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mh RESTORED RITZ-CARLTON FITS SOBE'S GLAM ROW 01/25/2004
THE MIAMI HERALD
Copyright (c) 2004, The Miami Herald
DATE: Sunday, January 25, 2004 EDITION: Final
SECTION: Tropical Life PAGE: 3M LENGTH: 129 lines
ILLUSTRATION: color photo: The Ritz-Carlton Hotel lobby (a) , poolside at the
Ritz South Beach (a) ; photo: the original lobby of the DiLido Hotel (a) , the
DiLido lobby after a $20 million renovation (a)
SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: BY BETH DUNLOP, bdunlop@herald.com
RESTORED RITZ-CARLTON FITS SOBE'S GLAM ROW
The new South Beach Ritz-Carlton is an ode to a time and place that never
really was - a sophisticated and glamorous Miami Beach that could have existed
five decades ago.
The hotel is largely housed in the DiLido Hotel, which the late and
legendary Morris Lapidus designed in 1953 even before he created the
Fontainebleau and the Eden Roc. The DiLido was never the lavish, outlandish or
at the very least over-the-top setting that Lapidus was to become known for,
but rather a stripped-down modern building.
In more recent times, most of us have known the DiLido as the home of the
Lincoln Road Denny's. How times have changed. Now, with a $20 million
restoration and adaption, the Ritz-Carlton is the worthy cornerstone of what
one might call celebrity row, the strip of trendy and sophisticated hotels
stretching north along Collins from Lincoln Road - including the Sagamore,
National, Delano, Shore Club and Townhouse, with more still to come.
The designers of the Ritz-Carlton opted not for trendiness but for
timelessness, however. Its look and feel are what one might call "early
modern, " but this is a cosmopolitan European-inspired modernism, with a muted
tropical color scheme and modern furniture that largely came from France. The
hotel complex actually incorporates two postwar structures at the corner of
Lincoln Road and Collins Avenue - the DiLido and the One Lincoln Road
Building, which was designed by another of Miami's postwar architectural
legends, Igor Polevitsky.
Interestingly, Lapidus, who died in 2001 at age 98, didn't publicly own up
to the DiLido, which he actually created with architect Melvin Grossman,
though it's clearly his work. In his autobiography Too Much Is Not Enough, he
mentions it not by name but describes being brought in after the building had
been framed out as associate architect and interior designer, a role he
describes as "designing and doctoring a hotel. "
KEEPING FAITH
The renovation architects (John Nichols and Anne Jackaway from Nichols,
Brosch, Sandoval & Associates) and designers (Zeke Fernandez from Jeffrey
Howard Associates) were respectful of Lapidus' design, but not constrained by
it, which means that they ended up with something that Lapidus would have
liked, maybe even enough to mention the DiLido by name in his book.
The original black terrazzo floor is there, with a high sheen. A great
curved "bubble wall" still stands in the lobby, but what once was painted
stucco is now clad in cherry. The aluminum railings along staircases and at
the edge of the mezzanine are Lapidus' original design but redone a bit to fit
the rhythm of the changed space. The front desk moved from the Collins Avenue
end to the Lincoln, and though the original design was kept, the countertop is
now backlit onyx. The mezzanine still opens over the tall two-story lobby, but
lights are recessed into dramatic coved ceilings, which seem a Lapidus
trademark but actually are a current innovation. Some of Lapidus' more
dramatic flourishes - which found full spectacular expression in the
Fontainebleau just a year later - are alluded to but not fully executed.
Still to come are shops and a restaurant that fills the space of the
original Collins Avenue entrance. The original front desk will eventually be a
bar. To get 375 rooms, the architects had to add to the hotel; it, of course,
is within both the local and national Art Deco historic districts, though this
is an International Style building, a postwar modernist building with clean
lines and an absence of decoration except for a painted mural, now restored
(but hidden behind a glass wall) .
OLD VS. NEW
Nonetheless, the architects were expected to follow the Secretary of the
Interior's guidelines for additions to historic buildings, which stipulated
that one should be able to differentiate old and new, that the new portions
should be "of our time" (a notion often misinterpreted to produce building
additions that could be anywhere and any time and are not either referential
or deferential to history) .
This addition is different, which is to say, successful. The architects
retained the sleek, simple geometry of the International style, but
differentiated the new from the old by using dark glass and more metal. The
additions actually look like they might have been made in 1955, and they are
straightforward expressions of architecture, not of an architectural ego,
which means that it all works as a whole.
The work is quite nautical, enhanced by the rooftop enclosure that hides
the mechanicals and harkens to the idea of a ship's smokestack. Poolside is,
as is de rigueur on celebrity row, an exercise in over-the-top minimalism. The
pool has "infinity edges" and the ocean is beyond, giving it all a further
shiplike feeling. The indoor restaurant and bar look out on this with ocean
views, and down on the sand is a second restaurant (with wonderful
tile-cladding) .
Start at the Ritz-Carlton and head north, and for five blocks or so, you
are in the presence of the hotels that movie stars and moguls select as their
South Beach hideaways these days. If your trip is along Collins - where there
are just about the same number of unrenovated hotels and where the west side
of the street is awaiting attention - you might wonder what all the fuss is
about.
THE GRAND TOUR
The beach side imparts a slightly clearer picture, but it is the grand tour
that tells it all - one great set for glamour after another. There is the
moonscape-spare Sagamore with its superb art collection, and the
white-and-black Shore Club with its Moroccan-sybaritic outdoor terraces. There
is the architecture-as-performance-art Delano with its wide array of chairs
and huge flowing curtains. There's the crisp beachy red-and-white Townhouse,
tucked on a side street. And there is the South-of-France-meets-South-
Beach-High-Deco embrace of the Raleigh. And not least is the National, which
was actually restored to the level of splendor it had when it opened in 1940.
These are all elite hotels, to be sure, and expensive, but we should be
glad to know that in Miami Beach, the hotel lobbies are now considered
historic public places, and of course many have restaurants and bars that are
open to all eaters and drinkers, even if the poolside is private.
And the beach is there for us all with a view back onto the oceanfront
cityscape of hotels from the 1930s, '40s and '50s to be shared by all. We tend
to take beach access for granted, but we shouldn't. NAME'S SIMPLICITY
Fifty years ago when the DiLido was being built, there was another
structure on the site as well - the Town and Beach Club motel. By the time the
Ritz-Carlton got under way, all that was left of the motel were some block
walls, but the simplicity of the name resonates, for that's what we have here
- town and beach, and the history of how Miami Beach became just that. This
new Ritz-Carlton opens a new chapter in that history, but it doesn't close the
book, and for that it will probably outlast some of the nearby glitter that is
not actually gold.
CAPTION: TONY BERMUDEZ-SALVETTI/HERALD STAFF PAUSE TO REFLECT: Above,
puttin' on the Ritz on South Beach. Right, poolside is an exercise in
over-the-top minimalism, with 'infinity edges' and a view of the ocean, which
gives the complex a shiplike feeling.
BEFORE AND AFTER: Top, the original lobby of the DiLido Hotel; above, the
lobby after its $20 million renovation.
DONNA E. NATALE PLANAS/HERALD STAFF INNER BEAUTY: The Ritz-Carlton Hotel
lobby - with its original black terrazzo floor and curved 'bubble wall' - gets
some last-minute dusting before its opening in December.