The Beverly Hilton Reboots Hollywood Glamor With Refreshed Spaces

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Los Angeles is a city of storied hotels. Some figure prominently in films, while others are beloved as long-time haunts of the film industry’s day-to-day realities.

The Beverly Hilton is just such a haunt. During the city’s awards season, which runs from the beginning of each year and culminates with the Academy Awards, the hotel’s ballroom is packed with the glitterati of film. On most evenings in the first two months of the year, arriving hotel guests share space with red carpet guests for an atmosphere not often matched at any other area hotel.

Wedged into the chevron-shaped confluence of Santa Monica and Wilshire in Beverly Hills, the hotel was opened by Conrad Hilton in 1955, and quickly became a hot spot. The Golden Globes have been held in the hotel’s International Ballroom since 1961, in addition to a bevy of other awards galas, benefits, and celebrations.

Guest rooms and public spaces were refurbished in 2020 during a multimillion-dollar overhaul. Rooms have champagne, teal, and glossy white palettes that recall the hotel’s midcentury roots, guest rooms were wired with numerous outlets to accommodate device-laden guests, and baths were refitted with modern customizable lighting, including lighted mirror frames.

A notable branding choice is that The Beverly Hilton maintains its own logo instead of the standard Hilton branding. A throwback font, rich burgundy background and pink lettering scream vintage and suggest traces of what a Hilton experience might have been like 70 years ago, compared with today. A prominent emblem is the Rosenthal Star, a rendering of an art installation hung over the hotel’s staircase in its early days—now found on printed materials and even in the shape of the drawer and closet knobs in the updated baths.

Corridors have new botanical-themed wallpaper that also feels straight out of Hollywood’s Golden Age. Altogether it’s a rather triumphant refresh in celebration of a period with a design ethos that offers some ideas to treasure, but many more to safely relegate to history.

It’s difficult to not feel like someone of great import, pulling up next to the fountain in the circular drive at the hotel’s entrance, strolling into the lush gold-and-blush lobby and past the aquarium in the Wilshire Tower elevator lobby. Tucked away into quiet corridors between function and dining spaces are photographs of the hotel’s famous guests of yesteryear, from a Presidential visit by Dwight D. Eisenhower soon after opening to photo shoots by starlets ranging from Marilyn Monroe to Sophia Loren.

Meals can be taken poolside at Mercato, offering fresh (and reasonably priced, for an upscale hotel in one of the country’s most exclusive zip codes) California fare throughout the day. In the evenings, the pool and palms are lit with blue and pink neon for an unmistakably Hollywood experience.

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