New York City - Central Park
The Pond - You can see the hotel The Plaza in the background.
Der Teich - Im Hintergrund sieht man das Hotel The Plaza.
The Plaza Hotel is a landmark 20-story luxury hotel and condominium apartment building in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of the borough of Manhattan, New York City. It opened in 1907 and is now owned by Katara Hospitality.
With a height of 250 ft (76 m) and a length of 400 ft (120 m), the hotel occupies the west side of Grand Army Plaza, from which it derives its name, and extends along Central Park South in Manhattan. Fifth Avenue extends along the east side of Grand Army Plaza. The Plaza Hotel is recognized as a Historic Hotel of America by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. The hotel's main entrance at 768 Fifth Avenue faces the southern portion of Grand Army Plaza, which commemorates the Union Army in the Civil War, whence its eponymous predecessor derived its name.
Construction on the first Plaza Hotel at this location began in 1883, on the site of the New York Skating Club. The builders ran out of money, and the New York Life Insurance Company foreclosed and hired the most-celebrated architects of the era, McKim, Mead & White, to complete the hotel, which finally opened on October 1, 1890.
It soon became apparent that the first hotel was far too small, and it was demolished in 1905. A new and larger Plaza Hotel, a French Renaissance château-style building designed by Henry Janeway Hardenbergh, was constructed in twenty-seven months at a cost of $12.5 million, opening to the public on October 1, 1907. When the hotel opened, a room at the Plaza Hotel was only $2.50 per night, the equivalent of $65.66 in 2017. The same room cost over $1,000 per night in 2001. The hotel proved so popular that a huge 300-room annex was added to the hotel along 58th Street from 1920-1921.
Conrad Hilton bought the Plaza Hotel for $7.4 million in October 1943 (equivalent to $105 million in 2017) and spent $6 million (equivalent to $84.9 million in 2017) refurbishing it. Hilton sold the hotel ten years later, in 1953, to Boston industrialist A.M. "Sonny" Sonnabend for $16 million. Hilton sold the Plaza to raise funds for construction of the Beverly Hilton, but immediately leased the Plaza back for two and a half years, and then another four when that lease expired. Sonnabend became president of The Childs Company, a national restaurant chain, two years later, and Childs purchased The Plaza on November 18, 1955 for $6.2 million in stock (equivalent to $57.8 million in 2017). Childs had partnered in the development of the neighboring Savoy-Plaza Hotel, (now the site of the General Motors Building). Sonnabend created the Hotel Corporation of America (HCA) in 1956, to leverage tax losses from Childs. HCA assumed management of the Plaza from Hilton in January 1960. HCA changed its name to Sonesta International Hotels in 1970. Sonesta sold the Plaza to Western International Hotels in 1975 for $25 million (equivalent to $114 million in 2017). Western International changed its name to Westin Hotels in 1980.
Westin sold The Plaza to Donald Trump for $390 million on March 27, 1988 (equivalent to $807 million in 2017). Trump commented on his purchase in a full-page open letter in The New York Times: "I haven't purchased a building, I have purchased a masterpiece – the Mona Lisa. For the first time in my life, I have knowingly made a deal that was not economic – for I can never justify the price I paid, no matter how successful the Plaza becomes." Trump installed his wife, Ivana Trump, as the hotel's president. After $50 million in renovations, the hotel was earning a healthy operating income, but not enough to make the payments on its heavy debt load. Trump made plans to pay off the hotel's debt by selling off many of its units as condominiums. A deal was instead reached for the Plaza's creditors, a group of banks led by Citibank, to take a 49 percent stake in the hotel in exchange for forgiveness of $250 million in debt and an interest rate reduction. The agreement was submitted as a prepackaged bankruptcy in November 1992.
In 1995, CDL Hotels International and Saudi prince Al-Waleed bin Talal purchased a controlling stake in the Plaza in a deal that valued it at $325 million (equivalent to $522 million in 2017).
