Bill
Targets Loss of Hotels
An L.A. City Council Committee Considers a Six-Month Moratorium
on Conversions of Lodging into Condos
Los Angeles Times - December 15, 2004
By Roger Vincent
Los
Angeles City Council members today will consider a proposal
supported by organized labor to block developers from converting
hotels to condominiums for the next six months. Some business
leaders strongly oppose the idea.
The
proposed moratorium is needed to stem "an alarming trend"
of eliminating hotel rooms - and therefore union jobs - at
a time when the local hospitality industry is finally showing
signs of improvement, said Councilman Martin Ludlow, who introduced
the motion. If approved by a council committee today, the
full council will consider the plan Friday.
Los
Angeles also is experiencing record demand for housing and
the owners of at least four hotels are considering converting
all or part of their properties to residential use:
- Buyers
of the St. Regis in Century City told more than 200 members
of Local 11 of Unite Here, which represents hotel employees,
that they would be out of work Jan. 22, when the four-star
hotel is set to close to make way for a condo conversion.
- The
manager and part owner of the Westin Bonaventure in downtown
Los Angeles, Peter Zen, said he might want to convert half
of the 1,400 rooms in his hotel to about 200 condos if the
planned 1,200-room Hilton Hotel next to Staples Center ended
up draining business from his property.
- One
of downtown's two Holiday Inns, a six-story property at
750 Garland Ave., closed this year and is being converted
to apartments by a Newport Beach developer.
- The
Furama Hotel near Los Angeles International Airport would
lose many of its 775 rooms in a planned renovation that
would turn much of the property into apartments and stores,
according to hotel consultant Alan Reay of Atlas Hospitality.
Union
leaders fear that at least two other downtown hotels may be
going condo.
Hilton
Checkers Los Angeles on Grand Avenue is being purchased by
Falor Cos. for $35 million, according to trade publication
Commercial Real Estate Direct. Falor specializes in selling
individual hotel rooms to investors. Such "condo hotels"
continue to rent rooms to guests when they are not occupied
by their owners. Falor didn't return a call requesting comment.
The
Hyatt Regency on Hope Street is for sale and is considered
a prime candidate for conversion. Developer Shaul Kuba of
CIM Group on Tuesday denied reports by real estate brokers
that his Hollywood-based firm was buying the property.
Altogether
the city faces the loss of 2,000 rooms, 1,000 jobs and the
revenue from a 14% "bed tax" on guests, Ludlow estimated.
Real
estate attorney Rick Davis of Greenberg Traurig said the City
Council might be overstepping its bounds in considering a
moratorium.
"To
cut off property owners' options of how they want to structure
ownership of their property or how they want to dispose of
it is an undue interference with the right of the owners,"
Davis said.
He
warned that Los Angeles could wind up driving away investment
"if the city gets a reputation for imposing restrictions
on property owners when some union wants them to."
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