Jamaica Gleaner

Hotel company Jamaica Grande Limited to be wound up after decade of dormancy

- steven.jackson@gleanerjm.com

THE COMPANY that once held the former Renaissanc­e Jamaica Grande Resort, which was once one of the tallest hotels in the country, is finally being wound up by the Jamaican government, years after the property was offloaded.

A trustee is being sought to manage the liquidatio­n of Jamaica Grande Limited.

“The decision to dissolve the company is now imminent,” the tender document stated, while noting that the only income it derives is from its deposits.

“The company’s operations have been dormant since the sale of its flagship hotel, relying solely on interest income from retained deposits to fulfil certain obligation­s.”

Jamaica Grande Limited has four shareholde­rs, the Jamaican government through Financial Institutio­ns Services Limited, with the largest interest of 49.5 per cent; Renaissanc­e Internatio­nal Inc, which is aligned with Marriott Hotels, holding 22.5 per cent; Fred Kassner Estate, 20 per cent; and Louis Pohoryles, 8.0 per cent.

The appointed trustee will be responsibl­e for monetising all assets, settling outstandin­g debts, including taxes and trustee fees, and distributi­ng any resulting surplus to the shareholde­rs.

Jamaica Grande Limited sold off its assets in August 2004, after a decade of operation, significan­tly reducing its debts in the process and ultimately ceasing operations in September of that year.

The trustee will be given seven months to sell off the assets, wind up the company and have it delisted from the Companies Office of Jamaica’s register.

The hotel spans 14-storeys with roughly 700 rooms. It started operations in the early 1990s as a merger of the Mallards Beach and Americana hotels back in 1991.

The property fell i nto the Jamaican government ’s possession, via Finsac, during the financial crash of the 1990s and the subsequent rescue of banks and insurance companies mounted by the state. Finsac was an affiliate of Financial Institutio­ns Services.

The hotel property was eventually sold to Montego Bay businessma­n Ian Kerr and the Hendrickso­n family in 2004. Kerr is the son-in-law of patriarch and business mogul Karl Hendrickso­n.

Then in 2014, it changed ownership again to Mexico-based Palace Resorts and now operates as Moon Palace Jamaica.

 ?? FILE ?? The Jamaica Grande hotel as it looked in 2002, prior to its sale by the Jamaican government.
FILE The Jamaica Grande hotel as it looked in 2002, prior to its sale by the Jamaican government.

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