The hotel lost money for the third consecutive year.
With the absence of the springs, the new hotel soon lost appeal and was closed down.
The 193-room hotel has been losing millions of dollars a year, according to the company's annual report.
Though thousands of homes were without electricity for days, in some cases weeks, most large hotels and businesses never lost power.
In 1909 the hotel lost its licence to sell alcohol.
The hotel lost its roof for the second time in March 1937, during another cyclone.
Last year, hotels lost an average of $429 on each room before taxes.
Daddy says it's just a malicious story made up by people who'd like to see the hotel lose business.
He said his hotel had lost 35 to 40 percent of its September business.
Inside the park, the two hotels that are usually open in the winter have lost $800,000 so far.