
Inside abandoned ‘Haven of Hedonism' hotel left to rot once owned by US porn baron & frequented by Saddam Hussein
THE Haludovo Hotel is one of many abandoned buildings along the Croatia's glittering Adriatic coast - but this one has a particularly scandalous past.
Amongst all the casinos and party hotels, the Haludovo was notorious for being the haven of hedonism.
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The opulent estate had 17 tennis courts, a mini football pitch and mini-golf, as well as waterski, paragliding and diving centres.
One of America's most notorious porn barons, Bob Guccione, dreamt up and funded the hotel throughout its 1970s heyday - when it was known as the palace of "Peace and Porn".
He brought in corset-clad hostesses, which he called "Penthouse Pets", who would walk the halls and serve guests champagne.
Many rich and famous names indulged in the glamour, even including Sadam Hussein - Iraq's violent dictator of 24 years.
Hussein enjoyed gold-standard service when he came walked through the doors of the Haludovo, and would always stay in the master suite.
The once-plush pad is now a graffiti-coated ruin, with crumbling walls and smashed windows.
Many curious tourists still visit the site on the island of Krk to photograph the deteriorating shell and wonder at the things that went on between the walls.
Guccione founded the Penthouse Magazine, which was the first American publication to feature full-frontal nudity.
He dreamed of building a lavish resort in Malinska, Krk, filled with luxury hotels and a grand casino, to attract a wealthy American pleasure-seekers.
He opened it up in 1972 in socialist Yugoslavia - which was largely ignored by the States.
This was a savvy business move, because casinos were untaxed.
Locals were banned from gambling in them, so they existed only to serve foreign tourists.
Guccione hoped that wealthy American tourists would flock to Krk to gamble away their money at his hotel.
He also planned to hire only locals so that he could avoid American employment regulations.
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In a 1972 interview with Radio Free Europe, Guccione vowed his resort would be the "real formula in the struggle against the cold war".
He claimed it would help relations to have Americans visiting the socialist country and enjoying themselves.
The porn king invested a whopping $45million, £296m in today's currency, into the development of the property and the casino.
One of Croatia 's most celebrated architects, Boris Magaš, was drafted in to design the complex.
The building's style was strikingly modern, and is now considered a classic example of brutalism.
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It took four years to build, and The Haludovo Palace Hotel and Penthouse Adriatic Club Casino opened in 1972 to great fanfare.
A 1972 ad for Haludovo in Penthouse magazine described the resort as a "mile-long Xanadu of glittering buildings [that] will become for international cognoscenti a premier playground for summer and winter seasons alike".
Guests gobbled 100kg of lobster, 5kg of caviar and hundreds of bottles of champagne each day of its lively first year.
The resort bloomed into a hub for global dictators and politicians, American weekend gamblers, the Yugoslav music scene, and ordinary citizens.
Who was Bob Guccione?
BOB Guccione was one of America's most famous porn publishers.
He founded Penthouse magazine, which was the first publication in the US to feature photographs of full-frontal nudity.
Guccione considered himself an artist and took many of the photos for Penthouse himself.
The trademark of his brand of soft porn was to picture the naked model looking away from the camera - which Guccione described as the "philosophy of voyeurism".
Founded in Britain in 1965, Penthouse made headlines across the Atlantic two decades later when it published unauthorised nude photos of Vanessa Williams, the first black Miss America.
The controversy forced her to give up her crown, but the issue sold nearly six million copies and helped make Guccione one of America's wealthiest men.
Guccione went on to squander a $400m fortune on unwise investments in the gambling and film industries.
He died in 2010 from cancer aged 79.

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NBC News
5 hours ago
- NBC News
He was biking across Iran and documenting it on TikTok. Then war broke out.
