Korman Makes a Quick Switch on Plans for 8500 Sunset Blvd.

ADVERTISEMENT
8500 Sunset Blvd.

Faced with a West Hollywood law barring short-term stays in apartment buildings, Korman Communities apparently has changed its plans for the condominium towers it recently acquired at 8500 Sunset Blvd.

In a press release yesterday, Korman announced that the 80 units in the east tower on the site will be leased as apartments rather than short-term corporate rentals, as it originally had announced. The 110 units in the west tower, which Korman also had planned to use for short-term corporate rentals, now will be available only for rentals of one month or more.

The units in the two buildings at that location were being marketed by CIM Group as condominiums until recently, when CIM sold them to Korman and the Brookfield Property Group. The acquisition price is unknown, but the value of the property has been estimated at $250 million. Korman said then that it planned to turn the buildings into one of its AKA hotels. Korman operates 11 such hotels, which offer extended stays to corporate executives in locations such as Beverly Hills, where rooms rent for a minimum of one week for as much as $1,000 a night, and rentals of only one night in other locations in New York, London, Philadelphia

8500 Sunset Blvd.

However corporate rentals have been banned in West Hollywood, part of a move by the City Council to prevent housing for residents from being taken off the market. Rental of a residential unit for fewer than 31 days is a violation of the city’s ban on short-term rentals such as those booked through Airbnb.

It’s likely that Korman’s plan to rent rooms for one month would still require approval by City Hall because it would effectively be operating the west tower as a hotel. John Keho, the city’s assistant community development director, said the city is in discussion with Korman about the plan, which wouldn’t comply with the building’s designation as a residential property.

In the press release announcing its new plan, AKA President Larry Korman said “Our intention with this acquisition is to operate annual luxury apartments in one tower and Korman Communities’ industry leading furnished residences available for stays one month or longer in the other tower. We are committed to working collaboratively with the City of West Hollywood and abiding by all local laws.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Turning the building into a hotel would be controversial, given concerns among owners and managers of the city’s existing hotels about the number of new hotels already coming into the market. With the recently completed but not yet opened “1” hotel (formerly the James), the city now has 19 hotels with 2,346 hotel rooms. New hotels approved by the city or already under construction such as the Edition and the Kimpton La Peer would add another 447 units. Other planned projects that haven’t received final approval would add 496 rooms, bring the total to 3,575 rooms. Those projects include 8950 Sunset, Robertson Lane and 7811 Santa Monica Blvd.

A study of West Hollywood’s thriving hotel market by CBRE Hotels, an industry consulting firm, has predicted a major impact on room rates if the seven hotels under construction, those permitted but not yet under construction and those in the existing permit process are completed. CBRE projects the current 85% occupancy rate would fall to 68% by 2020. The study predicts that by 2026 that rate will have risen only to 80%.

The hotel room occupancy tax is the largest single source of revenue for the City of West Hollywood. The tax is 15.5%, with 3% of that allocated to the city’s marketing and tourism bureau. The CBRE study found that the projected increase in hotel rooms would not reduce that revenue. The city’s 2016/17 fiscal year budget projects $23 million in hotel tax revenue. The CBRE study estimates that with the new hotels it will reach $36.8 million in the 2020/21 fiscal year.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

17 Comments
Newest
Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Observer
Observer
6 years ago

How was this built by CIM entertaining the thought of condos or apartments on the earthquake fault which according to WEHO law is not allowed? One step further, hotels house humans also, are they a less important category? This project appears to have been problematic from the start.

David Abrams
David Abrams
6 years ago

The city should grant this project an exemption to operate as a hotel. Operating as short term apartment rentals greater than 30-days means the city loses out on the hotel bed tax, and still gets all the negative impacts such as traffic.

Observer
Observer
6 years ago

Would be interersting to know who was on the Planning Commission that approved this project, the vote and likewise the City Council.

WeHo Resident
WeHo Resident
6 years ago

So, now, after completion, the units become rentals…without any inclusionary affordable units? How convenient. Wouldn’t want the riff-raff living on Sunset…except, of course, on the street.

Romaine
Romaine
6 years ago

So after all of the time, noise, traffic backups and hillside view-blocking size of these buildings, they still aren’t sure what the site will be to be used for? However, what is known for sure is that they create a huge, irretrievable footprint in the city and will continue to cause traffic headaches throughout all of the surrounding streets for the rest of time. Our City Council needs to take their blinders off and realize that each of them now wear this project as their legacy. As for the developer’s rendering of the proposed completed project at the top of… Read more »

Jonathan Simmons
Jonathan Simmons
6 years ago

I don’t understand this. However, I recall from years ago at a Planning Committee where small old house on South Orlando. The developer filed as a new apartment, the before completion, filed for it to be a condo. The Planning Commission were in ‘hysterics” all saying things like cheating, scam, illegal scam ….yadda yadda yadda… The assistant City Attorney was present, and said City frowns on builders who try this, however it is NO illegal. In that old case, it was clear they could build it without The Planning Committee forcing their OPINIONS and forcing change to superficial exterior details.… Read more »

WeHo conscience
WeHo conscience
6 years ago

” Whoever planned these buildings we’re[sic] idiots.” – Shane

The credit belongs to those who approved this monstrosity. That would be WeHo and it’s vaunted Planning Director, staff, Urban Planner and City Council.

It will stand as another great case study on how to sweet talk a willfully ignorant city with developer bait and switch.

Shane
Shane
6 years ago

These buildings are FUGLY. How this prison looking building was agreed upon and built is a mystery. And those billboards blocking the windows? Who thought anyone would appreciate those out their windows, condo, apartment, or hotel. Whoever planned these buildings we’re idiots.

Sam
Sam
6 years ago

Saw the inside. Not worth what the prices will be. Very, very small.

Vacay Girl
Vacay Girl
6 years ago

If they can get this approved, someone might want to keep an eye on those “minimum 30 day rentals”…same rule is supposed to apply at some of their other properties too, wink, wink.

Observer
Observer
6 years ago

@Ben: Yes back to the beginning. Scrape the lot and begin over. Or take a giant write off and donate the land….. A PARK designed by Rios Clemente & Hale would be a dream.

Luke
Luke
6 years ago

Sad. Weho is in desperate need for affordable long term housing.

17
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x