The Balmoral Hotel is a hotel and landmark in Edinburgh, Scotland. It is located in the heart of the city at the east end of Princes Street, the main shopping street beneath the Edinburgh Castle rock, and the southern edge of the New Town.
It is accessed from Princes Street, on its north side, and flanked by North Bridge and Waverley Steps. The latter gives pedestrian access to Waverley Station to the south, to which it was formerly linked. The hotel has been a Category B listed building since 1994.
The building's architecture is Victorian, influenced by the traditional Scottish baronial style. For most of the 20th century it was known as the North British Hotel or the N.B. While under railway ownership, the hotel had porters in red jackets who would take passengers and their luggage directly into the hotel via a lift. Ownership passed into the hands of the London & North Eastern Railway (LNER) in 1923.
After nationalisation of the railways in 1948, the hotel became part of British Transport Hotels until it was privatised and purchased by Gleneagles Hotel in 1983.
In 1988, the hotel closed for a major refurbishment with a final cost of £23,000,000, and the building was purchased in 1990 by Balmoral International Hotels. On 12 June 1991, the Edinburgh-born actor Sean Connery officially reopened the hotel as The Balmoral, Gaelic for "majestic dwelling". A plaque in the hotel lobby commemorates the occasion. The Balmoral was acquired by Forte Group, becoming part of their "Forte Grand" collection of international high-end hotels. Following a hostile takeover of Forte Group in 1996 by Granada plc, the hotel was put up for sale by its new owners. On 1 March 1997 it was acquired by Sir Rocco Forte, becoming part of Rocco Forte Hotels.
The Balmoral was the first hotel in Scotland to be awarded five stars by Forbes Travel Guide. The Number One restaurant under executive chef Jeff Bland was awarded a Michelin star in 2003, but lost its star in 2022. The main event spaces and those bedrooms with views of Edinburgh Castle were refurbished in 2017.
The clock is famously set to run three minutes fast, to give passengers more time to catch their trains. The only day that it shows the correct time is 31 December (Hogmanay), for the city's New Year celebrations. In 2020, the hotel decided not to set the clock right for that year's Hogmanay, citing a desire to have three minutes less of that year, although the practice resumed in subsequent years.
The clock's original mechanism was replaced by a computer-controlled system in 2014, after a fault in one of the cogs caused the clock to stop several times over a six-week period. The original mechanism, although no longer in use, is still present in the tower; it cannot be moved because of its weight.
In October 2010, Oprah Winfrey filmed a one-hour episode of Oprah at The Balmoral. She interviewed Rowling from room 230, the Scone & Crombie Royal Suite. Rowling spoke about finishing Deathly Hallows at the hotel.
Clock
Media
Laurel and Hardy (1932)
J. K. Rowling and Harry Potter (2007)
See also
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