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The '''Cavalier Hotel''', formally known as '''The Historic Cavalier Hotel and Beach Club''', is a landmark luxury hotel situated at 42nd Street and [[Atlantic Avenue (Virginia Beach)|Atlantic Avenue]] in [[Virginia Beach]], Virginia. After two decades of | The '''Cavalier Hotel''', formally known as '''The Historic Cavalier Hotel and Beach Club''', is a landmark luxury hotel situated at 42nd Street and [[Atlantic Avenue (Virginia Beach)|Atlantic Avenue]] in [[Virginia Beach]], Virginia. After two decades of planning and public advocacy for a world-class beach resort, the Historic Cavalier Hotel was officially completed in 1927, reflecting the prosperity and extravagance of the Roaring Twenties. The hotel was a major element of the development of Virginia Beach as a resort area and is known colloquially as the "Grand Dame of the Shore." Perched on a grassy hill overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, the Cavalier has welcomed ten U.S. Presidents, countless celebrities, and distinguished guests from around the world over the course of its nearly century-long history. The hotel was listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]] in 2014 and, following an $85 million restoration, reopened in 2018 as part of Marriott's Autograph Collection. As of 2025–2026, the property has been the subject of a proposed sale to an out-of-state operator, a development that has drawn significant attention from Virginia Beach city officials and the public.<ref name="wavy-sale">{{cite web |title=Historic Cavalier Hotel and resort could be sold |url=https://www.wavy.com/news/local-news/virginia-beach/historic-cavalier-hotel-and-resort-could-be-sold/ |work=WAVY News |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref><ref name="whro-sale">{{cite web |title=Historic Cavalier, neighboring hotels at Virginia Beach Oceanfront could be sold |url=https://www.whro.org/news/local-news/2026-05-12/historic-cavalier-neighboring-hotels-at-virginia-beach-oceanfront-could-be-sold |work=WHRO |date=2026-05-12 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
== Architecture and Design == | == Architecture and Design == | ||
The seven-story Cavalier Hotel is Virginia Beach's most prominent | The seven-story Cavalier Hotel is one of Virginia Beach's most prominent landmarks and a surviving example of the opulent approach to luxury travel that characterized the first half of the twentieth century. Constructed during the boom years of the 1920s with funds raised by public subscription, the hotel was positioned to compete with more established resorts elsewhere in the commonwealth and along the Atlantic Seaboard.<ref name="sah-archipedia">{{cite web |title=Cavalier Hotel |url=https://sah-archipedia.org/buildings/VA-01-VB8 |work=SAH Archipedia |date=2019-06-17 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
Designed by the Norfolk firm of Neff and Thompson, the building is distinguished by the use of Jeffersonian details on its exterior, tying it visually to some of Virginia's most esteemed architectural landmarks. The approach to the hotel's northern entrance is framed by serpentine walls that mimic the enclosed gardens of the [[University of Virginia]], and the entrance pavilion is a variation on the east portico of [[Monticello]]. The three wings of the Y-shaped building, crowned at their juncture by an ornamental cupola, provide guest rooms with maximum exposure to the ocean. | Designed by the Norfolk firm of Neff and Thompson, the building is distinguished by the use of Jeffersonian details on its exterior, tying it visually to some of Virginia's most esteemed architectural landmarks. The approach to the hotel's northern entrance is framed by serpentine walls that mimic the enclosed gardens of the [[University of Virginia]], and the entrance pavilion is a variation on the east portico of [[Monticello]]. The three wings of the Y-shaped building, crowned at their juncture by an ornamental cupola, provide guest rooms with maximum exposure to the ocean.<ref name="sah-archipedia"/> | ||
The Cavalier's Jeffersonian-inspired architecture, typified by exquisite plaster ornamentation atop columns, was designed in the spirit of Monticello, with additional references to Woodlawn and the Lawn at the University of Virginia. The decorative water tower that crowns the building draws inspiration from the work of James Gibbs, particularly his design for the Church of St. Mary-le-Strand at Aldwych in London.<ref name="sah-archipedia"/> | |||
The building itself was constructed with over half a million bricks — reported to be the most ever used on a single building in Virginia at the time of its construction. What distinguished the Cavalier from its competitors was the character of its oceanfront setting, which at the time was sparsely developed. Even today, the hotel maintains a commanding position on a large, landscaped hill that slopes down to the beach across Atlantic Avenue.<ref name="virginia-org">{{cite web |title=The Cavalier, Virginia Beach's Opulent Seaside Escape |url=https://www.virginia.org/blog/post/va-beach-cavalier-history/ |work=Virginia.org |date=2025-07-23 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