The hotel was sold in 2004 for $675 million (equivalent to $875 million in 2017) to Israeli-owned Manhattan-based developer, El Ad Properties. El Ad bought the hotel with plans of adding residential and commercial sections. Since the Plaza Hotel is a New York landmark, Tishman Construction Corporation, the construction management company hired to complete the renovations and conversions, had to comply with landmark regulations. El Ad temporarily closed the Plaza Hotel on April 30, 2005, for extensive renovations costing $450 million. Beginning May 2005, the Plaza Hotel's contents were available to the public via a liquidation sale.
The hotel reopened on March 1, 2008, offering 282 hotel rooms and 152 private condominium units; it is managed by Fairmont Hotels and Resorts. Diamond retailer Lev Leviev put in the first bid for a Plaza apartment at $10 million. Most of the condominium units are usually empty, used as pieds-à-terre by their wealthy owners.
In November 2008, the Plaza Hotel unveiled its retail collection, an underground mall featuring luxury brands such as Vertu and Demel Bakery (closed as of March 2010), an Austrian-owned business. In 2010, the Plaza Food Hall opened in the underground mall, anchored by The Todd English Food Hall in collaboration with Chef Todd English.
On July 31, 2012, India's business group Sahara India Pariwar agreed to buy a 75 percent controlling stake for $570 million from El Ad Properties.[27] The stake included 100 of the Plaza's 150 hotel-condominium units and a retail portion that included the Oak Room bar.
In August 2014, Sahara's Subrata Roy announced he was seeking a buyer for his company's majority stake in the Plaza, along with similar stakes in the Dream Hotel in New York and the Grosvenor House Hotel in London. A $4 billion price tag was placed on the Plaza stake. Speculation that Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah of Brunei would be the buyer was quashed by the sultan.
In 2016, Saudi businessman Al-Waleed bin Talal, who already controlled a 50 percent stake in the building's hotel, restaurant, and retail portion through his Kingdom Holding Company, partnered with the Qatar Investment Authority to purchase the hotel, but the deal fell through. He partnered again in 2017 with Ashkenazy Acquisition Corporation in another attempt to purchase control of the structure. In May 2018, the Sahara Group announced it had finalized a deal with Shahal M. Khan, founder of Dubai-based White City Ventures, and Kamran Hakim of the Hakim Organization to buy a majority share of the hotel for $600 million. That deal was expected to close on June 25, 2018.
The Plaza Hotel was accorded landmark status by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1969; it was designated a National Historic Landmark (NHL) in 1986 for its lavish architecture.
Long the site for famous performers and guests, it has also been the meeting place for important political meetings. The internationally known singers Josephine Baker, Eartha Kitt, Liza Minnelli, Marlene Dietrich, Lena Horne, Kay Thompson, Sandler and Young, Ethel Merman, Shirley Bassey, Andy Williams, The Mills Brothers, Patti Page and Peggy Lee played the Persian Room. Miles Davis recorded a live album in the Persian Room in 1958.
Unaccompanied ladies were not permitted in the Oak Room bar; women favored the Palm Court for luncheons and tea.
In September 1985, ministers of developed countries met at the Plaza Hotel to consult on finance issues and affirmed their agreement by signing the Plaza Accord. It served as an agreement among the finance ministers of the United States, Japan, West Germany, France, and Britain to bring down the price of the U.S. dollar against their currencies.
The Beatles stayed at the Plaza Hotel during their first visit to the United States in February 1964.
On November 28, 1966, in honor of the publisher Katharine Graham, the writer Truman Capote hosted his acclaimed "Black and White Ball" in the Grand Ballroom. The ballroom was also the site, in 1993, of Donald Trump's wedding to Marla Maples in front of 1,500 guests.
(Wikipedia)
The Plaza ist ein weltweit bekanntes New Yorker Luxushotel. Das am 1. Oktober 1907 eröffnete Hotel ist ein Wahrzeichen der Stadt und ebenso für seine im Stil der französischen Renaissance gehaltene Fassade und Innenausstattung sowie für seine illustren Gäste berühmt.
