The Orleans Hotel is a building listed as a California Historical Landmark.[1] Formerly a prominent hotel in Sacramento, California, it now serves as upscale apartments in Old Sacramento.
Orleans Hotel | |
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![]() 1857 sketch of Orleans Hotel with its neighboring buildings | |
Location | 1018 2nd Street, Sacramento, California (Old Sacramento) |
Coordinates | 38°34′57″N 121°30′17″W / 38.58256°N 121.50463°W |
Built | 1852 |
Reference no. | 608[1] |
History
The original Orleans Hotel was built by materials from New Orleans shipped around Cape Horn by its owner Maria Hastings.[2] There were 40 rooms and a saloon downstairs that served as a frequent stop for stagecoaches that were on their way to the mines during the California Gold Rush.[2] Mark Twain had even resided in the hotel in 1866 during his employment at the Sacramento Union.[3] The building burned down in 1852 along with many other Sacramento buildings in a large fire. It was rebuilt by the next year, this time in brick, only to meet the same fate in another fire in 1923.[2]
Several attempts were made to build on the site of the former Orleans Hotel since 1975,[4][5] but none succeeded until a business owner financed a new mixed-use building in 2007, with construction finished in 2008.[6]
Today the new Orleans Hotel replica is a four-story building with an exterior that matches the Gold Rush-era original. There are 24 rental lofts on the upper floors and was built with plans for a restaurant and other retail opportunities on the bottom floor.[7]
See also
References
External links
- Orleans Residential Site
- City of Sacramento - Orleans Hotel Project and Disposition and Development Agreement - Includes a very extensive history of Orleans Hotel