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❑ mh94 LOEWS WINS BATTLE TO BUILD BEACH HOTEL 07/22/1994
THE MIAMI HERALD
Copyright (c) 1994, The Miami Herald
DATE: Friday, July 22, 1994 EDITION: FINAL
SECTION: BUSINESS PAGE: 1C LENGTH: 65 lines
SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: ANTHONY FAIOLA Herald Business Writer
LOEWS WINS BATTLE TO BUILD BEACH HOTEL
Soon to be towering 16 stories over the sands of South Beach, a curvaceous
new landmark hotel meant to turn back the clock on Dade County tourism.
The 830-room Loews Hotel Miami Beach, of a scope and grandeur not seen on
this oceanside town in more than two decades, won a fierce contest Thursday
before city commissioners for more than $70 million in city incentives.
The hotel would become Dade's second largest after the 1,266-room
Fontainebleau Hilton on Miami Beach. Construction is slated to begin early
next year, and should be completed in 1997. The commission also voted
unanimously to begin negotiations for up to $10 million in loans to help build
a 265- room Sheraton Suites Resort proposed by four Miami black businessmen.
The measure was part of Miami Beach's promise to lure a black hotelier to the
island after the end of Dade's black tourism boycott.
"This is a historic moment for Miami Beach, " Mayor Seymour Gelber said
after unanimous votes on both projects. "We've suffered through some bad
times, but if anything is a sign of our new prosperity, this is. "
The Loews Hotel, a blue and white modern deco palace, will be situated on
a city-owned oceanfront site at 16th Street and Collins Avenue. The project,
which incorporates a renovation of the historic St. Moritz Hotel, is expected
to buoy the island's vast but money-losing convention center.
The next step: City-hired negotiators begin crafting a final contract
with the winning partnership between the 14- property Loews chain, controlled
by the powerful Tisch Family of New York, and Forest City Ratner Cos. , a huge
real estate developer led by the Ratner family` of Cleveland. In addition to
the city's incentives, the group also needs to line up additional financing to
complete the $165.7 million project.
If for some reason those negotiations break down, waiting in the wings
will be the other finalists: No. 2 Peabody Hotels and No. 3 Hyatt Hotels.
"This is the foundation for a new era in Miami Beach tourism, " said
Jonathan Tisch, Loews president. The Tisch family developed the Americana
Hotel, now the Sheraton Bal Harbour. The Ratners built the Clevelander Hotel
on Ocean Drive.
"The Tisch and the Ratners have returned to Miami Beach at a time when
the world has rediscovered it, " Tisch said. "This a major statement that the
beach is back."
Of the three finalists, the Loews proposal demanded the most from the
city -- $70.8 million in loans, land and a parking garage. It also took the
longest to return the money -- 25 years, compared to five to ten for the other
two. However, in the end, commissioners based their decisions on appreciation
for the sublime design of the Loews building, and faith in the corporate
history of the Tisch and Ratner families.
"It's a project that would respect the neighborhood in what has become
the popular place for the world, " said Nancy Liebman, Miami Beach
commissioner. "A unique blending of the old and new, it contains a sense of
scale that respects the historic nature of this community. "
The new black-owned hotel, to be constructed directly south of the Loews
project, calls for the renovation of the Royal Palm and Shorecrest hotels, and
construction of a hotel tower fronting the ocean. The project is being put up
by four local entrepreneurs: American Express Vice President Peter J. Calin,
Texaco attorney Jerry D. Bailey, Miami investor Marvin Holloway and Eugene
Ford Jr. , chief executive of Miami-based Argus Construction.
On Thursday, along with the vote, came a flurry of hopes that the two
hotels would help spark new era in the region's stagnant hotel industry.
"The key is not today, but tomorrow, and the long term impact this is
going to have on the town, " said Stu Blumberg, president of the Miami Beach
Hotel Resort Association, who built the last major hotel on Miami Beach, the
Hilton Plaza (now the Castle Beach) back in 1967.
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mh94 TOP PLAN FOR S. BEACH RESORT HAS DECO SPIRIT 06/30/1994
THE MIAMI HERALD
Copyright (c) 1994, The Miami Herald
DATE: Thursday, June 30, 1994 EDITION: FINAL
SECTION: FRONT PAGE: lA LENGTH: 92 lines
ILLUSTRATION: photo: The Loews (HOTEL-color) , The Grand Hyatt (HOTEL
--color) , The Peabody (HOTEL--color)
SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: ANTHONY FAIOLA And PETER WHORISKEY Herald Staff Writers
TOP PLAN FOR S. BEACH RESORT HAS DECO SPIRIT
16-STORY HOTEL PRAISED FOR ITS DESIGN
A proposal shaped by the spirit of the Art Deco historic district won the
first round of a competition to design, build and operate a landmark
convention center hotel in South Beach.
The 830-room hotel, expected to open a new era in South Florida tourism,
won the high marks for both architectural design and corporate backing.
Miami Beach is offering up to $60 million in incentives to build a hotel
at 16th Street and Collins Avenue to anchor its convention center. It will be
the first major hotel to be built on Miami Beach in two decades.
The front-runner is a partnership between Loews Hotels, controlled by the
powerful Tisch Family of New York, and Forest City Ratner Cos. , led by the
Ratner family of Cleveland.
Both are familiar with South Florida. The Ratners developed the historic
Clevelander Hotel on Ocean Drive. The Tisch family -- including CBS Chairman
Laurence Tisch -- built the Americana Hotel, known today as the Sheraton Bal
Harbour.
"We feel this project, located in one of the most well- defined historic
districts in the country, is going to turn Miami Beach into one of the most
pre-eminent resorts for business and leisure travelers in America, " said
Jonathan Tisch, president of Loews, who even dressed up as a woman in the
company's presentation video in the hopes some laughter would sway support
Loews' way.
The selection committee recommendation will be forwarded to the City
Commission, which will make the final choice later this month. The panel
ranked a proposal for an 800-room Peabody Hotel, backed by the Belz family of
Memphis, second best.
