Crystal Hoteliers International: Difference between revisions

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| founder =
| area_served = Worldwide
| key_people = [[Vana Dandreal]] ([[Akronism|Matron]]) <br /> Žatra VdaniVttani (CEO)
| industry = [[wikipedia:Hospitality industry|Hospitality]]
| products =
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==History==
[[File:Sydney (AU), George Street, The Fullerton Hotel Sydney -- 2019 -- 3576.jpg|left|thumb|300px|The original Heartwood Hotel on High St. in Crystal Coast, which is still in operation today.]]
In the build up to [[The Worldwide Exposition of 1895]] in Crystal Coast (then ''Enaro ŠdatražakaiTtatražakai''), more than two dozen new hotels were built in and around the city in anticipation of visitors. While the Expo was a success and Tavaris did begin to see increased tourism in the years afterward, after the end of the Expo ended there was very quickly a glut of hotels and a dearth of guests to fill them. Initally, the Church of Akrona's interest in the hotels was not as a business, but simply as extra space for their charitable efforts to provide food and housing to people in need of it. The Church had long provided food and housing in their own Temples—it is considered a religious mandate to "feed the hungry and shelter the exposed"—and was generally quite experienced in the logistics of hospitality, but it had run out of room. In 1897, one of the hotels decided to close, citing low demand, and the Church bought the building to use for public aid. However, when other hotels reached out to the Church about a similar offer, Church officials had no need for additional space for the province's charitable operations and initially declined. Only after a visit by the owners of the hotels to the Matron herself did the Church agree to buy the hotels, reserving one for "future need" and deciding to attempt to keep the other—the Hotel Heartwood on the high street in Crystal Coast—open as a commercial venture to raise funds for the local parishes.
 
The Hotel Heartwood was initially staffed by members of a cloistered order of male lay worshipers, the Seekers of the Assumption, who are otherwise known for their tradition of historical and theological research into the particular question of when in time the goddess Akrona began serving (or "assumed the mantle") as the deity over life on [[Urth]]. The building was in relatively poor condition when the Church assumed ownership, but because the Church had more cash on hand than the former hotel operator, it was able to front the costs for a relatively quick repair. Very few people, even inside the Church, expected the commercial venture to remain in operation for long, considering the rapid decline of the industry. To their surprise, however, the Hotel Heartwood began to turn a profit within the year. The hotel very quickly gained a reputation for being meticulously clean, due in large part to the strict discipline of the monks, and because the Church had hired an internationally renowned chef as the manager of the hotel's kitchen. The stunning success of the hotel inspired the Church to expand the commercial venture and establish a formal for-profit enterprise to manage it. Crystal Hoteliers International, Incorporated, was established in 1899.
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