Jun 18, 2008 11:45 am US/Eastern
De Niro Testifies In NYC Hotel Dispute
NEW YORK (AP) ―
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The hotel is the latest addition to Robert De Niro's growing real estate empire that includes restaurants, hotels and his Tribeca Film Center.
AP
Robert De Niro's planned $43 million hotel in downtown Manhattan
features a handmade brick exterior, Carrara marble bathtubs and a
luxurious penthouse, which has raised the hackles of preservationists
who say he flouted the rules with that top-floor suite.
The penthouse atop the seven-story hotel does not match the design
that the New York Landmarks Preservation Commission approved in 2004,
and the panel held a hearing Tuesday on whether De Niro and his
partners should remove the rooftop suite at an estimated cost of $1.5
million and start over.
De Niro appeared at the hearing, imploring commission members to
give him the benefit of the doubt for any mistakes made in the project.
"We worked on this project a long time to make it as good as we
could make it," the "Raging Bull" and "Goodfellas" star testified. "We
did it so it would fit into the neighborhood. ... If there are any
minor mistakes, my apologies for it, because in any creation there are
mistakes."
The hotel is the latest addition to De Niro's growing real estate
empire that includes restaurants, hotels and his Tribeca Film Center.
The 88-room Greenwich hotel, where rooms start at $625 a night, opened
on April 1.
Neighbors including actor-director Ed Burns told commissioners the hotel does indeed fit into the surrounding historic district.
"For me as a lay person, the architecture is beautiful," said Burns, who lives across the street from the hotel.
But Nadezhda Williams of the Historic Districts Council said the
penthouse is 1,100 square feet bigger than what the commission
approved, sports a mansard roof instead a sloping hipped roof and has
decorative details that make it appear "more residential and fussy"
than nearby industrial structures.
"Very simply put, this is not the penthouse the commission
approved," she said. "The Historic Districts Council urges the
commission to require the penthouse that was approved to be built
instead."
De Niro's involvement in the neighborhood dates to 1989, when he
converted an old coffee warehouse into film offices and the Tribeca
Grill restaurant.
He and restaurateur Drew Nieporent later teamed up with other
partners to develop Nobu, a perennially hot Asian restaurant that has
spawned more than a dozen outposts around the world.
The New York Observer put De Niro at No. 26 on its list of 100 most
powerful people in New York real estate, and he is often credited with
turning a warehouse district into a pricey loft neighborhood where
Mariah Carey has an apartment and Michael Imperioli can been seen
playing with his son in the park.
De Niro and partners Jane Rosenthal and Craig Hatkoff founded the
Tribeca Film Festival to promote the neighborhood after the 2001 terror
attacks.
The new hotel was built on a former parking lot, with the help of
$39 million in tax-exempt Liberty Bonds that were awarded after Sept.
11 to spur rebuilding after the attacks.
The restaurant on the ground floor, Ago, is the New York satellite
of a Los Angeles eatery popular with celebrities. But it has been
panned by critics.
Although it is a brand-new building and not a renovation of a
historic structure, the hotel required approval from the landmarks
commission because it is in a historic district.
Commissioners made no decision Tuesday but said they would review
the hotel again at a future meeting. Some board members said they might
approve the penthouse if the architects made alterations such as
changing its exterior from stucco to glass and metal.
De Niro was tight-lipped after testifying.
"You know," he said, "it's a process."
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