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1674-2-Bennett M. Lifter A 175 Docs Pg 11 of 11 mh CASINO BACKER CONVERTING HOTELS TO CONDOS 11/19/1986 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1986, The Miami Herald DATE: Wednesday, November 19, 1986 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 1B LENGTH: 63 lines SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: DEBBIE SONTAG Herald Staff Writer CASINO BACKER CONVERTING HOTELS TO CONDOS Hotelier Bennett Lifter, who poured $265,000 into the failed campaign to legalize casino gambling, said Tuesday that he will convert the Marco Polo and Waikiki hotels in Sunny Isles to condominiums. "We're not changing to be spiteful because gambling went down," Lifter said. "We have to. Tourism is on the way out. This is the last resort before shutting down completely." Lifter is also in the final stages of selling one of Miami Beach's formerly grand hotels, the Sans Souci, 3101 Collins Ave., to a kosher hotel operator. The Sans Souci, with no mortgage, has been losing $500,000 a year, he said. Lifter converted the neighboring Versailles Hotel to a condominium three years ago and its 274 rooms are almost all sold. "I never dreamed this could happen in a community blessed by the greatest natural resources, " Lifter said. "I thought this was like a national park of tourism that would be preserved with all the embellishments a great vacation spot deserves." Half the 509 rooms in the Marco Polo and half the 342 rooms in the Waikiki will go on sale this winter for $30,000 to $40,000 a unit, $1,000 down. The Metro Commission must approve Lifter's plans. The conversion of Lifter's hotels will bring to 2,000 the number of rooms that have been sold as condos in Sunny Isles, once a hopping, neon-flashing tourist strip known as Motel Row. "I don't like to see it at all, but the reason is obvious," said Stephen Nostrand, chairman of the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau. "There are no more traditional leisure guests coming to use those facilities. We will never be what we were. The pendulum has swung toward convention business." Lifter built the Waikiki, 18801 Collins Ave., in 1955 and the Marco Polo, 19201 Collins Ave., for $11 million in 1968. "In those days, we didn't have to compete with the islands, the cruise ships, the big gambling operations," Lifter said. "Nowadays, no matter how cheap the rates are, Miami Beach is not what the people are looking for. We've been trying to tell the world we're great, but they don't accept what we say." Lifter said the Marco Polo is not failing, but it's not profitable as a hotel. Occupancy at the Marco Polo has been steady at about 65 percent, the level most hotels need to break even. Many guests, however, are retired, staying for a month or more at about $15 a day. Lifter and other hoteliers, saying gambling could be their salvation, spent more than $3 million on a drive to legalize it. Statewide, voters overwhelming defeated the gambling referendum. In Dade County, it passed by a slim margin. In Sunny Isles, it passed resoundingly, by at least 10 percent of the vote in three out of four precincts. Before November, Sunny Isles developers selling rooms as condos lured buyers with the promise that the legalization of gambling could make their • investment multiply. Lifter said he thinks there is a market for his rooms without using gambling as bait. BOP Inc. , a firm that converted 950 rooms in Sunny Isles to condos, has been successful in attracting local Latins who buy vacation rooms in motels renamed Varadero after the popular beach resort in Cuba. County law requires Sunny Isles' converted motels to maintain a front desk and lobby. Unit owners cannot live year- round in the hotel rooms. And many who buy rooms rent them out, so that the conversion does not automatically change the nature of the strip to purely residential. "I wish they'd all go condo," said Chuck Rosen, director of the Sunny Isles Resort Association. "It doesn't mean tourism is dead. It's just mutating." TAG: 8603290768 118 of 175, 2 Terms