The Carlton Hotel was a luxury hotel in Beirut, Lebanon.
The Carlton was built in 1955 on Avenue General de Gaulle, the southern part of the Corniche Beirut,[1] offering 140 rooms with uninterrupted view to the Mediterranean, but it was demolished in 2008, causing a lot of criticism and triggering a renewed consciousness about the need to preserve modern heritage.[2]
The Carlton Hotel was designed by Karol Schayer, a Polish architect who came to Beirut during the Second World War[3] and Lebanese architects Makdisi, Shayer, and Adib.[4] It quickly attracted a cosmopolitan clientele, and its swimming pool and gardens overlooking the Corniche compensated from its distance from the shoreline.[5]
The hotel was not only a popular tourist resort and one of the symbols of the hedonistic pre-war years, but it was also a popular destination for the LGBTQ community in Beirut.[6]
During the Lebanese Civil War, Riad Taha, who was the president of the Syndicate of Publishers Union and at the time, trying to forge an anti-PLO front in Beirut, was murdered by the PLO outside the hotel.[7]