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1675-2 Singapore Hotel Press (RETURN] to continue or type q to return to Menu: ❑ mh END OF AN ERA 11/10/1994 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1994, The Miami Herald DATE: Thursday, November 10, 1994 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 4 LENGTH: 16 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: The Singapore Hotel in Bal Harbour after the bulldozers moved in (a) MEMO: CUTLINE END OF AN ERA PATRICK FARRELL / Herald Staff After the bulldozers moved in, the Singapore Hotel in Bal Harbour went the way of many other old-time beach resorts. The Singapore, at 9601 Collins Ave., opened in December 1958. Replacing the old hotel will be the Majestic Tower at Bal Harbour, a 22-story, luxury condominium with 165 units. TAG: 9403190709 9 of 159, 4 Terms mh BIG CONDO TO REPLACE 01/04/1994 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1994, The Miami Herald DATE: Tuesday, January 4, 1994 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 1B LENGTH: 71 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Babe and Ethel Marshall (SINGAPORE HOTEL) , SINGAPORE HOTEL, bartender Tim Gable and Juan Ortiz (SINGAPORE; map: Singapore Resort Hotel SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: RAFAEL LORENTE Herald Staff Writer BIG CONDO TO REPLACE BAL HARBOUR HOTEL • The Marshall sisters of Lowell, Mass., have spent many winter days sitting by the pool of the Singapore Resort Hotel in Bal Harbour. Next winter, they'll have to stay some place else. dP The Singapore, built in 1958 at 9601 Collins Ave. , is being torn down at Vb the end of this tourist season to make way for the Majestic Tower at Bal Harbour, a 22-story luxury condominium. And with it will go a slice of South Florida history. From the red carpeting and the plastic plants in the expansive lobby to the song and dance variety show in the Bali Hai lounge at night, the oceanfront Singapore is a throwback to the days when South Florida's beaches and hotels were king. Back then, condominiums didn't rule the skyline, and visitors to the Singapore and its lounge included Sammy Davis Jr., Liza Minnelli, Joe DiMaggio and Lou Rawls. "Next year this beautiful place will go down," said Babe Marshall, who along with her sister Ethel, has been coming to Dade beaches for over 30 years. The retired classical ballet teachers probably will stay at the Sheraton Bal Harbour next year. At one time, Bal Harbour had more than a half-dozen hotels, including the Kenilworth, the Ivanhoe and others. Today there are only three: the Singapore, the Sheraton and the Seaview Hotel. The seven-story Singapore opened in December 1958, when a vacationer would pay about $20 a night in January, compared to about $100 now, said Art Bouchard, the manager. The 238-room hotel brought a South Pacific theme to the Atlantic shore. It was sold in 1960. It spent the next two years in court because of financial problems before closing in July 1962. By 1965, the Singapore was in the hands of associates of mobster Meyer Lansky. Lansky, who was considered one of the deans of illegal gambling in the area, for many years used the Singapore as his headquarters. Lansky and his entourage used to get haircuts at The Golden Razor, a barber shop in the Bal Harbour Shops across the street, said Stanley Whitman, developer and owner of the ritzy mall. After a mobster was killed in a barber shop in New York, people started to get nervous during Lansky's visits, Whitman said. Today, the Singapore is facing the fate of many other hotels in the area that have been torn down or converted to condominiums. It is falling because building condominiums is more profitable. Regardless of the reasons for the Singapore's demise, its longtime guests and employees will miss the old building. "It's a shame. They need to have more of these places available," said Linda Pennfield, a New Yorker who's been coming to South Florida for a winter break for over 10 years. "It's a shame that they're losing their hotels. " Tim Gable, the pool-side bartender, said the Singapore has been his life since he started in 1976. "It's a good life, except on rainy days," Gable said. "I feel bad that things have changed." Gable has seen many changes, including the deaths of many of his regular guests. "You get attached to some of these people because they're not only customers, they get to be family." CUTLINES: AL DIAZ / Miami Herald Staff END OF AN ERA: Bartender Tim Gable, with Juan Ortiz, has seen many changes -- including the deaths of many regular guests. 'They're not only customers, they get to be family, ' he says. AL DIAZ / Miami Herald Staff LOSING A SLICE OF HISTORY: Babe and Ethel Marshall of Massachusetts have vacationed at the Singapore for many years. KEYWORDS: SINGAPORE END TAG: 9401010580 12 of 159, 4 Terms :4