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Hard Days Night Hotel

British companies established in 2004Commercial buildings completed in 1884Grade II listed buildings in LiverpoolGrade II listed commercial buildingsGrade II listed hotels
Hotels established in 2004Hotels in LiverpoolUse British English from April 2015
Hard Days Night Hotel, Liverpool
Hard Days Night Hotel, Liverpool

The Hard Days Night Hotel is a four star hotel located on North John Street in Liverpool, England. One of the only Beatles themed hotel in the world, it is named after their film, album and song A Hard Day's Night. The hotel opened four years after initial conception, in February 2008 during Liverpool's reign as European Capital of Culture. It has some 110 rooms, including the famed McCartney and Lennon suites as well as numerous bars and restaurants (Blakes Restaurant, Bar Four, The Lounge & Bar and the Live Lounge). The hotel is situated within the redeveloped Grade II listed Central Buildings, which was designed by Thomas C Clarke and completed in 1884.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Hard Days Night Hotel (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Hard Days Night Hotel
Mathew Street, Liverpool Cavern Quarter

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Wikipedia: Hard Days Night HotelContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.406 ° E -2.988 °
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Address

Cavern Walks

Mathew Street
L2 6RE Liverpool, Cavern Quarter
England, United Kingdom
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Hard Days Night Hotel, Liverpool
Hard Days Night Hotel, Liverpool
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Nearby Places

Cavern Mecca
Cavern Mecca

The Cavern Mecca was a Beatles museum in Liverpool. Founded in 1981 and named for the Cavern Club, it was instrumental in the birth of Beatles fan-based tourism in Liverpool. It was located on the corner of Rainford Square and Mathew Street. The museum was founded and run by Liz and Jim Hughes, who "single-handedly jump-started" what became the annual Beatles Convention in Liverpool, now part of the Beatles Week festival. When the museum and fan club were founded, the Beatles had been out of fashion and little acknowledged in Liverpool. The Cavern Club itself, where the Beatles had frequently played in their early years after returning from Hamburg, was closed in 1973 and later filled in as part of construction of the Merseyrail underground rail loop. In the same year as the opening of the Cavern Mecca, plans were announced to excavate and reopen the Cavern Club. The Cavern Club, complete with excavation of the original club, remained open from 1984 to 1989 before again closing, only to re-open again in 1991 as both a club and museum. The Cavern Mecca closed in December 1984 when founder Liz Hughes fell ill. Co-founder Jim Hughes died in 2018. In 2003, a signed copy of the Beatles album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, together with an official souvenir programme from the fourth annual Beatles Convention of Cavern Mecca, sold for $290,000 at auction, breaking the record at the time for the price of a signed Beatles album cover.