When it first opened, the Cavalier offered amenities that were extraordinary for the era. | When it first opened, the Cavalier offered amenities that were extraordinary for the era. Guests were provided with private bathrooms in every room and access to an indoor swimming pool filled with fresh ocean water. Guest rooms included bathtubs with a dedicated handle to draw a seawater bath, and sinks with an ice water spigot connected to a large wooden ice-filled tub on the hotel roof. The hotel's radio station, WSEA, was also notable for being the first to broadcast a congratulatory message from the mayor of Norfolk to pilot Charles Lindbergh following his transatlantic flight from New York to Paris.<ref name="virginia-org"/> | ||
== | == History == | ||
=== Opening and the Golden Age === | |||
On | On April 4–9, 1927, a ceremonious grand opening for the Cavalier was held. The Ben Bernie Band played for the festivities, and the hotel received congratulatory telegrams from Sophie Tucker and Al Jolson.<ref name="virginia-org"/> | ||
On Memorial Day weekend in 1929, shortly before the stock market crash, the [[Cavalier Beach Club]] opened on the oceanfront at the base of the hill below the hotel. The Beach Club became a celebrated venue for big band performances, drawing acts such as [[Benny Goodman]], [[Cab Calloway]], [[Glenn Miller]], [[Lawrence Welk]], Frank Sinatra, and Ella Fitzgerald. Between 1930 and 1950, the Cavalier became one of the most active contractors of big bands on the East Coast. A severe hurricane struck the Virginia Beach Oceanfront in 1933, heavily damaging the Beach Club, but the structure was rebuilt and performances resumed.<ref name="virginia-org"/><ref name="visit-vb-legend">{{cite web |title=The Cavalier Hotel: A Legend Restored |url=https://www.visitvirginiabeach.com/trip-ideas/the-cavalier-hotel-a-legend-restored/ |work=Visit Virginia Beach |date=2025-07-17 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
Since its opening in 1927, the hotel has hosted ten American presidents, including [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]], [[Harry Truman]], and [[John F. Kennedy]], along with a wide range of celebrated guests. Notable visitors have included Bette Davis, [[Elizabeth Taylor]], Muhammad Ali, [[F. Scott Fitzgerald]], Frank Sinatra, Mary Pickford, and Will Rogers. American writer [[F. Scott Fitzgerald]] and his wife Zelda are reported to have taken extended vacations at the Cavalier; Fitzgerald has been associated with the hotel in popular accounts of his creative life, though the claim that ''[[The Great Gatsby]]'' was directly inspired by his stays there is difficult to verify independently.<ref name="virginia-org"/><ref name="visit-vb-legend"/> | |||
== | The hotel also gained a measure of notoriety from the death of [[Adolph Coors]], founder of the [[Coors Brewing Company]], who died after falling from a window on the hotel's sixth floor. The precise circumstances of his death have remained a subject of speculation.<ref name="visit-vb-haunted">{{cite web |title=Haunted Virginia Beach: The Historic Cavalier Hotel |url=https://www.visitvirginiabeach.com/trip-ideas/haunted-virginia-beach-the-historic-cavalier-hotel/ |work=Visit Virginia Beach |date=2025-10-20 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
=== World War II and Postwar Years === | |||
The | The hotel operated successfully through 1942, when it was commandeered by the [[United States Navy]] for use as a radar training center during World War II. It was returned to its owners in 1945, but the years of military occupation had taken a toll on the property, and much of the prewar clientele did not return to the hotel in the postwar period. The building was converted into a private club for much of the 1950s and 1960s before reopening to the public for a period.<ref name="sah-archipedia"/> | ||
Competition from motels that catered more directly to middle-class families diminished the business of older resort hotels throughout the postwar decades. In response, a modern companion property, the Cavalier Oceanfront, was constructed in 1973–1974 across Atlantic Avenue, adjacent to the site of the Beach Club, by the firm of Shriver and Holland and Associates. The original hotel was renamed the Cavalier on the Hill, and with the opening of the Oceanfront property, the historic building was temporarily closed. It reopened to guests in 1976 and the two properties operated together as complementary destinations for the next several decades.<ref name="sah-archipedia"/> | |||
In 2002, both the Cavalier on the Hill and the Cavalier Oceanfront underwent multi-million dollar renovations. However, by 2014, both hotels had closed, and the Cavalier Oceanfront and Beach Club were demolished.<ref name="virginia-org"/> | |||
