circa 1960 The Diplomat Motor Hotel. Collage of photographs from the Richard Crowther Architectural Records (WH1504) and the Rocky Mountain News Photo Collection.
The Diplomat Motor Hotel. Collage of photographs from the Richard Crowther Architectural Records (WH1504) and the Rocky Mountain News Photo Collection.
The Diplomat is a blend of three symbols of 1960 U.S.A.: the automobile, the fine hotel, and the top-flight restaurant and lounge. — Denver Post, May 15, 1960
Denver was abuzz on May 16, 1960, when a new concept hotel opened at 1840 Sherman Street.
The Diplomat Motor Hotel (today the site of a parking lot) marketed itself as being “dramatically distinctive.” The three-story, $1.5 million hotel was built in Capitol Hill at a site that had once been occupied by “several century-old tenements.”
1959 Exterior of the Diplomat Motor Hotel, Richard Crowther Architectural Records (WH1504), PhotoBox 3
Exterior of the Diplomat Motor Hotel, Richard Crowther Architectural Records (WH1504), PhotoBox 3
Nestled in what was then “a quiet neighborhood without a traffic problem,” the Diplomat boasted that guests would only need to take a short walk to “major convention hotels and department stores downtown.” Tranquility and proximity!
But if one did prefer to drive, the Diplomat was exceptionally accommodating. Guests could pull their vehicles up to the “auto lobby” and hand their keys to a valet. Cars were taken to a 200-car underground parking garage tucked beneath the hotel.
View of courtyard, the Diplomat Motor Hotel. Richard Crowther Architectural Records (WH1504), PhotoBox 3
View of courtyard, the Diplomat Motor Hotel. Richard Crowther Architectural Records (WH1504), PhotoBox 3
The Diplomat was designed by renowned Denver architect, Richard L. Crowther, who described the hotel’s look as “luxurious informality.” The structure was essentially a U-shape design with a central patio court featuring a concrete and white marble “hanging” swimming pool.
circa 1960 Interior view, the Diplomat Motor Hotel. Rocky Mountain News Photo Collection, Box 360
Interior view, the Diplomat Motor Hotel. Rocky Mountain News Photo Collection, Box 360
Inside, the lobby, dining and cocktail areas mingled in an open-concept floor plan which mimicked “early European diplomatic corps headquarters.” The Los Angeles interior design firm Albert Parvin Co. (which also decorated the Flamingo, Tropicana and Sands hotels in Las Vegas, Nevada) oversaw the Diplomat’s interior design. Decor elements included rosewood paneling; putty-colored textured vinyl walls; white quartz terrazzo flooring; and custom brown, gold and apricot carpeting. Coats of arms and metal wall insignia in gold tint decorated the walls.
circa 1960 Dining room, the Diplomat Motor Hotel. Rocky Mountain News Photo Collection, Box 360
Dining room, the Diplomat Motor Hotel. Rocky Mountain News Photo Collection, Box 360
The “dramatically distinctive” feel the Diplomat marketed to guests was brought to life in the hotel’s dining room, which featured the cuisine of Chef Everett Sisson (who held the distinction of cooking for President Eisenhower while he vacationed in Palm Springs in 1959) and the service of Greek maitre ‘d Chris Leventis. Menus took the form of parchment scrolls, and guests were treated to such dishes as “flaming ring” steak, “a large beef tenderloin for two persons marinated in a special wine sauce, then charcoal broiled and served on a wood plank that has a ‘flaming ring’ mechanism around its edges.”
Although the Diplomat is no longer with us, its story lives on in photographs and articles found in the Western History and Genealogy Department.
Love Denver’s mid-century past? Check out DPL’s Western History and Genealogy Department for more.
circa 1960 A pool party at the Diplomat Motor Hotel. Rocky Mountain News Photo Collection, Box 360
A pool party at the Diplomat Motor Hotel. Rocky Mountain News Photo Collection, Box 360
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