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1675-1 Eden Roc mh HOTEL RESTORED TO '50S GLAMOUR 11/19/1999 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1999, The Miami Herald DATE: Friday, November 19, 1999 EDITION: Final SECTION: Local PAGE: 5B LENGTH: 66 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: The Eden Roc Hotel (a) SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: By PETER WHORISKEY, pjwhoriskey@herald.com HOTEL RESTORED TO '50S GLAMOUR Miami Beach's strip of once-glamorous '50s hotels and apartments is under siege. Two have been demolished in recent months. They're outdated, some developers say, and as cheesy as big-finned Cadillacs. But this mind-set may be changing. On Thursday, the Eden Roc hotel, built in 1955, celebrated the reopening of its lobby, which has been restored to the original design precisely because the owners believe in the appeal of '50s swank. Once upon a time, after all, the Eden Roc was hip. People lined up for shows by Frank Sinatra, Eartha Kitt, Johnny Carson, Nat King Cole and Barbra Streisand. Restoring the hotel's original look - an only-in-America, anything-is-possible collision of modern architecture and Italian Renaissance - might just be good for business. "What brought South Beach back to life is the preservation of the Art Deco hotels - we realize that, " said Randy Griffin, the marketing director for the hotel. "This is such a classic property; there is a lot of history here, and you can't buy that new. " The 349-room hotel was bought in 1998 by New York's Blackacre Capital Group in partnership with Destination Hotels & Resorts, a Denver company that owns and manages 23 four-star properties in North America. RAT PACK MEMORIES The restoration of the Eden Roc has raised the hopes of a small group of preservationists who have begun to call for the protection of Miami Beach's '50s-era hotels and apartments, the legacy of a time when the Rat Pack roamed Collins Avenue. Despite preservationists' sign-waving, slogan-chanting rallies, however, developers in recent months have taken down the Bel-Aire and the Royal York Hotel, two prominent Miami Beach buildings of the time. The city's leading preservation organization, the Miami Design Preservation League, praised the Eden Roc effort, noting that the owners of the Sherry Frontenac have undertaken a similar effort, too. "It's superb, " said Heidi Siegel, preservation director for the Miami Design Preservation League. "There has been a lot of attention given to making it accurate. We hope that other building owners follow their example. " LAPIDUS HONORED The hotel's original architect, Morris Lapidus, now 96, was the guest-of-honor on Thursday. He announced he was "delighted" with the work, a clear improvement after years of renovations unsympathetic to his original vision, a blend of freewheeling geometry and historical touches, like the bronze statues that ring the lobby's sunken ring. "I didn't like the last renovation, " Lapidus said. "Too colorful. Too clever. Too gaudy. I didn't do gaudy - I did elaborate. " In the renovation, the white glossy paint that had been slathered on the lobby's elephantine oval columns was stripped to reveal the rosewood originals. Partitions that had closed off a wing of the lobby were removed. And a clunky baluster that had been clumsily added to a floating staircase has been replaced with a more elegant glass rail. The renovation does not, however, recreate the elaborate chandelier that once dominated the lobby. It would have cost more than $30,000. "More than anything else, this was about taking out the junk that had been added over the years, " said Julio Grabiel, a principal of Spillis Candela DMJM, the Coral Gables architecture firm that did the restoration. The other members of the design team were Carlos Prio-Touzet, Emilio Bonilla, Carlos Fleitas and Donna Tew. Said Grabiel: "We wanted to reveal the original. " CAPTION: ORIGINAL LOOK: Miami Beach's Eden Roc Hotel as it appeared in the 1950s. The renovation seeks to create the original design, minus the elaborate chandelier that once dominated the space. KEYWORDS: TAG: 9911200325 9 of 41, 2 Terms mh CLASSIC MIAMI BEACH HOTEL SOLD 12/11/1997 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1997, The Miami Herald DATE: Thursday, December 11, 1997 EDITION: Final SECTION: Business PAGE: 1C LENGTH: 47 lines SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: By DALE K. DuPONT Herald Business Writer CLASSIC MIAMI BEACH HOTEL SOLD DEAUVILLE WILL BE RENOVATED A storied Miami Beach hotel that has played host to guests ranging from The Beatles to political conventioneers has been sold to a joint venture that promises to bring back its luster. The Deauville will be run by the Davidson Hotel Co. and Prudential Real Estate Investors, which will put more than $15 million into renovations. That's on top of an estimated purchase price of $30 million for the 544-room property at 67th Street and Collins Avenue. "We want to restore it to its old days of glory" and operate it as a luxury hotel, David Perella, the new general manager of the second-largest lodging in Miami Beach, said Wednesday. The Ramada name will stay for a while, but the hotel -- owned for the past 40 years by the Cohen family -- may get a new brand as it goes after more meeting and local catering business. The hotel expects to increase the 255-person work force by at least 100 after renovations are completed next November, said Perella, who came from the Kansas City Airport Hilton. Memphis-based Davidson manages 28 hotels and is in joint ventures on 10 properties with Prudential, a division of Prudential Insurance that recently sold the Hyatt Regency Coral Gables and the Miami Airport Hilton. Prudential also just bought Loehmann's Plaza in Aventura. Davidson's other South Florida hotel is the Palm Beach Hilton. "All the major hotel companies have been on the Beach and exploring their potential opportunities, " said Scott Berman, director of Coopers & Lybrand's hospitality consulting group in Miami. The Deauville has had landmark status from the time the original hotel opened in the mid-1920s, boasting the largest swimming pool in the state. The pool was the site of the 1938 Olympic diving trials and was preserved when Sam Cohen rebuilt the hotel in 1957. Cohen, whose sons sold to the joint venture, at one time owned outright or partial interest in some of the Beach's other well-known hotels including the Eden Roc, Sherry Frontenac and Sans Souci. The Beatles taped their TV premier with Ed Sullivan at the Deauville in 1964, and the Democrats lodged many of their national convention delegates there in 1972. Charles Brent, the hotel's director of marketing, said Alan and Joel Cohen will concentrate on their other Beach properties, the Saxony and the Crown. TAG: 9712130237 12 of 41, 2 Terms Transfer complete. Press [RETURN] to return to Menu: 0 Type first letter of feature OR type help for list of commands FIND MOD PRT S-DB DB OPT SS WRD QUIT ❑QUIT Save options? YES NO GROUP ONO ❑Connection closed by foreign host. 1- SII 2- SAVE 3- DUMP 4- Exit :4