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It was time for an update on Vancouver, and the best place to start was its iconic hotel, Fairmont Hotel Vancouver. What a trophy it must have been when the four-floor building, with 60 bedrooms, was finished in 1887 (that building was replaced in 1912, and it, in turn, was to be demolished to give way to today’s towering 17-floor ‘castle in the city’, officially opened by King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in 1939).

Yes, this is a place with history, and fortunately a sense of legacy remains. I felt the wood doors of the elevators, for instance, could have been used by Their Majesties. The best of today’s 556 bedrooms are those on the 14th, Royal, floor, or anything that has access to the ninth-floor Fairmont Gold club lounge. I was in 1405, a pale grey and mushroom space with lovely full-length drapes that blended various shades of shiny mole: I liked the simple chandelier, with six straight-sided white shades, and the fibre-optic lights cleverly set into the head of the remarkably comfy bed. I had sockets and USB ports at, it seemed, every turn. Pride of the whole, however, was the bathroom. Magnificently and flatteringly lit, it was all grey-flecked marble. The glass-walled shower area had showers, and space, for at least two sumo wrestlers. And oh, for simplicity, the Nespresso machine was easy to use, and generously had two each of four different capsules, and Fairmont Store’s own teas offered Imperial Breakfast and Oregon Mint organic tisane.

After an excellent breakfast, with, for a change, smoked salmon and hard-boiled eggs, I wanted to see the hotel’s main floor art exhibit. As part of Fairmont Hotel Vancouver’s 80th birthday, local photographer Dennis Grocer of The Collective You was asked to shoot some of the hotel’s team. As well as black-and-whites of both canine ambassadors, labradors Ella and Elly, there are also such subjects as Darren, a 29-year veteran now in the Fairmont Gold team. His caption says “the feeling of support, fun and love from colleagues and guests make my job an absolute joy to come to every day”.

Vancouver is a growing cultural hub. This very night I could listen to Vancouver Symphony Orchestra doing Carmen, with Canadian-Tunisian star Rihab Chaieb. Dana Michel is the star at The Dance Centre, there is a naughty but nice sex show at the Convention Centre, and, at Rogers Arena, Vancouver Canucks Hockey plays the Calgary Flames. During the day, there is also great shopping, and outdoor sightseeing (I love cycling round Stanley Park, and on this visit we had brunch at The Teahouse in Stanley Park, right at Ferguson Point – their ling-cod fish and chips have a light-crisp batter that is superb).

For dinner, there is nothing more stylish than Hawksworth at Rosewood Hotel Georgia. Before going into the restaurant, however, I had to re-visit favourite art pieces in the hotel’s lobby. Behind the concierge is a Nickalas Blades oil of a lifesize bicycle, the actual yellow Cinelli that Greg LeMond rode in the 1976-1977 season. Beyond are some unique 3D perspectives by Patrick Hughes. Then it was time for Hawksworth.

When Rosewood Hotel Georgia re-opened in 2011 after a massive conversion from its prior Crowne Plaza life, the hotel began a partnership with local celebrity restaurateur David Hawksworth. He leases the hotel’s entire ground floor facing West Georgia Street, with a dedicated street-set entrance. Designer Alessandro Munge, Munge & Leung, created four separate adjoining spaces, one a clubby bar and the others dining areas: all have significant wall art, with a Damien Hirst in the bar and, in one diming room, a 1.5-metre-tall Harland Miller sign, ‘too cool to die’. Staff are all Hawksworth (the hotel oversees lobby, poolside and in-room dining, and catering).



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