== Restoration and National Register Designation == | === Restoration and National Register Designation === | ||
By 2012, the historic Cavalier Hotel was facing the prospect of demolition. Community advocacy and governmental action ultimately preserved the structure. The hotel was accepted to the [[National Register of Historic Places]] in 2014, a designation that recognizes properties of significance to the history of their community, state, or nation based on age, integrity, and historical importance.<ref name="nrhp-press">{{cite web |title=The Cavalier Hotel Accepted to National Register of Historic Places |url=https://www.cavalierresortvb.com/press-media/the-cavalier-hotel-accepted-to-national-register-of-historic-places |work=CavalierResortVB.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
Following the National Register listing, Gold Key | PHR Hotels & Resorts undertook an $85 million, two-year restoration of the property in partnership with the architecture firm Hanbury Evans Wright Vlattas + Company and general contractor W.M. Jordan Company. The project team worked to shore up the structure while preserving historically significant interior elements, including the Hunt Room fireplace, cementitious terrazzo floors with brass dividers, marble columns, decorative molding, and ornamental cornice work. Such was the level of care required that windows on the first floor were removed from their frames and repaired by hand.<ref name="wmjordan">{{cite web |title=Restoration of the Historic Cavalier Hotel |url=https://wmjordan.com/projects/restoration-of-the-historic-cavalier-hotel/ |work=W.M. Jordan Company |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
The | The restored Cavalier Hotel officially reopened on March 7, 2018, with a "Grand Reveal" event at the property. Affiliated with Marriott's Autograph Collection, the reimagined hotel features 85 guest rooms, including 23 suites. Six of those suites, designated Heritage Suites, were designed to reflect the personalities of the partners who led the hotel's revival.<ref name="marriott">{{cite web |title=The Historic Cavalier Hotel and Beach Club, Autograph Collection |url=https://www.marriott.com/en-us/hotels/orfak-the-historic-cavalier-hotel-and-beach-club-autograph-collection/overview/ |work=Marriott.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
The | The restoration project received several professional recognitions. Engineering News Record MidAtlantic gave the project an Award of Merit in its 2018 Best Projects awards program in the Renovation/Restoration category. ABC Virginia recognized the project with three Excellence in Construction Awards, and the Hampton Roads Association for Commercial Real Estate awarded it an Award of Excellence in the Best Renovated or Historic Rehabilitation Project category.<ref name="wmjordan"/> | ||
== Current Operations and Amenities == | |||
== | The Cavalier Resort today encompasses the restored historic hotel building alongside a broader collection of accommodations, dining, and recreational facilities at the Virginia Beach Oceanfront. The historic hotel itself features 85 guest rooms, a luxury spa, a craft distillery, multiple dining venues, a resort-style pool, a rebuilt Beach Club with semi-private beach access, and approximately 9,885 square feet of event space. The hotel retains 21 of the original 350 acres of surrounding land, a portion of which has been developed as an exclusive private townhouse community.<ref name="cavalier-resort">{{cite web |title=The Historic Cavalier Hotel & Beach Club |url=https://www.cavalierresortvb.com/the-historic-cavalier-hotel |work=CavalierResortVB.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref><ref name="visit-vb-listing">{{cite web |title=The Cavalier Resort Historic Cavalier Hotel |url=https://www.visitvirginiabeach.com/listing/the-cavalier-resort-historic-cavalier-hotel/32/ |work=Visit Virginia Beach |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
One of the most distinctive features of the restored Cavalier is its on-site distillery. The Tarnished Truth Distilling Company operates within the hotel as the first craft distillery to be located inside a hotel in the United States. The distillery produces bourbon, rye, vodka, and gin, several of which have received industry recognition since the hotel reopened.<ref name="virginia-org"/> | |||
The | The hotel's dining options include the Hunt Room Tavern, the Raleigh Room, and Becca, a farm-to-fork restaurant offering American cuisine sourced from local ingredients. The name Becca is a reference to Pocahontas, who took the name Rebecca upon converting to Christianity — a nod to the hotel's original signature restaurant, which bore the name Pocahontas.<ref name="cavalier-resort"/> | ||
