Quote:
Originally Posted by BAKGUY
At first I shuddered at the thought. Within 10 seconds I began to think, this could salvage the building & rescue it from becoming another St Regis.
Some of the elements from The Marlborough Inn Hotel are exceptional & desperately need to be restored.
There are 2 sections, the older Fashion mall that have been offices and of course the Hotel itself.
My preference would be a complete reno & something similar to what they did in Montreal @ The Ritz - Carlton.
Have the cafe, dining room, ballrooms remain, possibly some greatly renovated boutique style, smaller number of guest rooms than now, perhaps on 1, 2 or 3 floors? with the rest as residential.
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This is what I was thinking, too. There are some real beautiful elements fit (or can be fit with some shoe polish) to remain as public amenities that are revenue-generating (or again, can be with a "reimagination"). My wife's (then gf's) masters class Christmas parties were in that ballroom and the architecture enriched the experience. I bet they could still make some $$ for these types of events (and weddings, and maybe small business conferences/seminars) if they kept that portion open. Same with a cafe and restaurant for local office workers wanting their morning coffee and lunch.
The last live show I saw before the world sucked was Allan Doyle in February at The Burt, and my grand plan was to hit up The Marlborough lounge for some pre-show beer and apps (knowing full well The Yellow Dog would be insane, and it was). The place had a lot of promise to be "the place" for pregaming before shows at The Burt, given there aren't that many options right across the street, and also having The Garrick Theatre right behind it (although now shuttered

). However, I think it would need some reimagining to become that from its current MO.
Lots of potential. And no doubt it's a gorgeous building. Housing would at least remove the transiency of the hotel crowd.