In third place is a proposal backed by Miami-based Plaza Development
Corp. and Cuban-American leader Jorge Mas Canosa for an 800-room Grand Hyatt
Hotel. The Hyatt proposal was designed by Alan and Morris Lapidus, legendary
beach architect and designer of the landmark Fontainebleau Hilton and Eden Roc
hotels.
The committee also recommended approval for a $10 million loan to help
build a 265-room Sheraton Suites Hotel proposed by four Miami black
businessmen. The measure was part of Miami Beach's promise to lure a black
hotelier to the island after the end of Dade's black tourism boycott. This
partnership includes American Express Vice President Peter J. Calin, Texaco
attorney Jerry D. Bailey, Miami investor Marvin Holloway and Eugene Ford Jr. ,
chief executive of Miami-based Argus Construction.
After two days of highly charged hearings, where five bidders
presented flashy videos, charts -- including a virtual reality tour through
one proposal -- the decision rested on two main criteria. Design and
economics.
"I think the design came first in our minds, " said Arthur Courshon,
chairman of the citizens selection committee and chairman of Jefferson
National Bank in Miami Beach. "The Loews proposal fit into the community the
best. "
The Loews design team, John Nichols and Bernard Zyscovich, won unanimous
praise for reflecting the surrounding Art Deco influence and for its scale. At
16 stories, it is the shortest of the competitors.
Said committee member Vincent Scully, an eminent architectural historian:
"It's a wonderful example of using history in the present. There is a sense
that the architects care about Miami Beach. "
Economics, including marketing strategy and corporate structure, also
weighted heavily. The selection committee chose the Loews chain because it was
smaller. They felt a smaller outfit would mean that the landmark Miami
property would garner more attention from corporate headquarters. Loews
manages a chain of 14 hotels worldwide.
Yet according to a last-minute review by city consultants, the Loews
proposal actually requested more incentive money from Miami Beach coffers than
the two runners-up.
The $165.7 million Loews proposal asked the city for a total of $70.7
million, in the form of land, city-bond backed financing, and the construction
of a parking garage across the street. It will take 25 years before the city
is completely paid back. `
The $132 million Peabody proposal asked the city for a total of $61
million, also in land, financing and a parking garage. Under this proposal,
the city would get its money back within 10 years.
Finally, the $130.5 million Hyatt proposal asked the city for a total of
$60.5 million. Under this proposal, the city would get its money back in six
years.
The selection committee narrowed the field down to three
from five bidders. It wasn't an easy process, and it was not without
controversy.
Neil Fairman, president of Plaza Development Group, backers of the Hyatt
proposal, complained that the city's financial consultants -- Arthur Andersen
& Co. and Bear Stearns & Co. -- did not provide comprehensive economic
comparisons between the different proposals.
"Clearly, they didn't do their job, " Fairman said. "All the proposals
compared apples and oranges in their numbers, and it was the job of those
consultants to do clear the fog for the committee. They didn't do that. "
KEYWORDS: ART DECO HOTEL MB COST
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mh94 GIANTS VIE TO BUILD GRAND HOTEL ON BEACH 03/08/1994
THE MIAMI HERALD
Copyright (c) 1994, The Miami Herald
DATE: Tuesday, March 8, 1994 EDITION: FINAL
SECTION: FRONT PAGE: 1A LENGTH: 96 lines
ILLUSTRATION: photo: Ross PEROT, Jorge MAS CANOSA; map: Proposed
hotel site in Miami Beach
SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: ANTHONY FAIOLA Herald Business Writer
GIANTS VIE TO BUILD GRAND HOTEL ON BEACH
PEROT, MAS CANOSA AMONG HOPEFULS
Ross Perot wants to build it. So does Jorge Mas Canosa. Then toss in about
every major name in the tourism business from Ritz-Carlton to Hyatt Hotels.
They're all vying for the right to build the first new grand hotel on
Miami Beach in 26 years.
Late Monday, Miami Beach city officials unveiled six proposals in a
worldwide search for developers to build a convention center hotel on 5.5
acres of prime waterfront land at 16th Street and Collins Avenue. The
proposals ranged drastically -- from a 50-story Ritz Carlton Tower to 15-story
Loews Hotel.
The new hotel would be Dade's second largest after the 1,266-room
Fontainebleau Hilton.
After a decade of unsuccessful attempts to lure developers, Miami Beach
lured them with an offer of more than $60 million in incentives -- including
land and city-backed bond financing.
They had one thing in common: All came with promises of
helping return Miami Beach tourism to its glory days.
"Miami Beach is going through a great renaissance, " said Morris Lapidus,
91, the legendary architect who designed the Fontainebleau Hilton, the
interior of Lincoln Road Mall and other Miami Beach landmarks. Lapidus and his
son Allan are part of a group that includes Hyatt Hotels; Mas Canosa, the
Cuban- American leader and head of Church and Tower, a phone cable company;
and Plaza Development Group, a Miami-based real estate development firm.
"This is the heart of the Miami Beach we're talking about, " Lapidus
said. "The correct hotel here could help redefine the city. "
The Hyatt/Lapidus proposal, a $127 million hotel with 800 rooms, would be
like a "modern Fontainebleau" with neon lights illuminating each level of the
hotel. The city asked for proposals for more than one hotel site -- and it
got them. Two additional bids came for two other sites in the city.
One group, backed by media mogul Eugene Jackson, proposed the $45 million
renovation of the Eden Roc Hotel into a four- star hotel similar to its early
days. In 1972, Jackson started the nationwide Black Radio Network, and is now
forming a new cable station called the World Africa Network. The bid includes
a partnership with the current owner, Lloyd Goldman.
Another group backed by four Miami black businessman proposed a 280- to
300-room hotel adjacent to the primary convention hotel, on property now
occupied by the Royal Palm and Shorecrest Hotels. The entrepreneurs include
American Express Vice President Peter J. Calin, Texaco attorney Jerry D.
Bailey, Miami investor Marvin Holloway and Eugene Ford Jr. , chief executive of
Miami-based Argus Construction.
But the largest minority proposal came from Atlanta-based H.J. Russell &
Co. , one of the biggest minority-owned development companies in the nation.