Das Plaza-Hotel repräsentiert ein Stück Zeitgeschichte der Stadt: mit der wachsenden Bedeutung New Yorks als Weltstadt ging eine erhöhte Bedeutung für den Geschäftsverkehr einher – der Tourismus spielte damals noch keine so große Rolle. Und wenn Geschäftspartner in New York absteigen wollten, dann musste für die Betuchteren auch ein entsprechendes Hotel zur Verfügung stehen. Zwei Namen spielten hier vor allem eine Rolle: The Waldorf-Astoria und The Plaza.
Gestaltet wurde das Bauwerk von Henry J. Hardenbergh. An der Stelle des heutigen Hotels stand bereits ab 1890 ein The Plaza, das aber 1905 abgerissen wurde, um Platz für das heutige Gebäude zu schaffen. $ 12,5 Mio. kostete der Neubau und wurde damals zum besten Hotel der Welt erklärt. Das Hotel mit seinen 800 Zimmern auf 19 Stockwerken liegt in Manhattan an der Kreuzung zwischen Fifth Avenue und East 59th, an der Grand Army Plaza, die Namensgeberin für das Hotel war, in der Upper East Side. Die exponierte Lage direkt an der südöstlichen Ecke des Central Parks machte das Hotel – wie auch das ehemalige Hotel St. Moritz, heute The Ritz New York – so exklusiv. Der Broadway am südwestlichen Ende des Central Parks ist 800 m entfernt.
1986 wurde das Plaza als „herausragendes Beispiel US-amerikanischer Hotel-Architektur“ zum National Historic Landmark der Vereinigten Staaten erklärt. Architekturkritiker haben das Plaza jedoch auch nicht rein positiv als „französisches Renaissanceschloss von riesigen Ausmaßen“ charakterisiert.
Regelmäßige Gäste waren unter anderem Mitglieder der Familien Vanderbilt, Gould und Harriman sowie Ernest Hemingway. Bekannt ist es auch für seine öffentlichen zugänglichen Bars und Restaurants, insbesondere die exklusive Oak Bar.
Im Herbst 2004 wurde das Hotel erneut versteigert. $ 675 Mio. hat der israelische Immobilienfonds Elad Properties ausgegeben, weitere 350 Mio. sollten in die Renovierung gesteckt werden. Im Jahr 2005 sollte das gesamte Hotel zu einem Appartement-Haus umgewandelt werden. Erst nach lautstarken Protesten der New Yorker Bevölkerung wurde dieser Plan geändert. Es wurden ‚nur’ die 450 Zimmer mit Blick auf den Central Park und die 5th Avenue in 150 Eigentumswohnungen umgewandelt. Die übrigen 348 der insgesamt 805 Hotelzimmer mit dem weniger attraktiven Blick auf die 58. Straße blieben, was sie waren.
Das Plaza-Hotel wurde renoviert und umgebaut. Im März 2008 wurde es als Kombination aus Eigentumswohnungen und Hotelkomplex wieder eröffnet. Das Haus gehört zu den Fairmont Hotels and Resorts. Entsprechend der Lage und Historie des Hauses sind die Preise der Appartements in den oberen Bereichen angesiedelt.
Alfred Hitchcock drehte hier Teile seines Films Der unsichtbare Dritte. Auch die Komödie Kevin – Allein in New York spielt zum Teil im Plaza – der damalige Besitzer des Hotels, Donald Trump (er hatte es 1988 erworben), hatte einen Cameo-Auftritt als Hotelgast. 1958 feierte hier das Plattenlabel Columbia Records eine Party mit Auftritten der Jazz-Stars Duke Ellington, Billie Holiday, Bill Evans, John Coltrane und Miles Davis; die Mitschnitte erschienen 1973 (Jazz at the Plaza, Vol. 1).
Im September 1985 einigten sich Vertreter der G5-Staaten (USA, Japan, die Bundesrepublik Deutschland, Frankreich und Großbritannien) im Plaza im so genannten Plaza-Abkommen darauf, auf eine Abwertung des US-Dollars gegenüber dem Yen und der Deutschen Mark hinzuarbeiten.
