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To view the
historic album
One of Pasadena's most unique buildings, the Castle
Green was built in 1898 as the annex for the famous Hotel Green. The
Castle Green is an imposing seven story Moorish Colonial and Spanish
style building sitting next to Central Park in Old Pasadena at
Raymond and Green Street. The Castle Green was built by Col. George
G. Green of the Patent Medicine Business.
The Castle Green, opened in 1899 as the second of
three buildings in the Hotel Green complex, was a lavish resort for
easterners and others escaping winter rigors. Architect Frederick I.
Roehrig, for what was later to be called the Central Annex, drew on
Moorish, Spanish, Victorian, and other stylistic elements to produce
Pasadena's most stunningly original building. He blended domes,
arches, pillars, balconies, and verandahs in a building of
structural steel with brick walls and concrete floors, making it
Pasadena's first fireproof building. He tied it to the first part of
the hotel complex, built on the east side of the street, by an
ornate enclosed bridge crossing Raymond Avenue. When the Annex
opened for business, its two cylindrical towers on the south and
much of the roof line were illuminated with exterior lights. There
was even a penthouse garden with a glass roof.
The Hotel Green became the social center of Pasadena, playing host
to vacationing tycoons and even presidents. It was also home to both
the Tournament of Roses and the Valley Hunt Club.
At the end of the resort era, the west annex was
purchased by a group of regular hotel guests who wished to continue
to come to the Hotel Green. In 1924 the group of investors divided
the hotel complex into three parts. The Central Annex was divided
into fifty individually owned units and so it remains today, renamed
the Castle Green.

Though the original building on the east side of Raymond has
disappeared, the Castle Green continues, proud, unique, fascinating.
Visitors note that the years have been kind. The building has an on
going restoration program but the facade is virtually unchanged. The
interiors breathe the charm of an earlier more leisurely era.
Currently, the inside public rooms have been restored to much of the
look of 1898. Several of the sitting rooms contain their original
furniture and beautiful fireplaces. There is also a warm and
inviting sunroom filled with historic wicker and plants. The grand
lobby with its mosaic tile floor and marble stairway are
breathtaking. And, of course, like any great hotel there is a Palm
Terrace Ballroom.
A number of motion pictures and television commercials have been
filmed in and around the building. Filmmakers often use the
versatile space, sometimes displaying, sometimes disguising the
turn-of-the-century elegance visible at every turn.
The Castle Green is listed on the National Register of Historic
Places, the State Historic Register, and the City of Pasadena's list
of Historic Places.
Today the Castle Green's public rooms and gardens are available for
parties, weddings, receptions, corporate meetings, and reunions; in
short, virtually any gathering that would be enriched by the
building's lavish Victorian interiors would find its location on the
edge of Old Pasadena convenient. There is a ballroom that will
accommodate 425 guests for a cocktail party or a dance, or 220 for a
sit down dinner. The entire first floor will accommodate 500 people.
For those who want to meet just a few friends, the cozy Sunroom is
the perfect place. Brides have found the sweeping marble stairway in
the lobby a splendid setting for a grand entrance (and tossing the
bouquet!).
Over the years the facade of the building began to show its age and
needed attention. Pasadena Heritage, a leading historical support
group, was able to acquire a grant of $692,000 to start the exterior
restoration. Since then a new support group was formed, Friends of
the Castle Green, a non-profit organization dedicated to helping
restore and maintain this unique piece of Pasadena history.
The Friends raise money through special tours, events and direct
contributions. All gifts are tax deductible. The public rooms are
available for parties and weddings to help raise money for the
restoration.
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