The company, which built the Georgia Dome and is building the new Olympic
Stadium in Atlanta, proposed a $130 million Marriott Hotel with 756-rooms.
This firm is also a potential bidder for building Northwestern High School
project.
Ross Perot's .Hillwood Development Corp. is also proposing a Marriott
Hotel. Perot wants to build a larger hotel, with 900 rooms, for an estimated
cost of $117 million.
The proposal with the largest scope comes from Ritz- Carlton, to be built
by Pacific International Construction Inc., one of the largest developers on
Miami Beach. Pacific International has built the Excellence, The Sterling, and
is beginning construction on Sunset Harbour that will front Biscayne Bay.
The Ritz-Carlton plan includes a 50-story tower built in a modern deco
style, adjacent to a refurbished St. Moritz Hotel. The total project would
cost $119 million, and include 900 rooms.
Another proposal teams up the Belz family of Memphis, owners of
factory outlet stores across the nation, with South Beach restaurateur Tom
Billante, owner of Mezzanotte on Washington Avenue, and the Peabody hotel
chain. Together, they want to build a $131 million hotel with 800 rooms.
The Tisch and Ratner families put forward a proposal that includes Dade
builder Armando Codina as a key consultant in the development of the property.
The Tisch and Ratner families, two powerful business clans with longtime
ties to Dade real estate, joined together in a $135 million bid -- the highest
priced of all six -- for an 830-room hotel under the Loews hotel chain.
For at least five years, the city-owned land could be leased for next
to nothing. Besides that, Miami Beach officials are willing to kick in more
than $45 million worth of city- backed bond financing, and possibly a new
hotel parking garage.
The package from the city also sets aside an additional $10 million for
erecting a smaller hotel built by an African American developer, thus
satisfying one of the demands of the black tourism boycott that ended last
spring. This money is included, regardless of whether or not a minority-owned
firm wins the bid for the larger convention hotel.
Over the next two months, a citizens panel, to be created by the Miami
Beach Commission, will review the proposals and interview applicants. The
panel is expected to issue a recommendation to the commission, which will make
the final selection sometime in May.
Among the criteria that will distinguish each bid: Up front equity
investments, size and design, proposed amenities, management and financing
plans, and name recognition from major chains.
Said Miami. Beach City Manager Roger Carlton: "This leaves no doubt that
Miami Beach is ripe for development of a convention hotel. We were overwhelmed
by the quality of the bids. Regardless of who is chosen, I don't think there's
any way the city can lose."
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mh94 POWERFUL FAMILIES BID FOR BEACH HOTEL 03/01/1994
THE MIAMI HERALD
Copyright (c) 1994, The Miami Herald
DATE: Tuesday, March 1, 1994 EDITION: FINAL
SECTION: BUSINESS PAGE: 1C LENGTH: 65 lines
ILLUSTRATION: photo: The AMERICANA HOTEL
SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: ANTHONY FAIOLA Herald Business Writer
POWERFUL FAMILIES BID FOR BEACH HOTEL
CASINO NOT REQUIRED, THEY SAY
The Tisch and Ratner families, two powerful business clans with longtime
ties to Dade County real estate, are joining together in a bid to build a new
800-room convention hotel on South Beach.
The partnership unites the Tisch family of New York -- including CBS
Chairman Laurence Tisch and his nephew, Loews Hotels President Jonathan Tisch
-- with the Ratners of Cleveland, owners of Forest City Ratner Cos. , a
national real estate giant with $2.5 billion in holdings.
The high-powered families are the latest to show interest in constructing
a convention center hotel on 5.5 acres of land owned by the city of Miami
Beach at Collins Avenue and 16th Street.
Besides the Tisch/Ratner group, 55 other investors have indicated an
interest in the project by requesting bidding packages from Miami Beach city
officials. Included in the fray are Donald Trump, Bally Manufacturing Corp.
and Hyatt Hotels.
The big names underscore the lucrative nature of such a hotel, especially
at a time when many are betting on casinos in Florida to boost convention
business on Miami Beach -- where no new hotels have been built in more than
two decades.
Jonathan Tisch said Monday, however, that the companies were interested
in the convention center hotel project -- casinos or not.
"Our numbers indicate that this hotel will be successful with or without
casino gambling, " Tisch said in a phone interview from New York. "We have a
history of doing business in Miami, and the need for a large convention hotel
in Miami has never been stronger. "
Neither the Tisch or Ratner families are strangers to South Florida.
In 1957, the Tisch family developed the famed 717-room Americana Hotel.
The family sold the property, now the Sheraton Bal Harbour, in 1972. The
family was an initial investor in the Deering Bay residential project on Old
Cutler Road with local developer Armando Codina, and it owns a stake in the
Beacon Centre in West Dade.
The Ratners, meanwhile, built the 70-room Clevelander Hotel on Ocean
Drive in 1938 -- at a cost of $75, 000. They sold it in 1985 for $1 million.
The family also worked with a committee on Mia`mi Beach to develop a
revitalization plan for Lincoln Road Mall lastyear.
Today, the Ratners own one of the nation's largest real estate
development companies. Among their recent projects: the 4.2
million-square-foot Metrotech Center in Brooklyn. The company also intends to
build a massive retail/entertainment mall in Atlantic City that will include
a hotel and casino.
The bid from Tisch/Ratner to build on Miami Beach could have an edge on
the others.
Miami Beach is offering up to $60 million in land incentives to any hotel
developer, but the private investment needed to construct the hotel is high,
hovering around $100 million.
The families, however, say their proposal includes an undisclosed amount
of equity fronted by the families, and a letter from an financial institution
willing to fund a first mortgage.
Next Monday, both Jonathan Tisch and Bruce C. Ratner will fly into town
to present their proposal to Miami Beach officials in person. In the deal, the
Ratners would build the project, and the Tisch family would operate it under
the Loews name.
outlines
TISCH CREATION: The Americana Hotel, now the Sheraton Bal Harbour, is
shown in 1957. The Tisch family developed the hotel.
