Marriott Syracuse Downtown

Hotel Syracuse
Location 100 E. Onondaga St., Syracuse, New York
Coordinates 43°2′40.9″N 76°9′4.3″W / 43.044694°N 76.151194°W / 43.044694; -76.151194Coordinates: 43°2′40.9″N 76°9′4.3″W / 43.044694°N 76.151194°W / 43.044694; -76.151194
Built 1924
Architect Post, George B. & Sons
Architectural style Renaissance
NRHP Reference #

08000141

[1]
Added to NRHP March 5, 2008

The Marriott Syracuse Downtown is a historic hotel located at 100 E. Onondaga St., Syracuse, New York. It was built in 1924 as the Hotel Syracuse. It closed in 2004 and is currently being restored for a planned reopening in June, 2016.[2]

Architecture

It is significant in that it is "an excellent example of an early 20th century modern hotel designed by one of the leading hotel designers of the day." It was designed by William Stone Post of George B. Post & Sons of New York City in 1921.[3]

History

Ground was broken for the building in 1922 and the Hotel Syracuse opened on August 16, 1924.[4] Among its first guests that day was child star Jackie Coogan.[5] In 1927, Charles Lindbergh visited the hotel to talk about his historic trans-Atlantic flight from New York to Paris in the Spirit of St. Louis.

Hotel Syracuse seen in a 1930s postcard

In 1980 the hotel was renamed the Hilton at Syracuse Square.[6] It was expanded with an extension containing the Imperial Ballrom and a new tower wing designed by William B. Tabler.[7] The hotel left Hilton in the 1990s and returned to its original name. The massive 790-room Hotel Syracuse eventually found itself battling bankruptcy and closed in 2004.

Decades of closure

In December 2004, the city announced that a million-dollar payment by the chief creditor of the Hotel Syracuse would settle the unpaid property taxes dispute. This allowed the hotel to emerge from bankruptcy.

In August 2005, the Israeli firm GMUL agreed to buy the Hotel Syracuse and its garage and renovate the property into a new four-star hotel and condos. More detailed plans became public in December 2005,[8] listing the following plans for the complex: 54 condominiums located in the 1980 tower, 155-room business hotel, 150 Apartments, Restoration of banquet facilities and street-level store-fronts, Rehabilitation of the complex's parking garage, Pool and gym

In May 2006, the Hotel Syracuse was sold to another Israeli company, AMERIS Holdings Ltd, as part of a larger package deal, which included other assets acquired from GMUL. AMERIS Holdings Ltd, controlled by Levi Kushnir and his son Elad, has a large portfolio of development across the globe and specifically in the USA. The new owners reconfigured some of the previous plans. Rather than selling condominiums in the tower, the condo portion of the project was to be shifted into the historic building. When ownership changed in 2006, Ameris Holdings ltd. reopened the banquet facilities, which had been closed for several years. Shortly after, the garage was fully renovated (Opened September 1, 2007), and the complex hosted some large-scale events, including the Syracuse Film Festival in April 2007. In July 2007, work began on converting the 1980 tower to apartments. Then-mayor Matt Driscoll committed to turning Onondaga Street near the hotel complex into a park, in order to push the development along. Hotel Syracuse was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2008.[1]

Ameris went bankrupt later in 2008, however, and work on the apartment tower was halted when about eighty percent complete. The 1980 tower, renamed Symphony Tower, was eventually severed from the rest of the building and sold to the Hayner Hoyt Corporation for $1.4 million in 2012.[9] As of 2014, that sale was still the focus of ongoing litigation, and the Symphony Tower remains vacant.[10]

Restoration

On April 14, 2013, Boston-based Pyramid Hotel Group made an offer of an undisclosed amount to the City of Syracuse to renovate and reopen the Hotel Syracuse. The City of Syracuse began a seizure process against the hotel's Israeli owners, GML, for $500,000 in unpaid back taxes.[11]

Ed Riley, senior vice president of project management for Pyramid Hotel Group, said that if the deal were to go through, the hotel would be reopened with 260-280 rooms. He estimated that a renovation would take 14–16 months, and cost over $60 million. Riley said the hotel's rooms are too small and badly outdated. They would need to be renovated and enlarged, with all-new bathrooms installed, he said. He said the hotel's spacious lobby and its ballrooms need updating but are in relatively good shape and would be preserved. Many city officials have been pushing for a hotel to complement the 99,000 square foot Nicholas J. Pirro Convention Center. The Hotel Syracuse is located just a block and a half away and many feel that a revamped Hotel Syracuse could serve the purpose of being the convention center hotel.[11]

In 2014 Ed Riley finally acquired the Hotel Syracuse. As of June 22, 2015, work on the $57 Million Dollar restoration project had already begun[12] The Hotel is slated to open for business in June 2016 with 261 guest rooms and all major historic spaces returned to their former grandeur.[12] On June 26, 2015, the hotel was renamed Marriott Syracuse Downtown.[13]

During the renovations, the hotel's front entrance was shifted to the other side. As a result the street address is no longer 500 S. Warren St. but now 100 E. Onondaga St.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, April 14, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.