Ten Square
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Ten Square is a four-star hotel in
Donegall Square Donegall Square is a square in the centre of Belfast, County Antrim, Northern Ireland. In the centre is Belfast City Hall, the headquarters of Belfast City Council. Each side of the square is named according to its geographical location, i.e. Do ...
South,
Belfast Belfast ( , ; from ga, Béal Feirste , meaning 'mouth of the sand-bank ford') is the capital and largest city of Northern Ireland, standing on the banks of the River Lagan on the east coast. It is the 12th-largest city in the United Kingdom ...
, Northern Ireland, and is located a few metres away from the City Hall.


Architectural significance

The hotel building itself occupies a notable Grade B1 listed building, once called Yorkshire House. It is the oldest extant commercial building in Donegall Square, built originally in 1862–63 as a linen warehouse for the Jaffe brothers. Its age makes it the same vintage as the Ulster Hall in nearby Bedford Street. The floral pedimented windows to the upper floors and the eccentric range of famous heads between the ground floor windows. There are 16 faces in total with North elevation - from left, Michelangelo, Columbus, Washington, Mercury, Minerva, Shakespeare, Schiller and Homer; and East elevation - from left, Newton, Humboldt, Jacquard, Peace, Flora, Stevenson, Moore and Watt. Sir Otto Moses Jaffe was Belfast’s first and so far only Jewish Lord Mayor. Born in Hamburg on August 13, 1846, his father, Daniel Joseph Jaffe, was a merchant, who came to Belfast to set up a linen export business in 1850. The Jaffe linen memorial fountain is located on Victoria Street outside new Victoria Square. Jaffe erected the Jaffe Memorial fountain in 1874 to commemorate his father, who had funded the building of Belfast’s first synagogue at Great Victoria Street. As well as having a successful career in business, Jaffe was a prominent public figure, active in Belfast civic life. His public positions included membership of the Harbour Commission, the Senate of Queen’s College, which later became Queen's University and the board of Governors of the Royal Hospital. Elected to the town council in 1894, he was Lord Mayor in 1899 and 1904. He set up Jaffe Public Elementary School at the corner of both the Cliftonville and Antrim Roads in 1907. However, Jaffe’s philanthropy was poorly rewarded during the first world war when a group of Belfast ladies refused to support the Children’s Hospital if ‘the Germans’, Jaffe and his wife, remained on the board. Previous to the current building, it is said the ground was once a row of Georgian houses where the famous physician, poet, educationalist, and radical democrat Dr William Drennan lived in the early 1800s (whose sister had already founded the Maternity Hospital on the city square several years before, and which was the forerunner of the current Royal Maternity Hospital).


History

The hotel was officially opened in 2000. In 2008, the hotel was purchased by millionaire property developer John Miskelly (famous for his £250 million takeover attempt of
Liverpool Football Club Liverpool Football Club is a professional football club based in Liverpool, England. The club competes in the Premier League, the top tier of English football. Founded in 1892, the club joined the Football League the following year and has ...
) for an undisclosed sum from the
County Antrim County Antrim (named after the town of Antrim, ) is one of six counties of Northern Ireland and one of the thirty-two counties of Ireland. Adjoined to the north-east shore of Lough Neagh, the county covers an area of and has a population o ...
-based Hill family, owners of the Galgorm Manor Hotel. The hotel has also hosted several notable events such as The Miss Belfast final in 2010, film and cinema events and city council dinners and other local government functions.


Features

The hotel consists of 135 rooms across seven floors. These comprise boutique guest bedrooms across two floors in the landmark Grade B1 Listed Yorkshire House building, plus offering a further 48 ‘Signature rooms’ in the recent contemporary extension, completed in December 2016. It also has a selection of events and conferencing facilities, most notably the Linen Suite. The hotel venue is registered for civil partnership ceremonies and markets itself as "the most LGBT friendly of all Belfast's hotels".


Awards and hospitality links

The hotel has won a number of awards, most recently winning 'Best City Hotel' from the Belfast Business Awards. The hotel has been voted 'Sexiest Hotel in Belfast' by ''
Cosmopolitan Cosmopolitan may refer to: Food and drink * Cosmopolitan (cocktail), also known as a "Cosmo" History * Rootless cosmopolitan, a Soviet derogatory epithet during Joseph Stalin's anti-Semitic campaign of 1949–1953 Hotels and resorts * Cosmopoli ...
'' and 'Belfast's Coolest Hotel' by ''
The Sunday Times ''The Sunday Times'' is a British newspaper whose circulation makes it the largest in Britain's quality press market category. It was founded in 1821 as ''The New Observer''. It is published by Times Newspapers Ltd, a subsidiary of News UK, w ...
''.


References

{{coord missing, County Antrim Hotels in Belfast