TAG: 9401160026
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❑ mh97 NEW 17-STORY HOTEL ON S. BEACH 11/23/1997
THE MIAMI HERALD
Copyright (c) 1997, The Miami Herald
DATE: Sunday, November 23, 1997 EDITION: Final
SECTION: Neighbors MB PAGE: 2 LENGTH: 102 lines
ILLUSTRATION: photo: Jonathan Tisch and Pat Riley and Chris Riley, Heather
Grosz and Marlene Post and Eddyse Kessler, Ken DeFilippo and Jerry Merlo and
Raymond Marin, Yvonne Gomez and Chris Perry and Susan Heyer
SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: BEA MOSS Herald Staff Writer
NEW 17-STORY HOTEL ON S. BEACH
PASSES MILESTONE IN CONSTRUCTION
Loews Hotels President and Chief Executive Officer Jonathan Tisch recently
helped with the topping off tradition of placing a tree on top of the new
17-story tower of Loews Miami Beach Hotel at Collins Avenue and 16th Street.
Joining him to mark the milestone in the project's development as it
progresses toward its October 1998 opening were former Miami Beach Mayor
Seymour Gelber , members of the City Commission and more than 200 business and
civic leaders.
During the ceremonies, Miami Heat Coach Pat Riley and his wife Chris
announced they would be co-chairmen of the benefit committee for the gala
grand opening in March 1999.
Hadassah leader
Heather Grosz of Miami Beach recently returned from Israel where she took
part in Hadassah's Young Women's Mission. Selected for her outstanding
leadership skills, Grosz joined 27 other young women from across the country
for an intensive program of seminars, study and sightseeing that examined the
social, intellectual and political issues facing Israel today.
Selected from among hundreds of nominees, Grosz, a communications
coordinator, is a member of the Or Chadash Chapter of the Greater Miami Region
of Hadassah. She serves as administrative vice president of her chapter.
Bistro opening benefit
Local dignitaries gathered at the recent opening of P.F. Chang's China
Bistro in North Miami Beach to feast on Chinese cuisine and support the
efforts of South Florida Food Recovery.
. Throughout its opening week, the restaurant donated a dollar from every
check to the organization whose mission is to feed Florida's hungry and
homeless. Approximately $2, 000 was raised.
Museum benefit
The 39th annual Orange Bowl Luncheon and Fashion Show in December will take
on a South Beach flair this year and feature fashions by the Lincoln Road
boutique Fashion Arena.
In years past, the fashion extravaganza has taken place at various
locations including the Radisson Mart, the Crowne Plaza and the Biltmore
Hotel, said show chairwoman Anne Cruxent of Coral Gables. This year the event,
sponsored by Ocean Drive magazine, returns to the Fontainebleau Hilton, where
it began in 1958.
The show and luncheon is the largest, all-volunteer fund-raiser for the
Miami Museum of Science and Space Transit Planetarium and averages about 800
guests each year.
A social hour starts it off at 10:30 a.m. Dec. 29, with the luncheon and
show following. Tickets range from $100 per person ringside to $65 for general
seating. Bus service aboard American Bus Lines will be available from the
museum to the Fontainebleau for $10 per person.
For more information or tickets, call 285-5500 any time.
Volunteer honors
For 23 years, the Senior Companion Program sponsored by the Miami-Dade
County Community Action Agency has provided volunteer opportunities for
seniors to assist frail elderly and adults with special needs, including those
with Alzheimer's disease.
Those volunteers will be recognized for their dedication at a luncheon in
their honor starting at 11 a.m. Dec. 2 at the Wyndham Crowne Plaza Hotel, 1601
Biscayne Blvd.
Anyone interested in finding out more about the Senior Companion Program
can call program director Cristina Oliva at 347-4851 any time.
Fund-raiser for kids
A fund-raising party to benefit the Jackson Memorial Foundation will take
place Dec. 2 at Morton's of Chicago, The Steakhouse, which recently opened a
Miami branch at 1200 Brickell Ave.
Guests will be able to sample Morton's fare, which will include hot and
cold buffet offerings.
Proceeds from the evening will help fund the expansion and modernization of
Jackson Children's Hospital at the University of Miami/Jackson Memorial
Medical Center.
Tickets for Morton's gala opening are $75. For more information or tickets,
call the foundation, 585-7260, any time.
If you have news for this column, please send it to Bea Moss, Friends and
Neighbors, Neighbors, 7300 N. Kendall Dr. , Suite 760, Miami, FL 33156 or fax
to 671-4350. Pictures cannot be returned. If you have questions, call Bea Moss
at 671-4341 and leave a message. She returns all calls.
HOSPITAL WORKER HONORED Yvonne Gomez, center, of Carol City, a buyer in the
materials management department at Parkway Regional Medical Center since 1988,
won the hospital's Employee of the Month Award for October. Chris Perry, left,
Parkway director of human resources, and Susan Heyer, director of materials
management, presented Gomez with her award.
cutlines
OPEN FOR BUSINESS: At the opening of P.F. Chang's China Bistro in North
Miami Beach are Councilman Ken DeFilippo, manager Jerry Merlo and Councilman
Raymond Marin.
cutlines
HOME AGAIN: Heather Grosz, left, of Miami Beach recently returned from
Israel where she took part in Hadassah's Young Women's Mission. With her are
Hadassah officials Marlene Post, center, and Eddyse Kessler.
cutlines
BRANCHING OUT: On hand for the tree-topping ceremony at Loews Miami Beach
Hotel are Loews executive Jonathan Tisch, left, and Heat Coach Pat Riley and
wife Chris.
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mh97 ITS SAVING GRACE IS PRINCESS GRACE FAMOUS CASINO IS OVERRATED, B 11/23/199
THE MIAMI HERALD
Copyright (c) 1997, The Miami Herald
DATE: Sunday, November 23, 1997 EDITION: Final
SECTION: Travel PAGE: 1J LENGTH: 149 lines
ILLUSTRATION: color photo: Monte Carlo Casino (n) , Princess Grace's grave
site (n) ; photo: view of Monaco palace (a) ; map: Monaco
SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: JAY CLARKE Herald Travel Editor
DATELINE: MONACO-VILLE, Monaco
ITS SAVING GRACE IS PRINCESS GRACE FAMOUS CASINO IS OVERRATED, BUT OTHER SITES
WIN OVER VISITORS TO MONACO
Come to Monaco if you will, but don't say I didn't warn you.