(Wikipedia)
New York City - Central Park
The Pond - You can see the hotel The Plaza in the background.
Der Teich - Im Hintergrund sieht man das Hotel The Plaza.
The Plaza Hotel is a landmark 20-story luxury hotel and condominium apartment building in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of the borough of Manhattan, New York City. It opened in 1907 and is now owned by Katara Hospitality.
With a height of 250 ft (76 m) and a length of 400 ft (120 m), the hotel occupies the west side of Grand Army Plaza, from which it derives its name, and extends along Central Park South in Manhattan. Fifth Avenue extends along the east side of Grand Army Plaza. The Plaza Hotel is recognized as a Historic Hotel of America by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. The hotel's main entrance at 768 Fifth Avenue faces the southern portion of Grand Army Plaza, which commemorates the Union Army in the Civil War, whence its eponymous predecessor derived its name.
Construction on the first Plaza Hotel at this location began in 1883, on the site of the New York Skating Club. The builders ran out of money, and the New York Life Insurance Company foreclosed and hired the most-celebrated architects of the era, McKim, Mead & White, to complete the hotel, which finally opened on October 1, 1890.
It soon became apparent that the first hotel was far too small, and it was demolished in 1905. A new and larger Plaza Hotel, a French Renaissance château-style building designed by Henry Janeway Hardenbergh, was constructed in twenty-seven months at a cost of $12.5 million, opening to the public on October 1, 1907. When the hotel opened, a room at the Plaza Hotel was only $2.50 per night, the equivalent of $65.66 in 2017. The same room cost over $1,000 per night in 2001. The hotel proved so popular that a huge 300-room annex was added to the hotel along 58th Street from 1920-1921.
Conrad Hilton bought the Plaza Hotel for $7.4 million in October 1943 (equivalent to $105 million in 2017) and spent $6 million (equivalent to $84.9 million in 2017) refurbishing it. Hilton sold the hotel ten years later, in 1953, to Boston industrialist A.M. "Sonny" Sonnabend for $16 million. Hilton sold the Plaza to raise funds for construction of the Beverly Hilton, but immediately leased the Plaza back for two and a half years, and then another four when that lease expired. Sonnabend became president of The Childs Company, a national restaurant chain, two years later, and Childs purchased The Plaza on November 18, 1955 for $6.2 million in stock (equivalent to $57.8 million in 2017). Childs had partnered in the development of the neighboring Savoy-Plaza Hotel, (now the site of the General Motors Building). Sonnabend created the Hotel Corporation of America (HCA) in 1956, to leverage tax losses from Childs. HCA assumed management of the Plaza from Hilton in January 1960. HCA changed its name to Sonesta International Hotels in 1970. Sonesta sold the Plaza to Western International Hotels in 1975 for $25 million (equivalent to $114 million in 2017). Western International changed its name to Westin Hotels in 1980.
Westin sold The Plaza to Donald Trump for $390 million on March 27, 1988 (equivalent to $807 million in 2017). Trump commented on his purchase in a full-page open letter in The New York Times: "I haven't purchased a building, I have purchased a masterpiece – the Mona Lisa. For the first time in my life, I have knowingly made a deal that was not economic – for I can never justify the price I paid, no matter how successful the Plaza becomes." Trump installed his wife, Ivana Trump, as the hotel's president. After $50 million in renovations, the hotel was earning a healthy operating income, but not enough to make the payments on its heavy debt load. Trump made plans to pay off the hotel's debt by selling off many of its units as condominiums. A deal was instead reached for the Plaza's creditors, a group of banks led by Citibank, to take a 49 percent stake in the hotel in exchange for forgiveness of $250 million in debt and an interest rate reduction. The agreement was submitted as a prepackaged bankruptcy in November 1992.
In 1995, CDL Hotels International and Saudi prince Al-Waleed bin Talal purchased a controlling stake in the Plaza in a deal that valued it at $325 million (equivalent to $522 million in 2017).
