Cortez Building - 2014
Cortez Building

Cortez Building - 2014

The Cortez Building is located on the northeast corner of North Mesa and Mills Avenue on San Jacinto Plaza in downtown El Paso, Texas. For more than seventy-five years it has served the city as a hotel, office building, and home to government agencies. It was originally built as a hotel on the plaza, the last of three hotels to occupy that site. In 1899, Mrs. Alzina DeGroff, a pioneer in the hotel business in El Paso, acquired the Vendome Hotel and renamed it the Hotel Orndorff after her first husband. She operated it for more than twenty-five years until 1924 when she borrowed 825,000 dollars and hired the renowned El Paso architectural firm Trost and Trost to design a new hotel. The Hotel Orndorff was demolished and a new Orndorff Hotel was constructed at the same site at a cost of more than 1.4 million dollars. Henry C. Trost, who dominated the architectural scene of the American Southwest for more than three decades, designed the building. Unfortunately, Mrs. DeGroff did not live to see the completion of the building and in 1927 it was sold to became the Hotel Hussman. The company spent almost 700,000 dollars expanding the hotel. Three-hundred rooms, a major convention hall, and dining facility were added. When completed, this was the largest hotel between Dallas and Los Angeles. In 1935 a contest was held to re-name the building and the name was changed to the Hotel Cortez. The eleven-story building has twelve bays facing Mesa and ten facing Mills. The entrance on Mesa Street has a five-story cast relief portal and ornamented windows on the sixth and seventh levels. It is in the tradition of the Spanish Colonial Revival which was popular in the 1920s, a blending of renaissance, Moorish, and Baroque styles featuring many references to the Spanish and Spanish-American past. The interior features wrought iron, glazed tiles, and wooden beams, many with hand-painted designs. In A Castle of Old Spain on the Plaza of El Paso, a booklet celebrating the hotel that was published shortly after its renovation in 1928 it was compared to a "Spanish nobleman's mansion." The exterior of the building features portrait heads of conquistadors on the front entrance. For the next thirty-five years the Hotel Cortez was a well-known landmark on the plaza drawing visitors and celebrities from around the world. In 1963, President John F. Kennedy stayed at the Cortez during his visit to El Paso. The Hotel Cortez finally closed its doors in February 1970. Mexican businessman Jorge Murra of Torreon purchased the building and leased the space to various government agencies. In the process, he gutted much of the interior. A major fire damaged the structure further in 1972. In the early 1980s the building was sold once again and underwent major renovations. The first and tenth floor were restored to their original splendor. The other floors were remodeled as professional offices. The El Paso Community Foundation, located on the tenth floor of the structure, has further restored the building. Today, the Cortez Building remains a splendid "castle" overlooking San Jacinto Plaza in downtown El Paso. (Source: http://epcc.libguides.com/content.php?pid=346448&sid=3176969)

Creator: Sergio Ramirez

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: EPMH

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

View towards Ciudad Juárez

The image shows parts of the two cities El Paso and Ciudad ...

View towards Ciudad Juárez

In the front the image shows parts of downtown El Paso, for ...

Angelus Hotel and Crawford Theater

Angelus Hotel and Crawford Theater before 1944.

Arrival of the Railroad

While Gould's railroad company was still 130 miles form reaching ...

Horse Drawn Ambulance

The McBean & Carr Ambulance in front of Providence Hospital. Mr. ...

El Paso Street

South El Paso Street was the center of town in 1882. The sign on ...

San Jacinto Plaza

When the US government leased land from Smith's ranch, for the ...

Downtown El Paso

Horse and Buggies meander through the streets of downtown.

Pioneer Plaza - 1908

Photograph of Pioneer Plaza in the year 1908.

San Francisco Street

San Francisco St. taken from Pioneer Plaza located at the road's ...

El Paso Public Library

Philanthropist Andrew Carnegie funded the El Paso Public Library ...

Major W. J. Fewel

Started the first gas company in El Paso,Texas with Zach White. ...

Harry Wiley

Chief Deputy Sheriff Harry Wiley.

Samuel Schutz

The first Jews were drawn to the area as it became a center for ...

Dr. Walter N. Vilas

Dr. Walter N. Vilas was a major surgeon of the First Texas ...

Jonathan Rogers

Jonathan Rogers was a four-time El Paso mayor and founder, ...

Ronald D'Emory Coleman - El Paso, Texas

Ronald D. Coleman, a United States Representative from El Paso ...

Ramon Villalobos

Ramon Villlalobos was one of the first Hispanic reporters in El ...

Barbara Funkhouser, El Paso Times

El Paso Times Editor - first woman editor of The El Paso Times. ...

George Kinsinger - El Paso Times

Mr. Kinsinger was a member of the staff of the El Paso Times. He ...

Bill Latham--El Paso Times Editor and Dr. Thomas Barnes

Bill Latham, the El Paso Times editor is to the left. Dr. Thomas ...

Gertrude Goodman and Sarah Lea - El Paso, Texas

Gertrude Goodman (on the left) was commended by the Senate of ...

Mrs. Paca Alarcon

Mrs Paca Alarcon came to El Paso in 1853. Then she married a ...

home.search_collection