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1675-25 Raleigh Hotel ./ • 280 of 711, 5 Terms mh RALEIGH OPERATORS HOPE TO RESURRECT SHORE CLUB 02/02/1995 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1995, The Miami Herald DATE: Thursday, February 2, 1995 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 6 LENGTH: 38 lines SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: RAFAEL LORENTE Herald Staff Writer RALEIGH OPERATORS HOPE TO RESURRECT SHORE CLUB John Cashman and Ken Zarrilli, who have turned the Raleigh Hotel into one of Miami Beach's most popular and most photographed buildings, have taken over the troubled Shore Club Ocean Resort. The two hope to resurrect the property after a disastrous four-month stint as a gay-oriented hotel. Former operators Dennis Doheny and partner Patrick Reilly opened the hotel in September as Miami Beach's largest gay-oriented resort. The two are best known for their successful nightclub Paragon, which they sold for $1 million last year to the singer formerly named Prince. The new operators, who took over Friday, aren't sure what direction the hotel will take, but it will be different. "It certainly will not be an all-gay concept, " Cashman said. Doheny and Reilly had a rocky time running the Shore Club, 1901 Collins Ave. , as a gay resort. They closed temporarily in November to restructure finances and gave up control of the property for good almost two weeks ago. They were $200,000 in the hole when they opened, according to Doheny. They also owed a significant amount of money when they closed to people who worked on the building's renovation. Now, it's up to the new operators to get the 226-room hotel back to profitability. Cashman wouldn't talk about details, but said he and his partner worked out a long-term deal with the Berkowitz family, who own the Shore Club, Saxony and Crown hotels. "It's a wonderful Deco property," Cashman said. "We're going to treat it with the same reverence that we treat the Raleigh." Cashman said as many as three of the four bars installed during the $4 million renovation of the 1940 hotel done by Doheny and Reilly will be taken out. He also said the hotel's rooms and hallways would eventually be redone. "Taste is in the eye of the beholder, " said Cashman, whose company did extensive renovations on the Raleigh, a 1940 building at 1775 Collins Ave. TAG: 9501080018