Tourism took off in the 1850s, and by the end of the 19th century, in 1881, two Swiss pioneers from Montreux :fr:Alexandre Emery |Alexandre Emery and Ami Chessex bought the Hotel du Cygne. In 1895 they founded the company Le Montreux Palace & Cygne. Swiss architect Eugène Jost built the Palace in a record time of 18 months and the hotel opened on March 19, 1906. The new hotel connected to the original Hotel du Cygne comprises a Salon de Musique, a Grand Hall and richly decorated ballrooms. The new Palace offering heating, electricity and private bathrooms with hot and cold running water was considered a modern hotel; Distinguished guests from all over the world: European aristocrats, Russian princes, New-York bankers, and maharajahs came to the Palace. Entertainment was offered in the afternoon and evening in the theater, ballrooms and music salon. A sports hall was built in 1911 to entertain guests during the day: The Pavillon, housed a tea room, a skating rink and a shooting range, tennis tournaments took place on the lawn. World War I: the hotel was used as a hospital to shelter wounded French and British Allied soldiers. After the war, in the 1920s, Montreux regained its former glory with the return of therich and famous. In 1928, the Montreux Palace took part in the foundation of The Luxury Hotels of Europe and Egypt association. On 20 July 1936, the important Montreux Convention Regarding the Regime of the Straits treaty, was signed at the Montreux Palace in the Salle des Fêtes. Five hundred diplomats invited by the Turkish Republic arrived at the Palace on 23 June 1936. The pact signed on 20 July at 10pm is recalled by a plaque in one of the salons. World War II: tourism receded and the hotel was used as a hospital again. Since then, the palace has been listed as a cultural property of national importance in Switzerland so as to be preserved.
Guests
Since its opening, the hotel has welcomed celebrities; Exiled Richard Strauss composed his Four Last Songs at the Palace, Vladimir Nabokov lived in the hotel for the last seventeen years of his life, and since the first season of the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1966, many renowned musicians have been staying at the Montreux Palace. Freddie Mercury spends his last moments there. The hotel' Belle époque decor, was selected for some film sequences by Peter Ustinov, The BBC or Luc Besson productions. The hotel continues to be the venue for conferences, in May 2019, the Fairmont Le Montreux Palace hosted the Bilderberg Meeting.
The hotel
Modernized and redecorated over the years, the hotel, with views over the lake and the Alps, offers:
236 rooms and suites,
15 meeting rooms and ballrooms,
2000 m2 Spa with indoor pool, outdoor pool, treatment rooms, hammam, sauna, jacuzzi, beauty salon, fitness,
Shops, laundry service, valet, hairdresser.
The hotel offers 6 venues – plus 24-hour in-room dining:
La Palmeraie where breakfast is served every day as well as the Sunday brunch,