage

A collection of photographs of our room (a standard Dolphin room) and the hotel at the Wave Hotel at Butlin's Bognor Regis

www.chezmummy.com/2013/05/butlins-bognor-regis-review/

Butlin's Bognor Regis by ChezMummy

© ChezMummy, all rights reserved.

Butlin's Bognor Regis

Bunk-beds in a standard Dolphin room in the Wave Hotel

Butlin's Bognor Regis by ChezMummy

© ChezMummy, all rights reserved.

Butlin's Bognor Regis

Out on the balcony of a standard Dolphin room in the Wave Hotel

www.chezmummy.com/2013/05/butlins-bognor-regis-review/

Butlin's Bognor Regis by ChezMummy

© ChezMummy, all rights reserved.

Butlin's Bognor Regis

The fabulous wall art in the bathroom of a standard Dolphin room in the Wave Hotel

www.chezmummy.com/2013/05/butlins-bognor-regis-review/

Butlin's Bognor Regis by ChezMummy

© ChezMummy, all rights reserved.

Butlin's Bognor Regis

Giving the games a go in the Game Zone at the Wave Hotel

Butlin's Bognor Regis by ChezMummy

© ChezMummy, all rights reserved.

Butlin's Bognor Regis

A standard Dolphin room at the Wave Hotel

Butlin's Bognor Regis by ChezMummy

© ChezMummy, all rights reserved.

Butlin's Bognor Regis

The Wave Hotel foyer

Butlin's Bognor Regis by ChezMummy

© ChezMummy, all rights reserved.

Butlin's Bognor Regis

Wall art in the Wave Hotel

Stairs by Bill M

© Bill M, all rights reserved.

Stairs

Wave Hotel, Butlins

Blue Water by Bill M

© Bill M, all rights reserved.

Blue Water

Wave Hotel, Butlins

In the Cabin by Bill M

© Bill M, all rights reserved.

In the Cabin

Wave Hotel, Butlins

The Wave Hotel Ocean Drive South Beach Miami 2010 by RyanReporting

© RyanReporting, all rights reserved.

The Wave Hotel Ocean Drive South Beach Miami 2010

On Thanksgiving eve November 24th 2010 Ryan Janek Wolowski documented the famous Art Deco Hotels of South Beach Miami and window fronts on Ocean Drive in Miami Beach Florida from S Pointe Dr to 15th St. A unique look at a moment of time captured of Ocean Drive.

www.miamibeachfl.gov

Photo
Miami Beach Florida USA
11-24-2010