avatarSara Burdick

Summary

The Hotel Del Salto, known for its proximity to the Tequendama Falls in Colombia, has a storied past involving indigenous myths, a transformation into a hotel, a period of decline, and eventual conversion into a museum, all while being surrounded by tales of hauntings and tragic history.

Abstract

The Hotel Del Salto, originally a private residence, was converted into a hotel in 1928 and operated for six decades near the Tequendama Falls in Cundinamarca, Colombia. Its closure in 1990 followed a decrease in tourism and environmental degradation of the Bogota River. The site is steeped in indigenous lore, including the belief that the Muisca people would leap from the waterfall to escape the Spanish Conquest and that the gods played a role in the creation of the falls to prevent flooding. After years of abandonment and rumors of paranormal activity, the hotel was restored and reopened as the Tequendama Falls Museum of Biodiversity and Culture in 2013. Despite its new role as a museum, the hotel's reputation for ghostly phenomena, including reported screams, shadows, and apparitions, persists.

Opinions

  • The author suggests that the hotel's name, "Hotel of the Leap" or "Hotel of the Fall," is fitting given its location and history.
  • There is an implication that the hotel's haunted reputation is a mix of local folklore and reported paranormal experiences, such as screams from the waterfall and ghostly apparitions.
  • The author expresses skepticism about the claim that the treacherous road to the hotel is a result of paranormal activity, instead attributing it to Colombia's tropical climate and the common occurrence of mudslides.
  • The author indicates a personal interest in visiting the hotel-turned-museum, hinting at its continued allure despite or perhaps because of its eerie past.
  • The author provides an affiliate link for readers to support writers, suggesting a personal investment in the content and a desire to engage the audience further.

The Hotel Del Salto´s Chilling Story

The Hotel Del Salto, also known as The Tequendama Falls Hotel, is located in Cundinamarca, Colombia, approximately 30 km from Bogotá, in the Soacha department.

Credit: Arturo Aparicio The Hotel Del Salto

The Hotel Del Salto, also known as The Tequenda ma Falls Hotel, is located in Cundinamarca, Colombia, approximately 30 km from Bogotá, in the Soacha department. The hotel sits directly across from a 180-meter-high natural waterfall, Tequendama Falls.

Hotel Del Salto, when translated to English, means ¨hotel of the leap¨ and can also be translated to ¨hotel of the fall¨. The hotel was originally a residential home to an architect named Carlos Arturo Tapias; it did not become a hotel until 1928. It remained in operation for the next 60 years.

In 1950 they even started constructing an 18-floor hotel; however, the construction never began, and the original hotel became too damaged to operate. Over the years tourism decreased to the hotel, and with the increasing trash, human waste, and industrial pollution in the Bogota river the smell became unbearable. The hotel was closed in 1990.

Tequendama can be translated to ¨he who precipitated downward¨. In the Chibcha language of the Muisca people. The natives to the land before the Spanish invasion, which started in the 1500s.

They are rumors that the indigenous tribespeople jumped into the waterfall during the Spanish Conquest to avoid being killed, believing in becoming eagles and flying away. It is said that the gods would transform them mid-jump, and they would fly away. Another side of the story is that the tribe members would take prisoners and push or make them jump to death.

The Myth is that the Gods Created The Falls.

The Muiscas are indigenous Amerindian people that have inhabited the Cundiboyacense highlands and the south of the department of Santander, in the center of the current Republic of Colombia, since approximately the 6th century BC.

The God of Bochica created the falls to prevent the flooding of the Bogota Savannah. However, Bochica only showed up because it is said that the Muiscas disrespected the gods and offended Chibchacum (the previous and beloved god).

Chibchaucum flooded the Savannah; this killed people and destroyed crops when the people prayed and asked for forgiveness; that is when the God of Bochica showed up to help. The God of Bochica then created the falls to prevent the flooding of the Bogota Savannah and saved the people.

The rumors that the hotel is haunted by its past continue to this day.

The site is still the location of many suicides. It attracts those who are brokenhearted to jump to their death. However, that is not the only reason the hotel is haunted.

A story states that after 5 pm, the paranormal activity starts and stays all night. There are stories of screams from the waterfall and shadows in the area. There have also been reports of guests claiming to see apparitions inside the hotel, and sometimes guests hear voices and talking in a strange language, perhaps that of the Muisca.

Another story is also about a beautiful young socialite who was brutally murdered in one of the rooms. It is said another guest killed her, and the voices told him to do it. Her spirit has remained in the hotel, seeking vengeance, and her spirit can be seen looking out the window of where she died.

It is also said that many hotel guests fell to their death off the outside balcony, some say there were drunk and fell, but who knows the real story?

The road to the hotel is also treacherous, leading to many accidents and frequent mudslides. Some say this is paranormal activity, but I’m afraid I have to disagree with this; as Colombia is a tropical climate and we get a lot of rain here, mudslides are standard on all roads.

In 2011 the Ecological Farm Foundation of Porvenir and the National University of Colombia Institute of Natural Science started to restore the hotel. As a result, they have renamed it ¨Tequendama Falls Museum of Biodiversity and Culture¨.

In 2013 it reopened as a museum that you can now visit if you dare. I have yet to visit this historic site, however it is on my list when I go to Bogotá.

Originally published here.

References:

https://allthatsinteresting.com/hotel-del-salto

https://www.history101.com/hotel-del-salto-haunted-abandoned-hotel/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muisca

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tequendama_Falls_Museum

https://jasonrobertsonline.com/hotel-del-salto/

XOXO

S

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Colombia
Travel Writing
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