Page 270 - Livre Beau Rivage Palace
P. 270

Fig. 4                                                  Fig. 5

          looks grand, but lacks intimacy.’  None the less, the board made the   renovation work on the courtyard. Parking will no longer be allowed on the
                                 15
          following announcement to its shareholders during their March   pavement, as occasionally happens at the moment.’
                                                                                                     21
         1940 meeting: ‘The bar was completely refurbished and reopened last May,   For some ten years the archive documents are silent on the
          and we are happy with the renovation.’  (fig. 8.)       subject of the bar, but the following lines, written at the start of
                                      16
              The effects of war on a hotel such as the Beau-Rivage   the 1950s, suggest that its glory days were over and that it was in
          Palace could provide the subject for an entire detailed study in   desperate need of another ‘revamp’: ‘Returning to the issue of lighting.
          itself. How was news of the tragic historical events that were  Almost all of the hotel is poorly lit: from the avenue, to our gardens (as seen
          unfolding received within its walls? What impact did it have on   from the waterfront), to the bar, which fails to impress. Some find it old-
          an establishment whose main purpose was to ensure a peaceful   fashioned and uninviting. We cannot create a focal point out of it; it is not a
          stay for its cosmopolitan clientele; a clientele who, as comments in   place where people like to congregate. Should we try to create one, or open a
          the guest books reveal, appreciated the hotel’s ability to provide a   summer ice-cream parlour in the arcades for example, similar to the Séchaye
         ‘timeless’, tranquil oasis? In September 1939, as the German army   café, which had to close after the war? The place could be open to the general
         was marching on Poland, the minutes of the board meeting noted   public of Lausanne.’  Another note from 1953 comments, ‘We have
                                                                                22
          that: ‘The radio attracts the clients to the bar at certain times [because of   also noticed that the cushions in the bar are threadbare. The lighting leaves
          the declaration of war and the mobilisation of the troops], with the result   a lot to be desired, being either too bright or too dim for the bar.’ 23
          that the bar is very busy.’                                 Had Cornaz fallen out of favour? In February 1950, the task
                            17
              Cornaz  undertook further  work  at the  hotel,  notably  the   of refurbishing the fourth floor of the Beau-Rivage was given
          renovation of the entrance lobby which was started in 1944.  A   to one of his old associates, Walter Baumann,  and in January
                                                            18
                                                                                                        24
          note from May 1946 reads: ‘The refurbishment of the Palace’s entrance   1951, after the death of the hotel’s architect, M. Perrier, the board
          lobby continues at a very slow pace. We are still waiting for some items to   decided ‘to consult with the architect M. Pierre Bonnard on all
          be finished. The tie-backs of the drapes are having to be made by hand,  matters regarding the building work’.  In December 1954, the
                                                                                                 25
          since it was impossible to find any which our architect M. Cornaz would   renovation of the bar became top priority once again: ‘The board
          approve of. M. Cornaz has taken a look at the fourth floor. The reason   has visited the bar and terrace together with M. Bonnard. For the bar,
          we have engaged him is because it is imperative we preserve the elegant   two projects with different decorative schemes have been proposed. The first
          lines of our facade. At first sight, it appears that converting the current staff   involves replacing the huge central pier between the bar and the gallery with
          accommodation into guest bedrooms will be very complicated.’ 19  a smaller supporting structure to create a T-shaped room. The second project
              In 1949 Cornaz was asked to design an awning for the same   retains the central pier, which is preferable as it would preserve the bar’s
          entrance lobby.  It was not executed, however, as the following   intimate atmosphere. For the same reason, we will not create a door in the
                      20
          comments from 1950 reveal, with a witty nod to the 1935 French   west partition wall, we will reduce the width of the entrance into the corridor
          jazz band hit ‘Tout va très bien, Madame la Marquise’, performed by   and remove the large mirror on the west side. The ventilation system will
          Ray Ventura and his Collégiens: ‘All is not well with the Palace’s awning.  be simplified and will not be connected to that of the dining room. Large
         The current one does not provide adequate shelter for arriving guests, while   insulated glass panes will be installed on the veranda to retain the heat.’
                                                                                                                      26
          the proposed one would have been too expensive to make. The Savary   By spring 1955, either the building work had been deferred or the
          company has suggested a canvas awning which would only be used for   chosen design had not been entirely satisfactory, because the issue
          gala evenings and other special occasions. We will be giving this idea further   was raised again: ‘The bar is taking up a great deal of our time. Our
          thought. In the meantime, a budget of 5,000 fr. has been approved for the   architect has been strenuously defending his original open-plan project. The

          The Beau-Rivage bar at the beginning of the 1940s.      J. Cornaz architect, General view of the bar with plans for a fresco showing           Fig. 8
                                                                  a compass rose and Lake Geneva, ink and wash on tracing paper, undated [1938-39].      J. Cornaz architect, Hôtel Beau-Rivage. Detail, bar with dance floor,
                                                                                                                                                         Indian ink on tracing paper, January 1939.


          270                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       271
   265   266   267   268   269   270   271   272   273   274   275