The rebuilt Beach Club features an infinity pool overlooking the Atlantic Ocean along with a poolside bar and grill, available to hotel guests and residents of the adjacent private community. The hotel's historic indoor pool has also been restored and now offers poolside service, private cabana rentals, and lounge areas. The SeaHill Spa includes a Himalayan salt room among its amenities.<ref name="marriott"/> | |||
The hotel's front lawn, a prominent feature of the property's landscaped grounds, serves as a venue for outdoor events including receptions and seasonal programming. During the summer months, the Cavalier hosts outdoor movie nights as part of its Beach Blanket Cinema series, with free admission, complimentary popcorn, and an outdoor bar available for attendees. The property also welcomes the [[Virginia Symphony Orchestra]] for occasional outdoor concerts.<ref name="visit-vb-listing"/> | |||
== Proposed Sale (2025–2026) == | |||
In 2025, reports emerged that the Historic Cavalier Hotel and the broader Cavalier Resort complex could be sold to an out-of-state operator. The Virginia Beach Development Authority and Virginia Beach City Council became involved in reviewing the proposed transaction, with city officials characterizing the potential sale as a significant development for the oceanfront district. The sale would include the historic Cavalier Hotel and neighboring properties at the Virginia Beach Oceanfront.<ref name="wavy-sale"/><ref name="13newsnow-sale">{{cite web |title=Virginia Beach City Council sees Cavalier Hotel sale as 'a positive thing' |url=https://www.13newsnow.com/article/news/local/mycity/virginia-beach/cavalier-hotel-sale-virginia-beach-va-update/291-f351308c-5ee0-499c-8235-9fd9d9aecb80 |work=13News Now |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref><ref name="whro-sale"/> As of early 2026, the transaction remained under review, and no final agreement had been publicly announced. | |||
== See Also == | == See Also == | ||
| Line 73: | Line 73: | ||
<references> | <references> | ||
<ref name="virginia-org">{{cite web |title=The Cavalier, Virginia Beach's Opulent Seaside Escape |url=https://www.virginia.org/blog/post/va-beach-cavalier-history/ |work=Virginia.org |date=2025-07-23 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | <ref name="virginia-org">{{cite web |title=The Cavalier, Virginia Beach's Opulent Seaside Escape |url=https://www.virginia.org/blog/post/va-beach-cavalier-history/ |work=Virginia.org |date=2025-07-23 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
<ref name="cavalier-resort"> | <ref name="cavalier-resort"> | ||
Latest revision as of 03:42, 15 June 2026
The Cavalier Hotel, formally known as The Historic Cavalier Hotel and Beach Club, is a landmark luxury hotel situated at 42nd Street and Atlantic Avenue in Virginia Beach, Virginia. After two decades of planning and public advocacy for a world-class beach resort, the Historic Cavalier Hotel was officially completed in 1927, reflecting the prosperity and extravagance of the Roaring Twenties. The hotel was a major element of the development of Virginia Beach as a resort area and is known colloquially as the "Grand Dame of the Shore." Perched on a grassy hill overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, the Cavalier has welcomed ten U.S. Presidents, countless celebrities, and distinguished guests from around the world over the course of its nearly century-long history. The hotel was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2014 and, following an $85 million restoration, reopened in 2018 as part of Marriott's Autograph Collection. As of 2025–2026, the property has been the subject of a proposed sale to an out-of-state operator, a development that has drawn significant attention from Virginia Beach city officials and the public.[1][2]
Architecture and Design
The seven-story Cavalier Hotel is one of Virginia Beach's most prominent landmarks and a surviving example of the opulent approach to luxury travel that characterized the first half of the twentieth century. Constructed during the boom years of the 1920s with funds raised by public subscription, the hotel was positioned to compete with more established resorts elsewhere in the commonwealth and along the Atlantic Seaboard.[3]
Designed by the Norfolk firm of Neff and Thompson, the building is distinguished by the use of Jeffersonian details on its exterior, tying it visually to some of Virginia's most esteemed architectural landmarks. The approach to the hotel's northern entrance is framed by serpentine walls that mimic the enclosed gardens of the University of Virginia, and the entrance pavilion is a variation on the east portico of Monticello. The three wings of the Y-shaped building, crowned at their juncture by an ornamental cupola, provide guest rooms with maximum exposure to the ocean.[3]
