Juhász Gyula - Szántó András: Hotels - Our Budapest (Budapest, 1999)

Opened in the eighties in the Inner City and Buda, these three- and five-star hotels reflect the influence of con­temporary western trends in their design, and with their various amenities they provide the most up-to-date ser­vices. (Hotel MERCÜRE KORONA - No. 14 Kecskeméti utca, district V; Hotel LIGET - No. 106 Dózsa György út, district VI; Hotel NOVOTEL - No. 63-67 Alkotás utca, district XII; Hotel MERCÜRE BÜDA - No. 41-43 Krisztina körút, district I). The Hotel Novotel With the fresh stirring of initiative in the middle of the decade, the state’s firm monopoly over the hotel indus­try was broken, and the private sphere, relying on its hefty capital, came to life. Medium-category hotels were the result of these early efforts (IBIS Centre - No. 6 Ráday utca, district IX; Hotel ORION - No. 13 Döbrentei utca, district I; Hotel VIKTÓRIA - No. 11 Bem rakpart, district I; Hotel WALZER - No. 110 Németvölgyi út, dis­trict XII). For years, both Hungarian tourists and middle-class visitors from East-European countries had a hard time finding reasonably priced accommodation providing decent amenities. The workers’ hostels, party residences and training centres for workers’ militiamen that went 59

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