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Progress in Human Geography, Vol. 32, No. 3, 383-398 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0309132508089096

The hotel and the city

Donald McNeill

Urban Research Centre, University of Western Sydney, 34 Charles Street, Parramatta, New South Wales 2150, Australia, d.mcneill{at}uws.edu.au

This paper examines the relationship between cities and hotels, arguing that this urban space sheds light on many of the traits of twentieth-century urbanism. First, it sketches the relationship of hotels to urban space, either as landmarks within cities, as statements of civic selfconfidence in booming central business districts, or as components of urban renewal strategies. Second, it is suggested that the design of hotel space is expressive of consumption choices, whether in terms of a standardized, hard-wearing functionality or an expression of uniqueness, reflecting contemporary trends in consumer marketing, distinction and branding. Third, these spaces are crucial to the notion of the `circulatory' city. They are representative of a form of dwelling, of a temporary domestic, for various types of traveller, as well as serving as a business space. Fourth, they are reflective of the complex social geographies of city life, and provide a microcosm of the occupational hierarchies of hospitality services.

Key Words: consumption • design • hotels • mobilities • service industries • urban space.


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