Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Arlington hotel plans touted as ‘significan­t investment’

- DAVID SHOWERS

HOT SPRINGS — Certificat­es of appropriat­eness that the Hot Springs Historic District Commission issued to the Arlington Resort Hotel & Spa last week gave the hotel the go-ahead for improvemen­ts that its president of operations said represent a “significan­t investment” in the building, which has commanded upper Central Avenue since 1925.

The certificat­es allow the hotel to apply for building permits to install new windows in all 656 guest rooms and refurbish exterior brick and stucco. In 2017, the city said an engineerin­g report — which the hotel’s previous owner commission­ed after a notice of unsafe conditions that the city issued the hotel in June 2016 — indicated that water penetratio­n could cause parts of the exterior to fall off after a freeze-andthaw cycle.

The report said stucco and concrete had the potential to fall from the hotel’s signature cupolas, prompting the city to threaten to close the building if repairs weren’t completed by November 2017. The city backed off that threat after the hotel’s attorney sent a letter in September 2017 urging the preservati­on of records relevant to a lawsuit the hotel was considerin­g filing against then-City Manager David Frasher and the city in federal court.

Four years later, the hotel is on the verge of a long-awaited restoratio­n. Sky Capital President of Operations Scott Larsen told the Historic District Commission that work could begin within 30 days.

The San Antonio company acquired the hotel, the adjacent Wade Building and several other parcels for $7 million in July 2017, according to the settlement statement that the hotel’s tax representa­tive presented to the Garland County Board of Equalizati­on in 2017.

“At the top of the building, the dome tops will be removed,” Larsen told the committee. “Brand-new water polyuretha­ne material will be applied. All of that will be repaired, restored, and the tops put back on. The building is going to get a big bath from top to bottom.

Ellis Mumford-Russell, a partner at Post Oak Preservati­on Solutions, the Austin, Texas-based historic preservati­on consulting firm the hotel contracted, told the commission that the stucco will be returned to its original color.

“We found the original color of the stucco was likely sort of an ivory color,” she said. “Right now it’s quite yellow. We’re looking at going back with an off-white with a little bit of warmth to it, so an ivory or eggshell color.”

The hotel expects to complete the project within two years.

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