You'll find plenty to interest you, but this little principality ruled by
the Grimaldi family for 700 years isn't all peaches and cream.
The famous Monte Carlo Casino, for instance, is about as stodgy a place as
you'll ever see. Architecturally, there's no denying it's a Belle Epoque
marvel, and it's true it was all glamour and glitter for the scenes filmed
there for a James Bond movie. But in real life, gambling there is about as
exciting as rolling dice in a funeral home, and I frankly resent paying the 50
francs (about $9) that is charged just to enter the place.
Then there's Jimmy'z Disco, a trendy nightspot frequented by the Beautiful
People. Order a beer and they'll present a bill for 200 francs, about $38.
Even by French Riviera standards, that's astonishing.
And lining the narrow streets of Monaco-Ville, the old town atop a rocky
headland, is a depressing collection of souvenir shops, fast-food spots and
touristy boites. A motion simulator ride sits in the center of one little
plaza -- a totally inappropriate sight amid the venerable buildings atop
Monaco's —Rock. "
But once you stand before the simple marble slab in the cathedral marking
the grave of Princess Grace, the American movie star who married Monaco's
ruler, Prince Rainier III, your view of Monaco softens. Every day, fresh
flowers are placed there. Somebody cares.
Monaco is a tiny place, as everybody knows, and expensive and sometimes
haughty as well. But here and there amid its forest of high-rises lie some
treasures.
When you stroll through the nearby Oceanographic Museum, you'll see some of
the finest marine exhibits in the world. Check out the 65-foot-long skeleton
of a whale harpooned by Prince Albert I, Rainier's great-grandfather, and the
diving gear developed by the late oceanographer Jacques Cousteau, who was a
director of the museum for three decades.
. Founded in 1910 by Albert, a monarch with a scientific mind,the institution
also displays a replica of the laboratory he maintained aboard his 1911-1915
marine exploration ship, the Hirondelle II.
Real, working palace
The Royal Palace, commanding a stunning view of the harbor and its
mini-Manhattan landscape, is another fascinating place. Its state apartments
are open to the public in the summer and early fall; the private rooms, where
Prince Rainier lives, are always off limits.
Entering a real, working palace is a treat, even if the portions you see
are mainly for show. In the throne room, the four corners of the marble floor
are inlaid with crowns. The throne sits under a velvet canopy with the
Grimaldi coat of arms -- a shield of vermilion diamonds -- above it. It is
here, presumably, that Monaco's 5,000 citizens meet their prince on state
occasions. Rainier's actual office is another room whose floors also are
inlaid with crowns; his desk is a 17th Century piece rimmed in gilt.
From an upstairs loggia, visitors can look into the courtyard, whose walls
are covered with frescoes. More frescoes are found inside the palace, along
with hundreds of paintings (one of them a lovely 1976 portrait of Princess
Grace) and elegant, centuries-old furniture.
Obtained through ruse
These are works collected in the 700 years since Rainier's ancestor,
Francois Grimaldi -- called variously Francois the Spiteful or Francesco the
Cunning -- seized the Rock from the Ghibellines through a ruse: Disguised as
monks, he and his cohorts gained entrance into the castle, then massacred the
garrison.
Somewhere along the line, the ambitious Grimaldis expanded their holdings
to include a sizable chunk of coastline and also attained royal status, as did
another commoner who reportedly is one of Rainier's distant relatives,
Napoleon Bonaparte. That relationship is the reason you'll find a Museum of
Napoleonic Souvenirs in a separate wing of the palace. Among its exhibits: the
French emperor's monocle and hat.
From the square outside the palace, visitors can watch the changing of the
guard daily at 11:55 a.m. At other times, a single guard paces back and forth
in front of the palace entrance, creating a photo opportunity for legions of
visitors. Another marvelous photo can be made from the parapet next to the
palace, from which one gets a panoramic view of nearly all the principality's
482 acres.
Look down on Monte Carlo
From that vantage point, it's easy to spot the bulge in the coastline that
is the other great gathering spot in Monaco for tourists. Here, in the section
of the principality known as Monte Carlo, are found the convention center and
Loew's Hotel, and behind them, the Monte Carlo Casino, Hotel de Paris, Cafe de
Paris and the gardens of the Place de Casino.
The famous Monte Carlo Casino was built by Charles Garnier, designer of the
similarly rococo Paris Opera, and it also incorporates an opera house, the
Salle Garnier. If you want to enter the casino -- whether to gamble or simply
to look at the elegant structure itself -- present your passport and pay 50
francs. (Not nearly as elegant, but vastly more fun, is the large casino in
the Loew's Hotel -- and you aren't charged admission. )
Just as elaborately fanciful as the casino in design is the Hotel de Paris,
whose rooms in season go for rather princely sums -- as high as $600 a night.
It's known also for its restaurant, Alain Ducasse's Louis XV, generally
regarded as one of the two best on the French Riviera. (The other is Roger
Verge's Moulins de Mougins in the town of Mougins, above Cannes. ) A meal at
the Louis XV, with wine, can run $200 a person.
Reasonable meals available
Dining in Monaco doesn't have to be that expensive, of course. Nor does it
have to be in rococo surroundings. Still upscale but pleasantly informal is La
Saliere, where you can sample inventive Italian appetizers on an awninged
terrace overlooking the old port. On the Rock, the Castleroc restaurant
opposite the palace offers Monegasque specialties such as onion tarts and
stockfish; it's open only for lunch. And homesick Americans can feast on
hamburgers and T-bone steaks in Stars 'N' Bars, a sports bar, or go Tex-Mex at
The Texan and come away with a T-shirt.
Other worthwhile sites:
* The National Museum: This contains a remarkable collection of more than
400 dolls, puppets and mechanical toys.
