The Westin Excelsior Rome


The Westin Excelsior, Rome, is a luxury hotel on the Via Veneto in Rome, Italy. It opened in 1906.

History

The Hotel Excelsior opened on January 18, 1906. It was constructed by the Actiengesellschaft für Hotelunternehmungen, based in Lucerne, Switzerland. They sold the hotel in 1920 to CIGA, the Compagnia Italiana Grandi Alberghi, or Italian Grand Hotels Company, an Italian luxury chain. In 1944, the hotel became the temporary headquarters of General Mark Clark after the US Army entered Rome.
The Aga Khan IV bought CIGA in 1985, then sold it to Sheraton Hotels in 1994, which placed the Excelsior in its Luxury Collection. In 1998 Sheraton was sold to Starwood Hotels, and the Excelsior was transferred to its Westin Hotels division and renamed The Westin Excelsior, Rome. The hotel was fully renovated in 2000. Starwood sold the hotel to Qatar-based Katara Hospitality in 2015 for €222 Million.

In popular culture

The hotel hosted the cast and crew of Ben-Hur in 1959. La Dolce Vita was filmed around the hotel in 1960 and Two Weeks in Another Town was filmed in the hotel in 1962. Portions of the 1983 miniseries The Winds of War were filmed in the hotel, as was a scene in the 2009 period musical Nine. In the 1973 film The Exorcist, Chris MacNeil can be heard asking to be connected to the Hotel Excelsior in Rome when she is trying to reach Regan's father.
On March 3, 1994, singer Kurt Cobain overdosed in one of the hotel suites.
The hotel is marked by its distinctive cupola, and for the two-story "Villa la Cupola" suite located on the fifth and sixth stories beneath it. This suite is noted as one of the most expensive hotel rooms in the world, and includes hand-painted frescoes, up to seven bedrooms, and a private cinema.