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The Hyatt Regency hotel in Dubai's old city center of Deira opened in 1980 as Hyatt's very first foray into the UAE. The hotel, which also included a serviced apartments tower for long-term guests as well as a shopping mall, was developed and initially owned by local "gold trader"-turned-entrepreneur Abdul Wahab Galadari. It introduced many "firsts" to Dubai when it opened, such as the emirate's first revolving restaurant, the first authentic Japanese restaurant, and the first ice-skating rink housed within the attached mall. The hotel was wound up by Dubai Government four years later, when his business empire fell into bankruptcy as a result of reckless investments. Today, the hotel is owned by Wasl Asset Management, a semi-governmental entity that also owns all other Hyatt properties in Dubai. The hotel consisted of a 26-floor hotel tower with 441 guestrooms (expanded from 400 during a renovation in 2014-15), as well as a 33-floor serviced apartments tower known as The Galleria, featuring 361 apartments and the namesake shopping mall on its lower floors. The hotel tower, being one of the early Hyatt Regency hotels directly influenced by John Portman's design for the original 1967 Atlanta location, was topped by a revolving restaurant called Al Dawaar (literally meaning 'rotation' in Arabic), similar to Hyatt Regency hotels in San Francisco (1973), Phoenix (1976), Milwaukee (1979), and Kansas City (1980; now a Sheraton). It had a three-level, well-lit lobby at its base. The ground floor housed the main reception and an adjacent link to the shopping mall next door. Also on this floor were The Kitchen, an all-day dining restaurant, as well as a business center, gift shops, and the main ballroom and several banquet halls. Behind the banquet halls were back-of-house areas and administration offices. The first floor was the location of the hotel's main bar overlooking the lobby, as well as the Regency Club, the executive lounge of Hyatt Regency hotels; the lounge had been moved from the original location on the floor 18 during the 2015 renovation, displacing an Italian restaurant named Focaccia. Adjacent were several meeting rooms and a Chinese restaurant called Summer Palace, the latter of which replaced an Iranian restaurant named Shahrzad. The second floor had more function rooms as well as a health club named Club Olympus (the health clubs of many Hyatt properties around the world also use this name), which included a spa, fitness center and squash court, as well as a rooftop outdoor pool, three tennis courts and a mini-golf park. The third floor was a mechanical level not served by the passenger elevators, while guest rooms occupied floors 4 to 21; floors 20 and 21 also housed three duplex penthouse suites. Floors 22-24 had storerooms and kitchens for the revolving restaurant above, while the restaurant itself was located on floor 25. The hotel's elevators had been supplied by Mitsubishi, and were some of Mitsubishi's earliest significant installations in Dubai. This video features, among those, the bank of five passenger elevators serving the hotel tower. Originally DC gearless traction models (likely TFNL), they had been modernized into newer NexWay models at the same time as the 2014-15 renovation; some original components had been retained however, such as the door track. The cabs had mahogany wood and mirrors on the walls, alongside handrails made of thick marble, as well as white and gray marble tiles laid out in a checkerboard pattern on the floors. They had round stainless steel buttons as well as an early version of LCD indicators that began to appear in late 2000s. Among the five cars, three served up to the 20th floor, while one also served the upper level of the suites on the 21st floor and the revolving restaurant. The remaining one acted as an express car to the revolving restaurant, skipping all guest floors except 18 (the former location of the Regency Club) and 21 (the upper level of the three specialty suites), and could be called separately from the other four. All guest floors were restricted, though a round-trip could be made to and from the revolving restaurant level during the opening hours of the restaurant. Their speed was alright for 21-26 floors and actually not that fast (though not excessively slow), though the short floor-to-ceiling height of the guest floors made them look faster than they actually were. They ran very smoothly, as expected of Mitsubishi's high-rise installations. Manufacturer: AG MELCO Elevator Co. L.L.C. Model name: NexWay Year of commission: 2015 Loading: 1,600kg (3,530lbs) Capacity: 21 persons Full speed: 3.5m/s (700FPM) Serviced floors: *L, 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 (cars No. 1, 4, and 5); *L, 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 25 (car No. 2); *L, 1, 2, (4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17: non-stop), 18, (19, 20: non-stop), 21, (24: non-stop), 25 (car No. 3)