* Exotic Gardens: High above the city, this preserve boasts more than 7,000
succulents and cacti. You can also explore the Observatory Grottos, ancient
dwellings of cavemen.
* Port of Monaco: Strolling around the U-shaped harbor in season, you can
gaze upon some of the largest and plushest yachts in the world.
* Museum of Antique Automobiles: Prince Rainier's private collection of 85
beautifully restored vintage cars, including many European models not often
seen in the United States, such as a 1903 De Dio Bouton, a 1911 Renault
Torpedo and a 1913 Panhard Levassor.
* Other gardens: Monaco has several lovely gardens. Princess Grace Rose
Garden boasts more than 4,500 rose bushes in its 10 acres in the Fontveille
district. Blooms reach their peak from April through June. The pleasant
pathways of Saint Martin Gardens wind through Aleppo pines, olive trees and
agaves on the Rock. The Japanese Garden in Monte Carlo has gentle hills,
waterfalls, sandy beaches and lakes. At the Place de Casino, lovely formal
gardens complement the turn-of-the-century buildings.
IF YOU GO
Location: Monaco occupies a tract of coast three miles long and a half-mile
wide (482 acres total) close to the Italian border on the French Riviera.
Political structure: A hereditary monarchy.
Currency: The French franc.
Major events: International Circus Festival, January/February;
International Tennis Open, April; International Grand Prix, May; World Music
Awards, May; International Fireworks Festival, July/August; Red Cross Gala
charity ball, August; Monaco Classic Week (vintage sailboats and cars) ,
September. Cultural events peak in the winter.
Information: Monaco Government Tourist Office, 565 Fifth Ave. , New York,
N.Y.10017; (800) 753-9696, or mgto@monacol.org for e-mail. Web site is www.
monaco.mc/usa/
cutlines JAY CLARKE / /Herald Staff PANORAMA : Almost all of the tiny
principality of Monaco is visible from the parapet next to the royal palace,
atop the 'Rock. '
Photos by JAY CLARKE / /Herald Staff ORNATE AND SIMPLE: Monte Carlo Casino,
left, was designed in ornate Belle Epoque style by Charles Garnier, who also
was the architect for the Paris Opera. The casino also houses an opera house.
At right, Princess Grace's simple grave, engraved ' 'Gratia Patricia, " lies
inside the Monaco Cathedral. It is always bedecked with flowers.
KEYWORDS: PROFILE MONACO STATISTIC HISTORY
TAG: 9711260139
4 of 29, 6 Terms
mh97 LOEWS HOTEL GREETS 10/29/1997
THE MIAMI HERALD
Copyright (c) 1997, The Miami Herald
DATE: Wednesday, October 29, 1997 EDITION: Final
SECTION: Business PAGE: 7B LENGTH: 111 lines
ILLUSTRATION: photo: A palm is placed on the rooftop of the Loews Hotel under
construction (a) , Jorge Gonzalez (a)
SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: By DALE K. DuPONT Herald Business Writer
MEMO: see ABOUT LOEWS at end of text
LOEWS HOTEL GREETS
MANAGER WITH MISSION
After a giant crane lifted a coconut palm atop the concrete skeleton of the
Loews Miami Beach, Jorge Gonzalez had just one year left to make sure the
800-room luxury hotel opens and operates flawlessly.
But the $135 million Loews marking a construction milestone Tuesday is more
than just a high-profile project with a boss who's good at logistics.
Gonzalez, the hotel's managing director, is easing himself into a community
that's counting on the hotel to do everything from increasing convention
business and employment to raising industry service standards. It already has
been given credit for helping spark neighborhood renovation and development
and has a healthy number of advance bookings.
"I think service is the biggest challenge we have, " Gonzalez said.
But it's nothing new to a man who spent 20 years with Hyatt before joining
Ritz-Carlton in 1992 to open its hotel in Cancun the following year.
The pitfall in opening a property the size of Loews is finding the proper
staff to run it, said Jim Hisle, managing director of the Statler Hotel at
Cornell University -- training ground for the school's renowned hospitality
program. —It will be a big reflection on how well the hotel operates and on
Miami Beach itself. "
Too often, many say, hoteliers are just looking for warm bodies to fill a
vacancy. Successful operators spend a lot of time and effort on employees.
Loews made an effort to get Gonzalez, whose Lincoln Road office gives him a
view of the Collins Avenue hotel -- though he doesn't oversee the
construction.
He was happily working at the Ritz-Carlton in Naples when he got a call
about the Loews. He wasn't interested. A week later, he got another call. He
thought about it some more.
"It's a unique project. There's no other South Beach in the United
States, " Gonzalez said. —I don't think there are many other destinations as
hot as this, business wise. "
And Gonzalez, 43, had made a reputation for him self. Raised in the hotel
business in Mexico where his father helped start Balsa Hotels, he thought
about being an architect, but dropped out after one year in college. "My true
love is the hotel business, " Gonzalez said.
He started with Hyatt as a management trainee in Houston, where he loaded
and unloaded supplies and had a chain-smoking boss with a Texas drawl so thick
he had to ask a co-worker to interpret the orders.
Other jobs with Hyatt took him from Puerto Rico to Northern California.
Then he joined Ritz-Carlton before coming to Loews a year ago.
"He's a very fair individual. Good ethics. A hard worker. He has a lot of
empathy for employees, but he also has a good business head, " said Joe
Kordsmeier, a former Hyatt executive who has known Gonzalez for more than 20
years.
Loews has a reputation for hiring well, said Kordsmeier, who's now getting
ready to reopen the Beacon Hotel in South Beach. "They don't go after you
unless you have something on the ball. "
The project marks the return of Loews' Tisch family to South Florida, where
it opened the Americana, now the Sheraton Bal Harbour, in 1956.
Loews, a large holding company whose interests include CNA Insurance,
Lorillard Tobacco and Bulova, has 14 hotels and resorts. It also is planning
two luxury hotels in Orlando.
"Their philosophy is to become a community partner. And Jorge is a
reflection of their philosophy, " said Stu Blumberg, head of the Greater Miami
& the Beaches Hotel Association.