The hotel was sold in 2004 for $675 million (equivalent to $875 million in 2017) to Israeli-owned Manhattan-based developer, El Ad Properties. El Ad bought the hotel with plans of adding residential and commercial sections. Since the Plaza Hotel is a New York landmark, Tishman Construction Corporation, the construction management company hired to complete the renovations and conversions, had to comply with landmark regulations. El Ad temporarily closed the Plaza Hotel on April 30, 2005, for extensive renovations costing $450 million. Beginning May 2005, the Plaza Hotel's contents were available to the public via a liquidation sale.
The hotel reopened on March 1, 2008, offering 282 hotel rooms and 152 private condominium units; it is managed by Fairmont Hotels and Resorts. Diamond retailer Lev Leviev put in the first bid for a Plaza apartment at $10 million. Most of the condominium units are usually empty, used as pieds-à-terre by their wealthy owners.
In November 2008, the Plaza Hotel unveiled its retail collection, an underground mall featuring luxury brands such as Vertu and Demel Bakery (closed as of March 2010), an Austrian-owned business. In 2010, the Plaza Food Hall opened in the underground mall, anchored by The Todd English Food Hall in collaboration with Chef Todd English.
On July 31, 2012, India's business group Sahara India Pariwar agreed to buy a 75 percent controlling stake for $570 million from El Ad Properties.[27] The stake included 100 of the Plaza's 150 hotel-condominium units and a retail portion that included the Oak Room bar.
In August 2014, Sahara's Subrata Roy announced he was seeking a buyer for his company's majority stake in the Plaza, along with similar stakes in the Dream Hotel in New York and the Grosvenor House Hotel in London. A $4 billion price tag was placed on the Plaza stake. Speculation that Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah of Brunei would be the buyer was quashed by the sultan.
In 2016, Saudi businessman Al-Waleed bin Talal, who already controlled a 50 percent stake in the building's hotel, restaurant, and retail portion through his Kingdom Holding Company, partnered with the Qatar Investment Authority to purchase the hotel, but the deal fell through. He partnered again in 2017 with Ashkenazy Acquisition Corporation in another attempt to purchase control of the structure. In May 2018, the Sahara Group announced it had finalized a deal with Shahal M. Khan, founder of Dubai-based White City Ventures, and Kamran Hakim of the Hakim Organization to buy a majority share of the hotel for $600 million. That deal was expected to close on June 25, 2018.
The Plaza Hotel was accorded landmark status by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1969; it was designated a National Historic Landmark (NHL) in 1986 for its lavish architecture.
Long the site for famous performers and guests, it has also been the meeting place for important political meetings. The internationally known singers Josephine Baker, Eartha Kitt, Liza Minnelli, Marlene Dietrich, Lena Horne, Kay Thompson, Sandler and Young, Ethel Merman, Shirley Bassey, Andy Williams, The Mills Brothers, Patti Page and Peggy Lee played the Persian Room. Miles Davis recorded a live album in the Persian Room in 1958.
Unaccompanied ladies were not permitted in the Oak Room bar; women favored the Palm Court for luncheons and tea.
In September 1985, ministers of developed countries met at the Plaza Hotel to consult on finance issues and affirmed their agreement by signing the Plaza Accord. It served as an agreement among the finance ministers of the United States, Japan, West Germany, France, and Britain to bring down the price of the U.S. dollar against their currencies.
The Beatles stayed at the Plaza Hotel during their first visit to the United States in February 1964.
On November 28, 1966, in honor of the publisher Katharine Graham, the writer Truman Capote hosted his acclaimed "Black and White Ball" in the Grand Ballroom. The ballroom was also the site, in 1993, of Donald Trump's wedding to Marla Maples in front of 1,500 guests.
(Wikipedia)
The Plaza ist ein weltweit bekanntes New Yorker Luxushotel. Das am 1. Oktober 1907 eröffnete Hotel ist ein Wahrzeichen der Stadt und ebenso für seine im Stil der französischen Renaissance gehaltene Fassade und Innenausstattung sowie für seine illustren Gäste berühmt.