The Cavalier's Jeffersonian-inspired architecture, typified by exquisite plaster ornamentation atop columns, was designed in the spirit of Monticello, with additional references to Woodlawn and the Lawn at the University of Virginia. The decorative water tower that crowns the building draws inspiration from the work of James Gibbs, particularly his design for the Church of St. Mary-le-Strand at Aldwych in London.[3]
The building itself was constructed with over half a million bricks — reported to be the most ever used on a single building in Virginia at the time of its construction. What distinguished the Cavalier from its competitors was the character of its oceanfront setting, which at the time was sparsely developed. Even today, the hotel maintains a commanding position on a large, landscaped hill that slopes down to the beach across Atlantic Avenue.[4]
When it first opened, the Cavalier offered amenities that were extraordinary for the era. Guests were provided with private bathrooms in every room and access to an indoor swimming pool filled with fresh ocean water. Guest rooms included bathtubs with a dedicated handle to draw a seawater bath, and sinks with an ice water spigot connected to a large wooden ice-filled tub on the hotel roof. The hotel's radio station, WSEA, was also notable for being the first to broadcast a congratulatory message from the mayor of Norfolk to pilot Charles Lindbergh following his transatlantic flight from New York to Paris.[4]
History
Opening and the Golden Age
On April 4–9, 1927, a ceremonious grand opening for the Cavalier was held. The Ben Bernie Band played for the festivities, and the hotel received congratulatory telegrams from Sophie Tucker and Al Jolson.[4]
On Memorial Day weekend in 1929, shortly before the stock market crash, the Cavalier Beach Club opened on the oceanfront at the base of the hill below the hotel. The Beach Club became a celebrated venue for big band performances, drawing acts such as Benny Goodman, Cab Calloway, Glenn Miller, Lawrence Welk, Frank Sinatra, and Ella Fitzgerald. Between 1930 and 1950, the Cavalier became one of the most active contractors of big bands on the East Coast. A severe hurricane struck the Virginia Beach Oceanfront in 1933, heavily damaging the Beach Club, but the structure was rebuilt and performances resumed.[4][5]
Since its opening in 1927, the hotel has hosted ten American presidents, including Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry Truman, and John F. Kennedy, along with a wide range of celebrated guests. Notable visitors have included Bette Davis, Elizabeth Taylor, Muhammad Ali, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra, Mary Pickford, and Will Rogers. American writer F. Scott Fitzgerald and his wife Zelda are reported to have taken extended vacations at the Cavalier; Fitzgerald has been associated with the hotel in popular accounts of his creative life, though the claim that The Great Gatsby was directly inspired by his stays there is difficult to verify independently.[4][5]
The hotel also gained a measure of notoriety from the death of Adolph Coors, founder of the Coors Brewing Company, who died after falling from a window on the hotel's sixth floor. The precise circumstances of his death have remained a subject of speculation.[6]
World War II and Postwar Years
The hotel operated successfully through 1942, when it was commandeered by the United States Navy for use as a radar training center during World War II. It was returned to its owners in 1945, but the years of military occupation had taken a toll on the property, and much of the prewar clientele did not return to the hotel in the postwar period. The building was converted into a private club for much of the 1950s and 1960s before reopening to the public for a period.[3]
Competition from motels that catered more directly to middle-class families diminished the business of older resort hotels throughout the postwar decades. In response, a modern companion property, the Cavalier Oceanfront, was constructed in 1973–1974 across Atlantic Avenue, adjacent to the site of the Beach Club, by the firm of Shriver and Holland and Associates. The original hotel was renamed the Cavalier on the Hill, and with the opening of the Oceanfront property, the historic building was temporarily closed. It reopened to guests in 1976 and the two properties operated together as complementary destinations for the next several decades.[3]
In 2002, both the Cavalier on the Hill and the Cavalier Oceanfront underwent multi-million dollar renovations. However, by 2014, both hotels had closed, and the Cavalier Oceanfront and Beach Club were demolished.[4]
Restoration and National Register Designation
By 2012, the historic Cavalier Hotel was facing the prospect of demolition. Community advocacy and governmental action ultimately preserved the structure. The hotel was accepted to the National Register of Historic Places in 2014, a designation that recognizes properties of significance to the history of their community, state, or nation based on age, integrity, and historical importance.[7]
