Friday, June 30, 2006

Downtown Residence Inn construction starts after 18-month redesign delay

This is from today's Business First.
I didn't realize this building by the corner of Gay and High was slated to be a Residence Inn. That's great news for the vitality of downtown since it's more central than most downtown Columbus hotels and close to some downtown Columbus condominium projects.
Additionally, they're saving an historic building and the hotel itself will be urban-cool because of the architecture.


Suite hotel finally gets off ground

Business First of Columbus - June 23, 2006
by Brian R. Ball
Business First
A North Carolina hotel developer and operator has begun the long-delayed conversion of the old Buckeye Federal Savings and Loan building in Columbus into a Residence Inn by Marriott.
Concord Hospitality Enterprises Co. and development partner Lubert Adler Real Estate Funds of Philadelphia expect to open the 126-suite hotel at 36-42 E. Gay St. by mid- to late-summer 2007.

Debra Adcock, Concord's vice president of operations in Ohio, said Columbus-based Ruscilli Construction Co. started the $23 million project June 19 after climbing development costs forced a redesign of the project over the last 18 months.
"The sheer complexity of redeveloping an 80-year-old building and increases in construction costs made us rethink and reinvent the design," Adcock said. "It took a significant amount of time to do that."
The partnership earlier completed demolition and removed asbestos from the building.
"The tough part is over," Adcock said. "Now we're into the fun."
The Residence Inn, she said, should complement the business Concord Hospitality does at the 149-room Courtyard by Marriott business-class hotel it has owned and operated at 35 W. Spring St. since 1994.
The Courtyard "is designed for business and leisure travelers staying for less than five nights ... whereas the Residence Inn is designed for customers staying five or more nights," Adcock said.
The Residence Inn has studio rooms, and one- and two-bedroom units.
The rooms include kitchens and living rooms.
"It's apartment-style living," Adcock said. Meeting the market
Construction of the Residence Inn starts two years after the former Adam's Mark on North Third Street was turned into a Renaissance Columbus, another Marriott-flag luxury hotel.
Real estate consultant Eric Belfrage said the addition of an all-suite hotel downtown will round out offerings for travelers.

"I think it's a fabulous addition to the market," said Belfrage, a lodging specialist with CB Richard Ellis Inc. "There's nothing like that downtown."

The Residence Inn will mark a 4 percent addition to the 3,151 hotel rooms downtown, meaning it should have little effect on center-city hotel occupancies, he said.
Belfrage said renovation of a historic building will add a cosmopolitan dimension to the downtown lodging market.

Adcock said a few details of the project remain in flux.
For instance, the size of the hotel's convenience store is not set, she said, and the developer has yet to secure a restaurant operator for an area off the lobby.
"The most difficult part of that is having the (restaurant operator) see the space," Adcock said. "They want to visualize the space before they commit to it, so we really need to get into construction."
The chief executive of the region's convention and visitors bureau said he welcomed the hotel's progress.
"We were a little concerned it might not move forward," said Experience Columbus CEO Paul Astleford.
He said the hotel, once complete, will add to the mix of hotels available downtown even if it's not close to the Greater Columbus Convention Center.
"I think it will get good play from convention groups because it's a good name and it's a good product," he said.

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