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'If you're stopped by police, I should just wave goodbye, because there's nothing I can do.' As of Wednesday, the State Department had advised citizens to 'leave Iran now' and to have plans that do 'not rely on U.S. government help.' Other governments have also warned their citizens to leave the region as the conflict unfolds and airspace closes. The United Kingdom has advised against " all travel to Iran." Similarly, Australia has said its citizens should not travel to Israel. Major U.S. carriers like Delta and American have offered rebooking options. Some Americans in Israel have also been able to leave the region after the state of Florida and a nonprofit organization arranged a flight to bring evacuees home. Andersen said his departure was possible only because of Reza, whose last name he did not share to protect his safety, and help from the State Department. 'I had a couple weeks there in country of really positive good experiences," he said in a phone interview. "Experiencing Iran as it should be experienced.' His first vlog from Iran, posted June 2, recorded him crossing into the country from Turkey. Not unlike other influencers whose content focuses on travel, Andersen also posted himself trying different local cuisines — including a fermented yogurt drink, a Persian omelet and kaleh pacheh, a stew made with goat head — and showing the hospitality of the Iranian people. "They tried to give us for free and said we are their guests, but we had to insist," Andersen says in one video, which Reza explains is an example of the "ta'arof," a form of etiquette practiced by Iranians worldwide. As he biked around the country, he also captured the landscape and talked to viewers about the impact of sanctions, asking in one video, "What happens when a country is cut off from the global economy for decades?" The lighthearted, fun tone of his videos began to shift one week ago while he was in Chalus. 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Andersen said that since he left the country, his thoughts continue to be with the people of both Iran and Israel and that he is also 'thinking about all the people who don't have the option to leave, like I did.' U.K.-based influencers Nadia Akhtar and Irfan Aziz, who go by the handle "fieldofvisions" on TikTok, where they have 60,000 followers, were also in Iran when the strikes began. The couple, who were unavailable for an interview, were traveling with their young son, Zakariya. They quickly realized they were among the last to enter the country on an incoming flight and soon had a front-row seat for the attacks from their balcony. "Iranian forces were intercepting Israeli drones right above us," Aziz says in a video. "That night, we realized this wasn't normal and it's nothing like what has happened before. We needed to start thinking about an exit plan." The advice they got from officials was simple: 'Get out now." Like Andersen, they said they leaned on help from their guide, Ali, to help them get out. Aziz said that at 1:30 a.m. that night, they drove with Ali "through the night despite getting zero sleep" to get to the Turkish border. "It was when we approached Tabriz, seven hours from Tehran, the reality of the situation kicked in," Aziz says in the video, adding that they saw smoke rising in different areas around them. "Locals told us five fighter jets had bombed a cement factory at 5 in the morning. Nowhere was truly safe," he added. Akhtar and Aziz described their goodbyes with their guide when they finally reached Turkey's border as 'emotional.' "Even though we had just met, he sacrificed his own family's safety, leaving them behind in Tehran to help us," Aziz says in part two of his video series about the experience. "And for this, we will forever be grateful to him. But not everyone has the privilege of leaving like we did. Millions of people just like Ali are at the receiving end of the war that has nothing to do with them."


Daily Mirror
6 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Jack Nicklaus had to apologise for text he sent to PGA Tour star after mishap
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The Herald Scotland
14 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
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Holiday traffic meant it took seven hours on the return journey so I think my next Butlin's port of call will be the closer-to-home Skegness – once I've recovered from May half term. Football and playgrounds aplenty to keep the kids entertained on site (Image: NQ) Butlin's has three UK resorts, Skegness, Minehead, and Bognor Regis. Visit Summer Holidays from £475 (£119 per person) Butlin's offers a four-night Summer Holiday break featuring Stephen Mulhern staying in a two bedroom Comfort Room from £475 on 21 July 2025. Price is based on a family of four sharing and includes live shows and activities with free flow access to the pool, unlimited fairground rides and the SKYPARK playground. Dining packages start from £24.95 per adult, per day, £14.95 per child (6-14), per day and £6.95 per child (2-5). Summer Holidays from £1753 (£439 per person) Butlin's offers a four-night Summer Holiday break featuring Stephen Mulhern staying in a two bedroom Bayside Apartment from £1753 on 21 July 2025. Price is based on a family of four sharing and includes live shows and activities with free flow access to the pool, unlimited fairground rides and the SKYPARK playground. Dining packages start from £24.95 per adult, per day, £14.95 per child (6-14), per day and £6.95 per child (2-5).