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Monday, May 28, 2018

The Dominick Hotel, New York City, NY - Booking.com

The Dominick, formerly the Trump SoHo, is a $450 million, 46-story, 391-unit hotel condominium located at 246 Spring Street at the corner of Varick Street in the Hudson Square neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. It was announced in 2006, completed in 2008 and renamed in 2017.

The area is zoned for manufacturing, which precludes permanent residences from being built there. The condo-hotel design was approved after negotiations with New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. As a hotel condominium, 391 dwelling units within the building will be privately owned, but no unit may "be occupied by the same person for more than 29 days in any 36-day period, or for more than 120 days a year." When not occupied by the owner, an empty unit may be rented out as a hotel suite. The design architects for the building were the New York-based Handel Architects. The interior designer is David Rockwell of the Rockwell Group.

The project was a collaboration between Donald Trump's The Trump Organization, the Bayrock Group and Tamir Sapir. Trump has not invested his own capital in the project. Before the Trump name was removed, the Trump SoHo was the most recent building project constructed by Trump with his name on it, as of August 2016.

The hotel is part of Preferred Hotels & Resorts' Legend Collection.


Video The Dominick



Amenities

The developers claim that the 386,000-square-foot (3.59 ha) condo-hotel was designed to contribute to the neighborhood as well as the skyline. On the other hand, many complain that it "sticks out like a sore thumb" and is entirely inappropriate for the area. Along with the private rooms, there are public areas, including Spring & Varick restaurant and Mr. Jones, the hotel's cocktail lounge. There is also a business center with conference and meeting rooms.

The hotel features an outdoor, seasonal pool deck with a bocci court. Located on the same level is the 11,000 square feet (1,000 m2) The Spa at Dominick, fitness facilities and the seasonal bar Bar d'Eau.

The external walls of each room are made completely of double sided mirrors, giving its tenants a panoramic view. The rooms are the only New York City hotel furnished by Fendi Casa. The 46th floor is home to "SoHi", an event space offering New York skyline views.


Maps The Dominick



History

The plans for the building were unveiled on Donald Trump's show, The Apprentice, and chosen by the Season 5 winner, Sean Yazbeck, over the Trump International Hotel and Tower project on the June 5, 2006, Apprentice season finale. As of August 2016, it was the newest building constructed by Trump with his name on it, but by November 2017, this was no longer set to be the case due to the removal of the Trump name.

Construction and setbacks

Partners on the project included Soviet-born businessmen Felix Sater and Tevfik Arif, who ran the Bayrock Group real estate development firm. Excavation and foundation work for the new building began in November 2006, though full city approval for the project was not granted until May 2007. The plan faced strong opposition from the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation. The preservation group felt that the building was too large and not in keeping with the community's character. They pushed for rezonings of the Far West Village and Hudson Square that would prevent out-of-scale projects such as this.

Construction was temporarily halted in December 2006 after workers discovered human bones. Archaeologists determined that the remains were from 19th-century burial vaults built under the former Spring Street Presbyterian Church, which stood at the site until 1966.

On January 14, 2008, formwork collapsed during a concrete pour, killing one worker. Yuriy Vanchytskyy, an immigrant from Ukraine employed by DiFama Concrete, fell from the 42nd floor and was decapitated; three other workers were injured. The Department of Buildings halted work on the project and the contractor, Bovis Lend Lease, was issued four violations. Investigators subsequently determined that the wooden formwork did not meet industry standards. The stop-work order, which only applied to the building's upper floors, was later lifted on August 22.

The building's financing was troubled: Bank of America dumped the mezzanine loan for far less than its $75 million face value and the lenders who have $350 million in loans had to restructure debt with the developer.

Fraud lawsuit

On November 2, 2011, a lawsuit filed by buyers of ten condos in Trump Soho, including French soccer player Olivier Dacourt, was settled with plaintiffs recovering 90% of their deposits. The plaintiffs had claimed that they were tricked into buying the condos by "deceptive" sales figures of the developers and that the number of apartments sold at Trump Soho had been "fraudulently misrepresented." The New York Post described plaintiffs' 90% recovery as "staggering."

Before the settlement, The Wall Street Journal reported that the owners of Trump SoHo were offering buyers partial refunds on their deposits if they agreed not to participate in the lawsuit. In 2017 it was reported that as a condition of settlement, the buyers agreed not to cooperate with prosecutors unless they were subpoenaed. Further, the attorney for the buyer--who had been assisting prosecutors--"provided aid to the Trumps, writing a letter to the [Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr.] that stated, 'We acknowledge that the Defendants have not violated the criminal laws of the State of New York or the United States.'"

In 2017, the Trump SoHo lawsuit was described as "a watershed case in the world of condo litigation. ... [C]ondo attorneys said that developers are now far more reluctant to disclose sales information to buyers' attorneys, for fear of legal repercussions if they turn out to be wrong."

Business

Because of Trump's campaign in the 2016 presidential election, in which Trump ran as a Republican, Trump's properties in predominantly Democratic areas such as New York City saw a decline in business. In May 2017, WNYC reported that business at the Trump SoHo had fallen off, and that the hotel had plans to lay off some staff. The report speculated that the Trump name may be the cause of the downturn, although it pointed out that other Trump properties, such as the Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C. and the resort-hotel in Mar-a-Lago, had not experienced business reverses, and were in fact doing very well. Other Trump properties, such as Trump National Golf Club in Los Angeles and Trump Ferry Point in the Bronx, had shown a marked decrease in business. In November 2017, the Trump Organization reported that it was no longer going to be affiliated with the Trump SoHo by the end of the year. The building was renamed The Dominick on December 21, 2017.


The Dominick at 246 Spring St. in Hudson Square : Sales, Rentals ...


Critical reception

The AIA Guide to New York City, 5th edition, calls the building a "banal glass box".


Dominick, USA | Traveller Made


References

Notes

Further reading

  • Frank, Thomas (January 12, 2018). "Secret Money: How Trump Made Millions Selling Condos To Unknown Buyers". BuzzFeed News. 

The Dominick (New York City, New York) Verified Reviews | Tablet ...


External links

  • The Dominick Website (redirects to The Dominick website)