The Purple Hotel

The Purple HotelFor as long as I can remember, I have had a strong affinity for the color purple. Over the years, I have owned everything from purple Chuck Taylors to a purple Honda Elite Scooter. I suppose it is only natural for me to be fascinated by a hotel called the “ Purple Hotel” and located less than a mile from my home. 

It was originally built as the Lincolnwood Hyatt House in 1960. It stood at the corner of Lincoln and Touhy in Lincolnwood, Illinois, a small suburb bordering Chicago on the north. Over the years, it has also been a Ramada and a Radisson, although it has always been known as the “purple hotel,” because of its unique purple brick facade. It officially became The Purple Hotel in 2004.

 

Ironically, the purple bricks were a mistake. Hyatt ordered blue bricks, but purple bricks arrived instead. Not wanting to delay construction, Hyatt simply used the purple bricks. Thus a local legend was born. 

Through the ‘70s, the purple hotel was a hot spot, hosting such entertainers as Perry Como and Barry Manilow. In 1983, reputed mobster Allen Dorfman was killed in the parking lot. Michael Jordan stayed there during his first training camp with the Chicago Bulls in 1984. Finally, unfortunately, it was slated for destruction in late 2007, although legal entanglements have delayed the wrecking ball.

 

While I worked at the local newspaper, we held many of our functions in the purple hotel’s Grand Ballroom. One year, (currently GT’s own) Louie Atsaves won our holiday party limbo contest there. (I came in 15th place, barely edging out our 73-year-old dispatch driver). Our softball teams mourned many losses in the sports bar (aptly named “The Pressbox”).

As more modern, more luxurious hotels were built in the Chicago area, the Purple Hotel started to become a bit of a dinosaur. However, its charm and familiar purple façade endeared it to all, long after its heyday.

Once all of the legal wrinkles get ironed out, the very desirable location will probably become home to a retail-residential combo of some sort. It’s too bad. I always hate to see unique-looking buildings destroyed. Also, I think there is room for a quality hotel outside of the downtown or airport areas.

One last reason for my angst is obvious: Purple is very seldom used in architecture. Where else am I going to find a purple building, especially so close to home?

–John Wroblewski, Distribution Specialist

10 Responses to “The Purple Hotel”

  1. Mark Says:

    The purple hotel is a dinosaur. So it is a purple dinosaur? Does that mean it is like Barney?
    How did you miss that joke?

  2. Carmen Says:

    It is sad too see the Purple Hotel deserted like it is.

  3. Billy Says:

    I haven’t been there in years. I had no idea it went downhill like that. That’s a shame. It was so unique looking. It seems good management and a clever marketing team could have done more with it.

  4. NJ Says:

    From the look of the picture, the place does look dated. It is hard to tell if it looks cool retro or just bad old. Still, as a purple building, it is indeed unique.

  5. Mickey Says:

    When places look like that, their only hope is that it remains quaint. Once ownership or management starts to ignore it, their really is no hope.

  6. Triciel Says:

    There’s a hotel group based in the Bay Area called “joie de vivre”. This property might just be up their alley…

  7. Sky Torvis Says:

    Everybody knows the Purple Hotel even if they’ve long forgotten the actual name. It will be a sad day when that corner is no longer purple.

  8. parkers Says:

    Hey, 4 Cokes, I think this is your calling to renovate a building …. how can you let a “purple” hotel disappear? Start calling all your contacts ….

  9. JayHawk Says:

    It will be weird to drive by the corner of Touhy and Lincoln and not see the Purple Hotel in all of its eye-numbing glory. parkers right, Johngy get the ball rolling, the building calls to you!

  10. Vicemage Says:

    It’s always sad to see a unique building go, but with the condition of the hotel when I stayed there three months before it was shuttered, I don’t know that anyone could save it. I personally wish I could have known it when it was in good shape, because my only impression of the place is dreadful.

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