Following the National Register listing, Gold Key | PHR Hotels & Resorts undertook an $85 million, two-year restoration of the property in partnership with the architecture firm Hanbury Evans Wright Vlattas + Company and general contractor W.M. Jordan Company. The project team worked to shore up the structure while preserving historically significant interior elements, including the Hunt Room fireplace, cementitious terrazzo floors with brass dividers, marble columns, decorative molding, and ornamental cornice work. Such was the level of care required that windows on the first floor were removed from their frames and repaired by hand.[8]
The restored Cavalier Hotel officially reopened on March 7, 2018, with a "Grand Reveal" event at the property. Affiliated with Marriott's Autograph Collection, the reimagined hotel features 85 guest rooms, including 23 suites. Six of those suites, designated Heritage Suites, were designed to reflect the personalities of the partners who led the hotel's revival.[9]
The restoration project received several professional recognitions. Engineering News Record MidAtlantic gave the project an Award of Merit in its 2018 Best Projects awards program in the Renovation/Restoration category. ABC Virginia recognized the project with three Excellence in Construction Awards, and the Hampton Roads Association for Commercial Real Estate awarded it an Award of Excellence in the Best Renovated or Historic Rehabilitation Project category.[8]
Current Operations and Amenities
The Cavalier Resort today encompasses the restored historic hotel building alongside a broader collection of accommodations, dining, and recreational facilities at the Virginia Beach Oceanfront. The historic hotel itself features 85 guest rooms, a luxury spa, a craft distillery, multiple dining venues, a resort-style pool, a rebuilt Beach Club with semi-private beach access, and approximately 9,885 square feet of event space. The hotel retains 21 of the original 350 acres of surrounding land, a portion of which has been developed as an exclusive private townhouse community.[10][11]
One of the most distinctive features of the restored Cavalier is its on-site distillery. The Tarnished Truth Distilling Company operates within the hotel as the first craft distillery to be located inside a hotel in the United States. The distillery produces bourbon, rye, vodka, and gin, several of which have received industry recognition since the hotel reopened.[4]
The hotel's dining options include the Hunt Room Tavern, the Raleigh Room, and Becca, a farm-to-fork restaurant offering American cuisine sourced from local ingredients. The name Becca is a reference to Pocahontas, who took the name Rebecca upon converting to Christianity — a nod to the hotel's original signature restaurant, which bore the name Pocahontas.[10]
The rebuilt Beach Club features an infinity pool overlooking the Atlantic Ocean along with a poolside bar and grill, available to hotel guests and residents of the adjacent private community. The hotel's historic indoor pool has also been restored and now offers poolside service, private cabana rentals, and lounge areas. The SeaHill Spa includes a Himalayan salt room among its amenities.[9]
The hotel's front lawn, a prominent feature of the property's landscaped grounds, serves as a venue for outdoor events including receptions and seasonal programming. During the summer months, the Cavalier hosts outdoor movie nights as part of its Beach Blanket Cinema series, with free admission, complimentary popcorn, and an outdoor bar available for attendees. The property also welcomes the Virginia Symphony Orchestra for occasional outdoor concerts.[11]
Proposed Sale (2025–2026)
In 2025, reports emerged that the Historic Cavalier Hotel and the broader Cavalier Resort complex could be sold to an out-of-state operator. The Virginia Beach Development Authority and Virginia Beach City Council became involved in reviewing the proposed transaction, with city officials characterizing the potential sale as a significant development for the oceanfront district. The sale would include the historic Cavalier Hotel and neighboring properties at the Virginia Beach Oceanfront.[1][12][2] As of early 2026, the transaction remained under review, and no final agreement had been publicly announced.
See Also
- Virginia Beach Boardwalk
- National Register of Historic Places in Virginia Beach
- Virginia Beach Tourism
References
<references> [4] <ref name="cavalier-resort">
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Template:Cite web
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- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Template:Cite web
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- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Template:Cite web
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Template:Cite web
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Template:Cite web
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web