Our House

The success story of three ship propellers at a 3-star hotel
A collage-style illustration shows the steamship Cap Polonio with its three red and white funnels above the Hotel Cap Polonio building, which is surrounded by waves. Green foliage and the sky frame the illustration.
Historical black-and-white photograph of the façade of the Hotel Cap Polonio. The façade bears the inscription “Hotel Cap Polonio”.Exterior view in oblique angle of the picturesque Hotel Cap Polonio, built in Art Nouveau style in 1908, with a white façade, green filigree half-timbering, red decorative brick elements, large lattice windows and a round bay window on the left corner of the ground floor. The red serif lettering ‘Hotel Cap Polonio’ and ‘Rolin’ can be seen on the façade. The modern and simple hotel extension is visible on the left-hand side.
A black-and-white photograph from the early days of the hotel shows the historic ballroom of the Hotel Cap Polonio with a dance floor and tables set under a gallery on the left and right. The stage curtain is open, and heart-shaped lighting is located on the back wall.The historic ballroom of the Hotel Cap Polonio with laid tables, crystal chandeliers and a dance floor, as well as a stage and gallery. It can be used for banquets, weddings, birthdays, exhibitions, theatre performances, concerts, balls and other events. Much of the furnishings come from the passenger steamship Cap Polonio.
Black-and-white photograph of the Rolin Restaurant from the hotel's early days. Tables set with elegant chairs and white tablecloths. The walls are panelled in dark wood and the ceiling is painted white. The original panelling comes from the dining room of the passenger steamship Cap Polonio. Other furnishings from the Cap Polonio can also be seen, such as a large wooden cabinet and decorative elements.Two tables set with elegant tableware in the Rolin restaurant with white tablecloths, glasses, cutlery and pink roses. The walls are panelled in dark wood and the ceiling is painted white. The original panelling comes from the passenger ship Cap Polonio. In the background, you can see more tables and a large wooden cabinet, which also belonged to the Cap Polonio.
Black-and-white photograph of a narrow, elongated room in the Rolin restaurant from the early days of the hotel. Tables covered with white tablecloths, elegant chairs and upholstered benches. Oval mirrors hang on one wall. The curtains on the windows of the opposite wall are drawn.Room prepared for a conference at the Hotel Cap Polonio with large windows, round tables with white tablecloths, glasses and napkins. Brown chairs surround the tables.
A German postage stamp depicting the luxury passenger ship Cap Polonio, namesake of the Hotel Cap Polonio, with three red and white funnels against an orange background. The stamp, with a value of 50+25, was issued in Berlin in 1977.

Why a luxury steamer dropped anchor in Pinneberg

“Crazy people are moving in!” One was certain, back in 1935 in Pinneberg, at the birth of the Cap Polonio Hotel and Restaurant. It could only be the mentally misguided who had parts of the furnishings of the luxury liner once built for the Hamburg-South American Steamship Company transported 65 kilometres from Pinneberg harbour and installed in the building of what was then the Hotel Stadt Hamburg. But there was a method to the supposed madness and the crazy idea has become an institution that is known and loved far beyond Pinneberg. What the three-screw fast steamer with a length of more than 200 metres and a speed of 19 knots was granted at sea for only 13 years, has now lasted on land for more than 75 years. The Hotel Cap Polonio, with the much-lauded furnishings of the Cap Polonio’s first-class dining room, conveys the splendid atmosphere of the golden twenties.

Why the “Cap Polonio” finally dropped anchor in Pinneberg is an exciting story. Conceived as the flagship of Hamburg-Süd in service to La Plata, she was for years the largest ship in the merchant fleet based in the Port of Hamburg and was praised as the most modern and beautiful ship in South America service anywhere.

The not quite so magnificent older ones were called “Cap Finisterre” and “Cap Trafalgar”. On 25 March 1914, the “Cap Polonio” was launched by Blohm+Voss in Hamburg.