Gonzalez is on the boards of a number of organizations, including the state
and local hotel associations, the Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau
and the Miami Beach Chamber of Commerce.
The industry is counting on the new Loews, just blocks from the Miami Beach
Convention Center, to attract big conventions.
A Loews sales staff already has started booking business: 150, 000 group
nights through the end of 1999 -- about half of what's available.
'That's excellent, " said Scott Berman, director of Coopers & Lybrand's
hospitality consulting group in Miami. And the Loews expects to run more than
60 percent full its first year.
The sales force is finding people who have never been to South Florida or
haven't been in years. "Pure fun, " Gonzalez said. "This is what South Beach
is. "
But he also knows travelers will forget the fun if they aren't treated well
at their hotel.
"Training just doesn't happen the first three days you hire somebody, " he
said. "It has to be constant. "
An employee has to feel good about coming to work on a day-to-day
basis, " he said. Little things matter. Employee restrooms must be as clean as
those for guests.
That approach yielded a turnover rate of 30 percent at the Ritz-Carlton in
Cancun. The industry averages 46.8 percent turnover among non-management
employees and 26.8 percent for management, according to the American Hotel &
Motel Association.
Training pays off, Gonzalez said. Turnover can cost a company $5,000 to
$7,000 per employee.
"It's an industry where people move a great deal. And Loews doesn't have a
reputation for people jumping regularly, " Berman said.
The Loews is starting to hire executives. It also will participate in
initiatives designed to get people off welfare and expects to hire 25 to 50
workers through the program.
' 'It's a responsibility we should all have, " Gonzalez said.
noweb ABOUT LOEWS The Loews Miami Beach Hotel on Collins Avenue at 16th
Street was topped off Tuesday and is scheduled to open October 1998:
* It will open with 600 employees and hire 200 more in season.
* This is the first major hotel to be built in Miami Beach in 30 years.
* 700 rooms will be on floors four through 17 in the main building; 100
will be in the art deco St. Moritz, just to the south of the main building.
The Fontainebleau Hilton has 1,200; Loews has more rooms than the 600-plus at
Sheraton Bal Harbour, Intercontinental, Hyatt Regency and Biscayne Bay
Marriott.
* Published rates are $200-$385 but will vary.
KEYWORDS: PROFILE STATISTIC COST
CUTLINES
HARLES TRAINOR, JR. / HERALD STAFF TREE TOP: A PALM IS PLACED ON THE
ROOFTOP OF THE LOEWS HOTEL UNDER CONSTRUCTION IN MIAMI BEACH.
TAG: 9710311133
5 of 29, 43 Terms
mh97 BUSINESS NOTES 10/09/1997
THE MIAMI HERALD
Copyright (c) 1997, The Miami Herald
DATE: Thursday, October 9, 1997 EDITION: Final
SECTION: Neighbors MB PAGE: 27 LENGTH: 84 lines
ILLUSTRATION: photo: Enriques Fefer and Roger Sonnabend and Alan Sonnabend
look over a model of the Sonesta Sasson Resort Hotel & Condominiums (n) ,
Arthur Hertz (n) , Joan B. Stein (n) , Teena Weiss (n)
SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: Herald Staff
MEMO: BUSINESS NOTES
BUSINESS NOTES
Local marine contractor and Miami resident Richard A. Bunnell, president of
Bunnell Foundation, Inc., has been appointed by the Miami River Marine Group
and the South Florida Water Management District as the Miami River industry
representative to the newly-created Miami River Study Commission.
Darrin Hall has been named assistant vice president of Oral Health
Services. He holds a bachelor's degree from the University of Miami and
resides in Miami Beach.
Arthur Hertz, chief executive officer of Wometco Enterprises, has been
named chairman of the Public Health Trust board of trustees for the 1997-98
fiscal year. The Public Health Trust is an independent governing body
concerned with Jackson Memorial Hospital.
Sanford B. Horowitz a partner at the firm of Goldstein Schechter Price
Lucas Horowitz & Co. , P.A. , Certified Public Accountants and Consultants, has
been appointed to the Executive Board of Directors of the Young Presidents
Club of Mount Sinai Medical Center. He is a graduate from the University of
Georgia and native South Floridian.
Christine Kurtz-White, founding director of the Women's Business
Development Center at Florida International University, has been named to the
advisory board of the Women's Business Enterprise National Council in
Washington, D.C.
Taryn Schneider has been named director of public relations for the new
Loew's Miami Beach Hotel, which opens in the fall of 1998.
Joan B. Stein, CPA, has been promoted to manager in the tax department at
Berkowitz Dick Pollack & Brant. She will specialize in complex tax issues for
small businesses. She has been with the firm since 1994. She lives in Miami
Beach.
Teena Weiss, a resident of Miami Beach, has been named the president of the
Miami Beach Kiwanis Club, a community service organization focusing on
children's issues.
The Sanford L. Ziff Jewish Museum of Florida has announced its newly
nominated members for the Museum's board of directors. The new additions
include Fran Gaynor, Ron Krongold, Phyllis Miller, Robert Segall, Elliot Stone
and Stanley Wakshlag.
Sonesta Sasson Resort Hotel & Condominiums Miami Beach located at the site
of the former Sasson Hotel at Collins Avenue and 20th Street, is a product of
a recent merger between Sonesta Hotels & Resorts and owner/developer,
Sasson-Fefer Group. The resort is to be opened in the fall of 1999.
The Surfcomber Hotel, at 1717 Collins Ave. , has been sold for $8.3 million
to Chisholm Properties South Beach, Inc.
The Institute of Real Estate Management, South Florida Chapter No. 19, is
holding a seminar 11:45 a.m. Oct. 16 at the Miami City Club, 55th Floor, First
Union Financial Center, 200 S. Biscayne Blvd. Andrew Dolkart, president of
Miami Economic Associates, Inc. , will discuss Dade Revenue
Sharing/Incorporation: Impact on Business. Cost is $20 with reservations, $25
at the door and includes lunch. Call 932-4626.
