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Skirvin Hilton Hotel
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Skirvin Hilton Hotel
Hotel facts and statistics
Location 1 Park Avenue
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73102
United States
Opening date 1911 (Skirvin Hotel)
2007 (renovation and reopening)
Closing date 1988 for renovation and improvement
Architect Solomon Layton
Hicks & Forsyth
Kahler Slater
Management Marcus Hotels & Resorts, Inc.
Owner Skirvin Partners, LLC
No. of restaurants 1
No. of rooms 225
of which suites 21
Parking Valet
Skirvin Hotel
Skirvin Hilton Hotel is located in Oklahoma
Skirvin Hilton Hotel
Location in Oklahoma
Skirvin Hilton Hotel is located in the United States
Skirvin Hilton Hotel
Location in the United States
Location 1 Park Avenue, Oklahoma City, OK 73102
Area 1 acre (0.4 ha)
Built 1911
NRHP reference No. 79002010
Added to NRHP October 10, 1979
No. of floors 13

The Skirvin Hotel is a 225-room hotel located in downtown Oklahoma City and the city's oldest hotel. Comprising three towers of 14 floors in an Art Deco architectural style, it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The property is managed by Marcus Hotels & Resorts under the Hilton brand, and is a member of Historic Hotels of America, the official program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

History

First opened in 1911, the Skirvin Hotel contained 225 rooms in a ten-story two-winged tower. A third 12-story wing was added in 1925, and then in 1929–30 all three wings were leveled off to 14 floors with a total of 525 rooms. The hotel is named for its founder, William Balser "Bill" Skirvin, whose daughter, Perle Mesta, became the ambassador to Luxembourg under Harry Truman. The hotel closed in 1988 and sat abandoned for most of the next 19 years, until it was renovated and re-opened as part of the Hilton chain of hotels in 2007. The renovation project restored the original exterior finish, installed historically accurate windows, reconfigured guest rooms and added new guest elevators. The process to return the hotel to life started nearly a decade earlier, however, when, in 1999, Oklahoma City Mayor Kirk Humphreys appointed a Skirvin Solutions Committee to evaluate whether or not the historic building could be saved. The committee started its work by touring other restored historic hotels, looking at how those projects were paid for, and then recommended in October 2000 that the City of Oklahoma City explore creating a public-private partnership to get the Skirvin re-opened. In May 2002, Oklahoma City acquired the building from its current owners for $2.875 million and issued a request for proposals from potential developers late that same year. Partners in Development, a firm put together by principal John Weeman, made a proposal to renovate the building for $42.1 million and to re-open it as a full-service Hilton operated by Marcus Hotels and Resorts. The Oklahoma City Urban Renewal Authority selected Partners in Development as the developer in January 2004. Weeman bought the building from Oklahoma City in 2005, and, using money he invested plus funds from various other public sources including tax increment financing, grants, Empowerment Zone credits, historic tax credits and New Markets tax credits, completed its renovation for about $51 million.

Haunting

Rumors of a haunting in the hotel persist, and have been cited by National Basketball Association (NBA) teams. The most notable examples occurred in 2010, when the New York Knicks famously blamed their loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder on the haunting and when the Chicago Bulls reported doors slamming shut on their own and strange sounds outside their rooms. The story received national attention again in June 2012, when the Miami Heat were staying in the hotel for the NBA Finals. More recently, the Baylor Lady Bears, who were the defending National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I women's basketball champions, were put up at the Skirvin. In one of the biggest upsets in tournament history, the Lady Bears unexpectedly lost 82–81 to Louisville in the regional semifinals of the 2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament. In January 2019, Brooklyn Nets star Kyrie Irving announced that he was producing a feature film about the purported paranormal activity at the hotel.

Over the years, hotel staff say they have seen objects moving by themselves and have heard strange noises at night.

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Skirvin Hilton Hotel para niños

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