Gagudju Crocodile Hotel
Gagudju Crocodile Hotel | |
---|---|
General information | |
Location | Jabiru, Northern Territory |
Coordinates | 12°40′13″S 132°49′52″E / 12.67028°S 132.83111°E |
Opening | 1988 |
Owner | Kakadu Tourism Group |
Management | Accor Hotels |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 2 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | John Wilkins |
Developer | Gagudju Association |
Other information | |
Number of rooms | 110 |
Number of restaurants | 1 |
Parking | Available, complementary |
Website | |
[1] https://all.accor.com/ |
The Gagudju Crocodile Hotel, also known as Kakadu Crocodile Hotel or just the Croc Hotel is a 3.5 star hotel located in Jabiru, Northern Territory, within Australia's Kakadu National Park. Owned by the Indigenous clans of the Gaagudju people, it was the first major tourism development in the National Park and is notable for its unique design in the shape of a crocodile. Since 2014, the hotel has been operated by the Accor group under the Mecure brand.[1]
History
[edit]Following the declaration of Kakadu as a National Park in 1979, the township of Jabiru was established as a closed community to house workers at the Ranger Uranium Mine. The Park's second management plan in 1986 recognised the potential for the town's role to be expanded as a service centre to support tourism related development in consultation with traditional land owners.[2]
The Gagudju Association, representing Aboriginal clans from the Kakadu area, submitted plans for the hotel in 1987. The design was for a two-story, 110-120 room hotel including restaurants, bars and conference facilities contained within a structure shaped like a crocodile.[3] Although the animal carries spiritual significance to the Gaagudju people, the international success of the film Crocodile Dundee in 1986 also influenced the chosen design.[4]
The hotel was constructed by the John Holland Group, opening in 1988. While the Gagudju Association first approached Four Seasons Limited to manage the hotel,[3] the Southern Pacific Hotels Group operated it from its opening until the company was acquired by Bass Hotels in 2000.[5] Prior to the management rights being acquired by the Accor group in 2014, the hotel was branded as a Holiday Inn.
Design
[edit]The building's unique shape is an interpretation of a totem representing the giant crocodile Ginga, a spirit ancestor of the Gaagudju people. The crocodile is 250 m (820 ft) long and up to 30 m (98 ft) wide,[4] with the main entry through the animal's jaws, via a portico with supports shaped as teeth.[6] The head contains the main foyer and reception area, restaurant, cocktail bar, conference facilities as well as an art gallery. The guest rooms are arranged around central atrium and swimming pool, making up the crocodile's body.[4] Within the tail section there are some suites, staff amenities and storage rooms. Outside, open-air parking is provided in four small circular lots, that represent crocodile eggs when viewed from the air.[3] Architectural features on the roof of the head section contain ventilation and air-conditioning equipment, with the outward facing panels lit up at night to resemble glowing eyes.[4]
Impact and criticism
[edit]The Crocodile Hotel has featured in a number international travel blogs and magazines owing to its unique appearance. It is frequently included in lists of odd and quirky hotels around the world by publications including Condé Nast Traveler,[7] India's Outlook[8] and New Zealand's Stuff.[9] Kalya Ryan, in Lonely Planet's 50 Places To Stay To Blow Your Mind described it as having an "undeniably quirky edge, but nothing tacky".[10] In 2016, the hotel won a Tourism Northern Territory Brolga Award for best unique accommodation.[4]
The Gagudju Association was initially established to distribute royalties from uranium mining in Kakadu amongst local Aboriginal people and provide self-determination on how best to use this money to benefit the community.[11] Under this model, the hotel's development was seen as a revenue-focussed investment, rather than a social enterprise and the association has little involvement in running it.[12] Although the venture has proven profitable, supporting an argument that it has provided economic benefits and employment without "selling-out" customs and traditions,[13] it is not without criticism. During 2000 the hotel hosted a hospitality traineeship program for 22 indigenous participants.[14] Despite this, during the same year only 6 aboriginal people were employed by the Gagudju Association's tourism ventures.[15]
In 1999, The Guardian reported that the association was forced to sell off assets from the hotel to pay debts owing from other parts of its operations. It was revealed that a large percentage of other mining royalties had been spent on alcohol while the local aboriginal community lived in poverty.[16] Although drinking in public places is banned within the Jabiru, the hotel's public bar holds one of the few liquor licences in the town, facilitating problematic drinking that can damage the employment prospects of local aboriginal people and leading to erosion of traditional culture.[11] A further criticism raised by some local elders is that the increasing numbers of tourists brought in by the Croc Hotel and other developments have interfered with hunting and fishing practices as well as a loss of privacy around traditional ceremonies within Kakadu and facilitated alcohol abuse that has eroded cultural customs.[11]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Accor grabs a hold of croc hotel in shake-up". Territory Stories. Northern Territory News. 26 February 2014. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
- ^ Department of the Environment and Heritage (April 1999). "Australia's Kakadu - Protecting World Heritage" (PDF). Commonwealth of Australia. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
- ^ a b c "ANNUAL REPORT OF THE JABIRU TOWN DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY 1986-97". Territory Stories. Jabiru Town Development Authority. 3 March 1988. hdl:10070/388353. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
- ^ a b c d e "Kakadu's World Famous Crocodile Hotel Celebrates 30th Anniversary". Visit Kakadu. Kakadu Tourism. 13 September 2018. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
- ^ "Exclusive: IHG loses Kakadu hotels". Hotel Management. 17 February 2014. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
- ^ Nikki Marshall (16 March 2017). "Kakadu: the Crocodile Dundee tour of Australia's wetland wonderland". Guardian Australia.
- ^ Lauren Kilberg (10 November 2014). "Stay in a Hotel Shaped Like a Crocodile (and Other Hotel Oddities)". Condé Nast Traveller.
- ^ Nayanika Mukherjee (30 July 2019). "Quirky Hotels From Across the Globe". Outlook Traveller.
- ^ David Whitley (27 March 2018). "The 10 weirdest shaped hotels". Stuff Limited.
- ^ 50 Places To Stay To Blow Your Mind. Lonely Planet. 1 May 2017. ISBN 9781787010383.
- ^ a b c Scambary, Benedict (May 2013). My Country, Mine Country. Canberra: ANU Press. doi:10.22459/CAEPR33.05.2013. ISBN 9781922144737.
- ^ Brady, Maggie (December 2017). Teaching 'Proper' Drinking? Clubs and pubs in Indigenous Australia. Canberra: ANU Press. doi:10.22459/CAEPR39.12.2017. ISBN 9781760461584.
- ^ Weaver, David (2001). The Encyclopedia of Ecotourism (PDF). Wallingford: CAB International. p. 409. ISBN 0851993680.
- ^ Bob Collins (November 2000). "Kakadu Region Social Impact Study Community Report" (PDF). Parks Australia. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
- ^ Song, Nan (2008). "Indigenous Tourism – A Passport to Development for Indigenous Australians?". Intercultural Communication Studies. 17 (1): 269–284. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.604.9335.
- ^ Christopher Zinn (10 November 1999). "Riches to rags: aboriginal community squanders £20m". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 January 2022.