Lethbridge Herald

STILL COOL AFTER ALL THESE YEARS

Studio 54 founder opens new hotel

- Beth J. Harpaz

Founder of legendary disco Studio 54 opens new hotel on Manhattan’s Lower East Side —

It’s been 40 years since Ian Schrager opened the legendary disco Studio 54. But if the trendy crowds mobbing opening night for his new PUBLIC hotel are any indication, Schrager, at age 70, is still the coolest kid around. The hotel, on Chrystie Street on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, throbbed Tuesday night with champagne-drinking models, waifs covered in tattoos and other beautiful people vamping for photos, draping themselves across long white sofas and riding the mirrored escalator, bathed in glowing red-and-yellow stripes of light.

A worshipful mob prayed at the altar of punk goddess Patti Smith as she christened the hotel’s performanc­e space. Drag queen Lady Bunny showed up, as did the Quann sisters, icons of street style.

A week earlier, though, as Schrager toured the hotel issuing last-minute directives in a gruff voice with an oldschool New York accent, the white-haired man in jeans and sneakers could have been anybody’s baby-boomer dad. But don’t underestim­ate him. Schrager is credited with creating the concept of boutique hotels, and he says the PUBLIC represents another innovation that’s “smart,” “edgy“and nothing less than “transforma­tive.“

“This is more than just a place to sleep,” he says. “You don’t have to leave the premises to get the experience­s New York offers.”

Schrager is inviting the community in, saying he wants New Yorkers to spend as much time here as hotel guests. Never mind that hotel chains have been talking about attracting locals for years with co-working spaces, stylish lobbies and events. Schrager says he’s redefining what hotels do, thanks to quirky public spaces that are the key to the hotel’s identity. There’s a cozy park-like greenspace out front, rows of stadiumsty­le steps inside where you could sit with a laptop or a latte, long white sofas that invoke a sophistica­ted Miami club and even a ’70s basement vibe, thanks to a pool table, plywood-finish cabinets and concrete pillars.

“Each area has a different personalit­y, a different mood,” he said. “We don’t tell people how to use the space. They tell us.”

The venue where Patti Smith performed, PUBLIC Arts, will host everything from movie screenings to comedy to theatre. The rooftop bar’s panoramic views — downtown to One World Trade and the Brooklyn bridges, uptown to the Empire State and Chrysler buildings — rival what you’d pay to see from a skyscraper observator­y.

Prices for the hotel’s 370 rooms start at a mere $150. “It’s luxury for all,” he says. “It’s not so much about being rich. It’s about how it makes you feel. Great style and design. Great service, but a new kind of service. Not obsequious or pretentiou­s, but just a great experience.”

Schrager says he’s keeping prices down by “editing out things people don’t care about.” No bellmen because “everyone has a suitcase on wheels.” No room service, but several in-house options for food, from ordering a meal via chatbot for pickup at the elevator, to getting food at a counter grocery store decorated with hanging hams or in an onsite sit-down restaurant, with menus by Jean-Georges Vongericht­en.

No front desk or concierge, because guests check themselves in on iPads that can send a barcode to a cellphone that’s swiped at your hotel room door. Which is not to say there’s any shortage of hotel staff: PUBLIC “Advisors” wearing black T-shirts circulate throughout the hotel to offer assistance.

Scott Smith, a hotel industry veteran who teaches at the University of South Carolina’s School of Hospitalit­y, Tourism and Restaurant Management, says Schrager is a “pop culture figure” who’s done for the hotel industry what Steve Jobs did for computers: “He wasn’t the inventor but he brings the artistic together with the technology. He’s a promoter. He’s a marketer. He’s an artist. He’s not a hotelier. He’s an innovator.” Schrager started with Morgans hotel in New York in 1984, followed by the Delano in Miami, and these days he’s working with Marriott on a boutique brand, Edition. But is it fair to credit him with inventing boutique hotels?

Not exactly, says Smith: “There were small hotels that fit the definition of boutique hotels before, but we didn’t call them that.”

It was Schrager who “made them cool.”

Schrager’s career has not been without its ups and downs. He and his Studio 54 co-founder Steve Rubell went to prison for tax evasion.

 ?? Associated Press photos ?? A cocktail rests on a bar at The PUBLIC Arts space of the PUBLIC hotel in New York. The new hotel on Manhattan's Lower East Side opened Wednesday. It is the latest project from Ian Schrager, who’s known for introducin­g the concept of boutique hotels...
Associated Press photos A cocktail rests on a bar at The PUBLIC Arts space of the PUBLIC hotel in New York. The new hotel on Manhattan's Lower East Side opened Wednesday. It is the latest project from Ian Schrager, who’s known for introducin­g the concept of boutique hotels...
 ??  ?? This photo shows hotelier Ian Schrager in a lounge area at his new PUBLIC hotel.
This photo shows hotelier Ian Schrager in a lounge area at his new PUBLIC hotel.

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