Das Plaza-Hotel repräsentiert ein Stück Zeitgeschichte der Stadt: mit der wachsenden Bedeutung New Yorks als Weltstadt ging eine erhöhte Bedeutung für den Geschäftsverkehr einher – der Tourismus spielte damals noch keine so große Rolle. Und wenn Geschäftspartner in New York absteigen wollten, dann musste für die Betuchteren auch ein entsprechendes Hotel zur Verfügung stehen. Zwei Namen spielten hier vor allem eine Rolle: The Waldorf-Astoria und The Plaza.
Gestaltet wurde das Bauwerk von Henry J. Hardenbergh. An der Stelle des heutigen Hotels stand bereits ab 1890 ein The Plaza, das aber 1905 abgerissen wurde, um Platz für das heutige Gebäude zu schaffen. $ 12,5 Mio. kostete der Neubau und wurde damals zum besten Hotel der Welt erklärt. Das Hotel mit seinen 800 Zimmern auf 19 Stockwerken liegt in Manhattan an der Kreuzung zwischen Fifth Avenue und East 59th, an der Grand Army Plaza, die Namensgeberin für das Hotel war, in der Upper East Side. Die exponierte Lage direkt an der südöstlichen Ecke des Central Parks machte das Hotel – wie auch das ehemalige Hotel St. Moritz, heute The Ritz New York – so exklusiv. Der Broadway am südwestlichen Ende des Central Parks ist 800 m entfernt.
1986 wurde das Plaza als „herausragendes Beispiel US-amerikanischer Hotel-Architektur“ zum National Historic Landmark der Vereinigten Staaten erklärt. Architekturkritiker haben das Plaza jedoch auch nicht rein positiv als „französisches Renaissanceschloss von riesigen Ausmaßen“ charakterisiert.
Regelmäßige Gäste waren unter anderem Mitglieder der Familien Vanderbilt, Gould und Harriman sowie Ernest Hemingway. Bekannt ist es auch für seine öffentlichen zugänglichen Bars und Restaurants, insbesondere die exklusive Oak Bar.
Im Herbst 2004 wurde das Hotel erneut versteigert. $ 675 Mio. hat der israelische Immobilienfonds Elad Properties ausgegeben, weitere 350 Mio. sollten in die Renovierung gesteckt werden. Im Jahr 2005 sollte das gesamte Hotel zu einem Appartement-Haus umgewandelt werden. Erst nach lautstarken Protesten der New Yorker Bevölkerung wurde dieser Plan geändert. Es wurden ‚nur’ die 450 Zimmer mit Blick auf den Central Park und die 5th Avenue in 150 Eigentumswohnungen umgewandelt. Die übrigen 348 der insgesamt 805 Hotelzimmer mit dem weniger attraktiven Blick auf die 58. Straße blieben, was sie waren.
Das Plaza-Hotel wurde renoviert und umgebaut. Im März 2008 wurde es als Kombination aus Eigentumswohnungen und Hotelkomplex wieder eröffnet. Das Haus gehört zu den Fairmont Hotels and Resorts. Entsprechend der Lage und Historie des Hauses sind die Preise der Appartements in den oberen Bereichen angesiedelt.
Alfred Hitchcock drehte hier Teile seines Films Der unsichtbare Dritte. Auch die Komödie Kevin – Allein in New York spielt zum Teil im Plaza – der damalige Besitzer des Hotels, Donald Trump (er hatte es 1988 erworben), hatte einen Cameo-Auftritt als Hotelgast. 1958 feierte hier das Plattenlabel Columbia Records eine Party mit Auftritten der Jazz-Stars Duke Ellington, Billie Holiday, Bill Evans, John Coltrane und Miles Davis; die Mitschnitte erschienen 1973 (Jazz at the Plaza, Vol. 1).
Im September 1985 einigten sich Vertreter der G5-Staaten (USA, Japan, die Bundesrepublik Deutschland, Frankreich und Großbritannien) im Plaza im so genannten Plaza-Abkommen darauf, auf eine Abwertung des US-Dollars gegenüber dem Yen und der Deutschen Mark hinzuarbeiten.
(Wikipedia)