Business notes are compiled by Zahra Bhimani. Send all items to Business
Notes, c/o Neighbors, 407 Lincoln Rd., Suite 9-D, Miami Beach, FL 33139 or fax
them to 532-3009. If the item is about an employee award, promotion, award or
a new hire, please include the area in which the person lives. Also include a
phone number where you can be reached.
CAPTION: GOING UP: Enriques Fefer of the Sasson-Fefer Group, Roger Sonnabend,
chairman of Sonesta International Hotels Corp. , and Alan Sonnabend General
Manager of Sonesta Beach Resort, look over a model of the Sonesta Sasson
Resort Hotel & Condominiums set to open in the fall of 1999.
TAG: 9710100368
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Miramar apartment complex into condominiums, the first of what an executive
predicted would be a string of Florida acquisitions.
Elad Group Florida bought the Villaggio apartments for $43.5 million, said
Karen Kondell, the Steel Hector lawyer who represented Elad.
Tshuva subsidiaries already have large real estate holdings in Quebec,
Montreal and New York, and recently purchased the BellSouth office tower in
Jacksonville. "I think there are many more [Florida purchases] to come, "
said Elad Florida President Shaoul Mishal.
- DOUGLAS HANKS III
ADVERTISING
MARKETING AGENCY AIMS TO DEFY NORM'
Black Sheep Miami, a new marketing agency, joins the city's advertising
ranks.
The shop, billing itself as a boutique agency for the U.S. Hispanic market
and Latin America, launched with three clients: Voy Communications, Saf-T-Pay
and American Express.
It aims to "defy the norm to help clients stand out. "
The agency's two divisions - advertising and direct marketing/customer
loyalty - are overseen by four partners: Dan Austin, president; Alejandro
Berbari, vice president/creative director; Sebastian Galbusera, design and
interactive creative director, and Paulo Claussen, vice president.
- CHRISTINA HOAG
REAL ESTATE
SOUTH BEACH HOTELS TO BECOME ONE
South Beach's Edison and Breakwater hotels would be combined into a single
property and possibly converted into a hotel-condo hybrid by a Chicago-based
developer.
The Falor Cos. , which is transforming Islamorada's Cheeca Lodge and Coconut
Grove's Mayfair hotel into hotel-condos, has signed agreements to buy the
adjoining boutique hotels, said President Robert Falor.
The sale is scheduled to close in about two months. Executives at both
hotels confirmed the separate agreements.
- DOUGLAS HANKS III
MEDIA
NICKELODEON, MATTEL HIT MARKETING DEAL
Miami Beach-based Nickelodeon Latin America has reached a marketing deal
with toy-giant Mattel that will feature Mattel-branded programming on the pay
TV channel and associated websites.
"Teaming two powerhouse brands that cater to kids is a powerful
combination and is one we think will distinguish both brands from the clutter
in today's overly saturated kids market, " said Melissa Quinoy, senior vice
president of international marketing partnerships Latin America for MTV
Networks.
Nickelodeon Latin America will begin airing Mattel's animated series My
Scene, based on Mattel's My Scene dolls, in the fall.
- CHRISTINA HOAG
RETAIL
JEWELER FEATURES STARS IN AD CAMPAIGN
Levinson Jewelers wants to encourage consumers to "Live Life . . . .
Levinson Style. "
The Plantation jeweler's new advertising campaign features 11 South Florida
celebrities - including Miami Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino, Florida Marlins
outfielder Jeff Conine, restaurateur Steve Martorano and hotelier Linda Gill -
making a statement about their personality through the Levinson jewelry and
watches they wear.
- ELAINE WALKER
KEYWORDS:
TAG: 0405210500
9 of 10, 2 Terms
mhcur RITZY LODGE TRANSITIONS TO HOTEL-CONDO HYBRID 02/10/2004
THE MIAMI HERALD
Copyright (c) 2004, The Miami Herald
DATE: Tuesday, February 10, 2004 EDITION: Final
SECTION: Business PAGE: 1C LENGTH: 43 lines
SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: By CARA BUCKLEY, cbuckley@herald.com
DATELINE: KEY WEST
RITZY LODGE TRANSITIONS TO HOTEL-CONDO HYBRID
The new owners of Cheeca Lodge & Spa, the upscale Islamorada resort where
George H.W. Bush holds his annual bonefish tournament, completed the sale of
eight new condominiums last week.
The sale finishes the first leg of the conversion of nearly half of the
resort's 202 rooms into luxury condos, a strategy to recoup Cheeca's $34.5
million cost.
Cheeca Holdings, a partnership of Johnson Resort Properties and The Falor
Cos. , finalized its purchase of the 27-acre oceanfront resort from Olympus
Real Estate Partners last May. The new owners subsequently put $13.5 million
toward renovating the main lodge and converting 96 rooms into condo-hotel
units that owners can rent to hotel guests.
Despite Monroe County's strict development restrictions, Cheeca Holdings
did not need governmental approvals to execute the conversion because the
condos still function as hotel rooms, said Don Horton, Islamorada's building
services director. Cheeca Holdings pulled the necessary building permits for
the renovations, Horton said.
Opened in 1946 and home to a 1, 100-foot private beach, multiple restaurants
and a nine-hole designer golf course, Cheeca Lodge attracts the likes of the
Bush family, retired Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf and golf legend Jack Nicklaus.
During peak season, its hotel rooms fetch $550 on average per night.
Selling condo units that can be lent to transient guests in hotels is
gaining currency in the hospitality industry because it allows developers to
recoup their capital up front. The Ritz-Carlton Key Biscayne and Miami Beach's
upcoming Canyon Ranch and Fontainebleau III are among the spate of new South
Florida resorts that sell condo-hotel units.
At Cheeca, 12 eight-unit buildings inland are being refurbished with new
roofs, dark woods, marble bathrooms and plasma television sets. Each unit will
sell for between $495,000 and $1.44 million, said Robert Falor, president of
the Chicago-based Falor Cos.
With sales of the first building's eight units now complete, renovations of
the second building will begin shortly, and Falor expects all 96 units to be
sold within the next six months.
KEYWORDS:
TAG: 0402120058
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