The hotel was built by Niagara Falls businessman Frank A. Dudley and operated by the United Hotels Company.[2] The 12 story, steel frame and concrete hotel was designed by prominent Buffalo architects Esenwein and Johnson and was built in 1924 (cornerstone laid on March 24, 1924). The hotel was dedicated on April 8, 1925 and opened for business the following day. It is located 1/4 mile from the Horseshoe Falls, it is one block from the Seneca Niagara Casino. It has nearly 200 guest rooms as well as convention facilities. It has been known by various names including The Hotel Niagara; John's Niagara Hotel; Park's Inn; International; Days Inn-Falls View; and Travelodge Niagara Falls.[3]
The hotel's primary public rooms include the lobby, ballroom and main dining room and as of March 2016, have survived largely intact. They feature elaborate ceiling plaster moldings and columns, gilded capitals, faux limestone walls, oak and emerald terrazzo floors.[4]
2007 closure and subsequent restoration plans
The property closed for renovations in 2007, which never took place. In 2010, the property was foreclosed by the State Bank of Texas, which expressed no interest in ownership, after the owners, Amidee Hotels & Resorts, abandoned the property and allowed it to fall into foreclosure after their parent company, Amidee Capital Group, LLC, filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy. The building was condemned by the Niagara Falls Department of Code Enforcement after the heating system failed, which caused water pipes in the building to burst. The city shut off the water when that happened, leaving the building without running water or a functional fire sprinkler system, which constitutes several code violations.
In April 2011, the property was sold at a foreclosure auction for $1,250,000 to Jamil Kara, a developer from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. He told the Niagara Gazette, a Niagara Falls newspaper, that he planned to convert the building into a five-star hotel and condominium.[5]
In September 2011, Toronto developer Harry Stinson bought the building from Kara for an undisclosed amount, intending to restore it. His company, Stinson Developments,[6] estimated they would finish renovations by summer 2013.[7] However the work was never completed.
Stinson sold the building in 2015 to Reception Hotels & Resorts, for $4.4 million.[8] Reception similarly announced plans to renovate the structure.[9] they later announced that it would become a Radisson Hotel on the completion of a $21.5 million makeover.[8]
The purchase price was described as "up to $4.4 million," with funding for the acquisition, inspections, insurance and property holding services, up to $5 million, will be provided through Gov.Andrew Cuomo's state-financed "Buffalo Billion" development initiative.[10]
It was announced in December 2019 that the hotel would be restored by Syracuse developer Ed Riley, who previously restored the historic Hotel Syracuse as the Marriott Syracuse Downtown.[11] The restoration was to cost $42 million, and was set to receive $10.6 million in state and federal historic preservation tax credits. The hotel was to reopen in 2021 as part of the Tribute Portfolio division of Marriott Hotels & Resorts. It was to have 160 rooms, three restaurants, banquet facilities, and a rooftop lounge.[12] The restoration was stalled by the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the NCIDA withdrew its tax incentive package in 2021, when the owners found themselves unable to secure loans for the restoration.[13]
In June 2024, Riley's Brine Wells Development LLC resubmitted its plans to restore the structure, at a cost of $50 million.[14]