Aby Rosen’s Gramercy Park Hotel faces eviction

Hotel is behind on ground lease payments to Solil Management

The Gramercy Park Hotel at  2 Lexington Avenue and Aby Rosen of RFR Holding (Getty; Google Maps)
The Gramercy Park Hotel at  2 Lexington Avenue and Aby Rosen of RFR Holding (Getty; Google Maps)

The latest visit paid to the Gramercy Park Hotel was from the debt collector.

Aby Rosen’s RFR Holding, which owns the swanky hotel, is behind on $900,000 in ground lease payments, according to Artnet. A notice on the hotel’s door states that if Rosen does not pay by Dec. 28, his hotel could face eviction.

Rosen only owns the hotel, which before the pandemic was a go-to spot for art and fashion events. The estate of Sol Goldman owns the land underneath, which Rosen pays $5.3 million per year to lease.

Read more

Aby Rosen of RFR Realty and the Chrysler Building (Getty; iStock)
Commercial
New York
Aby Rosen is bringing back the Chrysler Building’s observation deck
RFR Realty's Aby Rosen and 522 Fifth Avenue (Getty; Google Maps)
Commercial
New York
Aby Rosen buys Midtown office building for $350M
From left: Michael Fuchs, Aby Rosen, Brandon Singer and Michael Cody (Getty, iStock)
Commercial
New York
Aby Rosen, Michael Fuchs back new retail brokerage

The notice is signed by Louisa Little, an administrator at Solil Management, the company that represents Sol Goldman’s estate. Goldman was one of Manhattan’s largest landlords and at one period owned nearly 1,900 separate parcels, according to ArtNet.

Sign Up for the undefined Newsletter

Rosen bought the hotel with longtime friend hotelier Ian Schrager in 2003. The two redeveloped the property, and Rosen took full ownership in 2010.

The hotel had closed its doors to guests at the onset of the pandemic, but Rosen recently said he offered his employees who live in the suburbs the opportunity to stay there to avoid commuting to the office.

“I told everybody, ‘Guys, you want to stay Tuesday night or Wednesday? Be my guest. Breakfast is at 9. Then show up at the office when you feel like it,’ ” Rosen told Bloomberg News.

Hotels have been hit particularly hard by the pandemic. About 80 percent of hotel properties tied to the commercial mortgage-backed securities market are showing signs of distress, according to recent figures from Trepp.

[Artnet— Keith Larsen

Recommended For You