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1675-7 Delano 140, 33 Terms mh HOTEL CHIC 06/25/1995 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1995, The Miami Herald DATE: Sunday, June 25, 1995 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: BUSINESS PAGE: 1K LENGTH: 121 lines ILLUSTRATION: color photo: Ian Schrager with the Delano hotel in the background (a) , inside the Delano room (a) ; photo: air freshner in Delano hotel room (a) , bathroom at the Delano hotel (a) SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: ANNE MONCREIFF ARRARTE Herald Business Writer HOTEL CHIC FAMOUS EVEN BEFORE IT OPENS THE DELANO BRINGS IAN SCHRAGER'S STUDIO 54 MYSTIQUE TO SOUTH BEACH Miami Beach's renovated Delano Hotel may be the most famous hotel that hasn't had a guest. The New York Times wrote about the project last year. This month, Vanity Fair devoted a six-page color spread to the hotel. Next week, the place finally opens for business. The advance publicity buzz should come as no surprise. The Delano is owned by Ian Schrager, one of New York's leading arbiters of hip. Since he founded Studio 54, Manhattan's trendy 1970s disco where potential patrons lingered outside hoping to be invited in, Schrager has been setting style for the stylish. Today, Schrager owns three Manhattan boutique hotels that vary in price and cater to Schrager's core clientele: the cool, the rich and the famous. Now he's bringing his cache to South Beach with the Delano, a small beachfront estate-style resort that Schrager calls "a theme park that's not cartoon characters, but sophistication and sophisticated people." The idea, as Schrager explains it, is to re-create the past grandeur of the Delano -- a 238-room hotel he visited as a child -- but do it with a '90s feel. Rooms are decorated in white, furniture is eclectic, children are welcome. "People never lose the desire to be part of what's going on -- that's what we sell," said Schrager, 48, who recently married and had his first child. "I want this hotel to be glamorous, but easy." To that end, Schrager has cast his employees a la A Chorus Line, personally selecting attractive, eager kids who "want to be involved in what's going on." He has staged his hotel design like "a three-act play," dark lobby, breezy outdoor porch and glistening beach and pool. And, he has brought some of New York's most chic names south. The hotel redesign is by celebrated French designer Philippe Starck. David Barton, who owns Manhattan's trendiest workout spot, is opening the Delano's David Barton Gym. Brian McNally and partner Madonna, who own 44, a New York restaurant in Schrager's Royalton Hotel, will run the hotel's Blue Door restaurant. And Rita Norona Schrager, Schrager's Cuban-born, Miami-bred wife, has designed the Delano's spa, Aqua, with friends Kelly Klein and Leila Fazel. Average room rates will be $150 a night, a pricey standard for most Miami Beach hotels. But Schrager prides himself on offering a range of rates. Delano accommodations start at $100 and rise to $450 a night for one of eight r Hollywood-style bungalows. "I think of this like I do organizing a party. You want an interesting mix of people, not guests that are too homogeneous, " Schrager said. "It's a vertical market that makes it fun. I learned in the nightclub business that it's irrelevant what people make and where they live, it's something else they have in common that's interesting. It's ball gowns dancing next to blue jeans. " If Schrager can re-create his ball gown/blue jean mystique in a white linen market, analysts say, the Delano will bring Miami a new wave of upscale New Yorkers, appeal to the luxury international market and create a hip oasis for locals. "Ian Schrager has a very distinctive position in the hotel industry and he is the kind of guy who can go after the high- end, artistic market, " said Chase Burritt, managing director of hospitality services group for Ernst & Young Kenneth Leventhal in Coral Gables. "He appeals to the crowd that are trend-setters. And there's a lot of interest among that group in a high-end, full-service destination hotel here." Still, to keep his hotel at his goal of 67 percent occupancy, Schrager also will have to draw some meeting and small convention business. "We're not talking Fontainebleau-style conventions here, " Burritt said. "We're talking Emilio Estefan getting his people together for a corporate meeting." For that kind of business, neighboring South Beach doesn't offer much. Though the hotels are notoriously hip, they also are very small and can't cater to travelers looking for a touch of luxury. None offers full-service amenities, said Scott Berman, director of hospitality for the Miami office of Coopers & Lybrand. Schrager agrees. "I make a distinction between myself and Ocean Drive because I worry about its trendiness," Schrager said. "Sure, it is a magnet like Versace, Sylvester Stallone and Madonna are magnets, but you don't invest this kind of money in a fad. " Schrager paid $4 million for the Delano three years ago and has invested $22 million in the renovation. The Delano is Schrager's first property outside New York. He bought the Mondrian Hotel in Los Angeles last year. It is slated to open next February. "I am interested in international gateway cities, " Schrager said. "I think there is a real circuit between New York, Miami and Los Angeles." Schrager also is interested in expansion. He is convinced the consumer trend toward shorter vacations will continue, and he is eager to create a small hotel chain of some 15 properties that can tap the highest end of that market. "I want to get as big as I can and still be an entertainment business." Schrager said he would like to work around a spoke-and- wheel theory, clustering hotels in adjacent markets under regional management. He is looking at San Francisco and Seattle to compliment his Los Angeles hotel; Washington, D.C., to tie into New York; as well as Houston, Atlanta and New Orleans. In Europe, London, Paris, Milan, Belgium and Dusseldorf, all fashion industry cities, are under consideration. As for South Florida, if the Delano takes off, Schrager plans to expand to Palm Beach, the Keys and maybe Naples, he said. "The Delano will be a very good test to see if Schrager can bring his panache to South Beach and transfer his New York business here," said Burritt. "If he can, Palm Beach and Key West would be great options. " Meanwhile, Schrager said, he will continue doing what he does best. "I sell magic," Schrager explains. "Not sleep." cutlines I