But the classic beauty soon became a victim of the world economic crisis. She was not even granted a decent maiden voyage. There was a war on and the floating palace was seized by the Imperial Navy. All luxury was removed. Instead of serving for pleasure, the ship, disgraced under the false name “Vineta” and armed with four 15-centimetre and four 8.8-centimetre guns, had to operate as an auxiliary cruiser against the enemy during the First World War. The steamer was not up to this task. By order of the Reichstag, the “Cap Polonio” was sent back to Blohm+Voss for a beauty treatment, and Cinderella became the pretty queen again in 1916.

The technical data of the “Cap Polonio”: Construction number 221 at Blohm+Voss. Size: 20,576 GRT (comparable to the “Fedor Dostojewskij”), 201.8 metres long (comparable to the “Europa”), 22.1 metres wide. Propulsion: two III expansion engines and one exhaust steam turbine, three propellers. Maximum power 20,000 hp – 19 knots. Passengers: 1st class 356, 2nd class 250, steerage 949 passengers. Crew: 460 persons.

Finally, on 16 February 1922, the ship left the port of Hamburg for the first time under the command of Captain Ernst Rolin on a triumphal voyage bound for South America. Onlookers lined up in rows of four in front of the shipping company’s agency in Buenos Aires to get tickets for a tour of the fast steamer. The visit was worthwhile. The winter garden with zones for smokers and non-smokers was considered a sight to see. The ship’s own nursery with greenhouses on the boat deck supplied the flowers for decoration and sale to travellers. The covered swimming pool between the first and second funnels was generous in size.

By 1926, the renowned steamer had carried 52,000 passengers and earned a net profit of 2.1 million marks. After eight years of service, however, it had to make way for the one knot faster “Cap Arkona” in 1927.

It served for a short time as a trade fair ship, made a few pleasure trips to Scandinavia and finally set off on its last voyage to the scrapping yard in Bremerhaven in the summer of 1935.

At this point, the third and most enduring phase of the “Cap Polonio’s” life began: Her sophisticated chic became a legend. Even today, picture postcards of the elegant luxury liner circulate in collectors’ circles and at flea markets. In 1977, the German Federal Post Office issued a stamp showing the impressive hull of the ship. Otto Olbers, a hotelier from Pinneberg and for years the chief engineer on the “Cap Polonio”, set up a monument to the floating beauty of the world’s oceans on land. He bought the inventory of the first-class dining room at auction, used it to expand his accommodation business and henceforth called it “Cap Polonio”.

Olbers and his wife Christine established the tradition of a noble hotel that is and will remain a family business to this day. The house, which reveals a unique cultural heritage of German maritime history, was a matter of the heart for him, as it was for his descendants. It took a whole year for the valuable rosewood wall panelling, leather wallpaper, brass lamps and radiator panelling as well as furniture shipped across the Elbe and Pinnau rivers to reach their final destination. The ship’s bell and one of the luxury cabins of the “Cap Polonio” can also be admired in the Maritime Museum in Bremerhaven.

Hildegard and Hermann Harder were the second generation to run the house – since 1986, the third generation has been Ute Harder-Lobe, Michael and Marlies Ostermann (née Harder), Roland and Heike Harder and Kay and Kristiane Wulf (née Harder) – in 2004, Marc M. Ostermann took over the kitchen management and Philipp Harder-Lobe the reception area.

 

Source: Pinneberg im Wandel, by: Marion Girke; Medien-Verlag Schubert

Why you will love the Hotel Cap Polonio

House with maritime charm
Distinguished by warm hospitality, tradition, modern amenities and personal service.
Free WiFi
WiFi is available in all areas and is free of charge.
Restaurant & Bar
The ROLIN restaurant awaits you with regional cuisine and Mediterranean accents. Deck 48 is a bar and bistro at the same time.
Wellness in the surroundings
Spa Karibik – Relaxing time out link
Zeitlos – Pampering wellness link
Salzhuus – Wellness with a difference link