Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Historic ocean liner may get second life as hotel, or an Airbnb

- By Patrick Clark and Olivia Carville

Scott Rechler was negotiatin­g a deal to build Airbnb rentals in a Manhattan office tower when the real estate developer had an epiphany. Tree houses and other unconventi­onal lodgings were popular on the homesharin­g site. Why not a ship?

Mr. Rechler, chief executive officer of RXR Realty, had a vessel in mind. For decades, cruise operators and real estate people have been trying to revive a mothballed ocean liner called the SS United States. Encouraged by his conversati­ons with Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky, Mr. Rechler decided to take the plunge.

Last year, he struck a deal with the ship’s nonprofit owner and started commission­ing designs. Now RXR is shopping its plan to New York, San Francisco and a half-dozen other U.S. cities, seeking a site for a roughly $500 million project that would include hotel rooms, restaurant­s and a museum celebratin­g the vessel’s history. If local government­s respond well to a formal request for interest, work could begin at a shipyard later this year.

“The idea is to build a great public space that can become a destinatio­n for people to spend the day and be a part of history,” Mr. Rechler said in an interview.

RXR has a track record of refreshing aging structures, including a former Manhattan shipping terminal that the firm converted into office space for Google, and the Nassau Coliseum, where it’s developing apartments and retail shops on the parking lots surroundin­g the outdated arena.

The 990-foot-long SS United States will need a lot of work. The ship has spent more than two decades rusting on a pier in Philadelph­ia, and a series of failed redevelopm­ent plans have left it stripped of virtually all furniture and fittings. Doors hang off their hinges and metal scraps dangle from the ceiling.

The ship’s interiors look like an abandoned industrial space, not a luxury ocean liner.

And yet it was the envy of the world when it took its maiden voyage in 1952, symbolizin­g postwar America’s technical and financial might. The ship set a speed record on its first New York-to-London crossing, thanks to secret funding from the U.S. Department of Defense — which wanted a ship that could carry 15,000 troops across the Atlantic Ocean without refueling in the event of war.

That conflict never came, but the age of the airplane did. The ship was pulled from service in 1969, and has spent the past half-century bobbing between owners who tried and failed to repurpose it. When commercial owners gave up, philanthro­pists stepped in, raising money from history buffs who wanted to save the “most famous ship that didn’t sink.”

“The ship embodies a moment in history in which anything was possible,” said Susan Gibbs, president of the SS United States Conservanc­y and granddaugh­ter of the naval architect who designed the vessel. “It wasn’t just about a ship, it was about the nation’s ability to excel.”

For Mr. Rechler, the ocean liner’s stripped-down state makes it a blank slate for redevelopm­ent. Early plans call for converting its bowels into a brewery and food hall and creating a glassed-in event space on the ship’s stern.

Last Spring, RXR announced a novel deal with Airbnb that called for the developer to build 200 lodging units in an office building at Rockefelle­r Center and list them exclusivel­y on the home-sharing site. The companies also have teamed up on a project near the Brooklyn Navy Yard, with Airbnb offering design expertise and serving as the primary channel for filling rooms.

Airbnb, laying plans to go public this year, has been seeking ways to extend beyond its traditiona­l home-sharing offerings. Many of the cash-strapped millennial­s who were the company’s earliest users are traveling on bigger budgets, or working at firms with expense policies that don’t support homesharin­g. Signing deals with real estate developers also gives Airbnb a way to add listings that comply with local regulation­s on land, air or sea.

Airbnb declined to comment on Mr. Rechler’s project.

RXR is focused on finding a site to moor the ship, and hasn’t started looking for partners for the hotel portion of the project, Mr. Rechler said.

In one version of the plan, RXR will spend two years remaking the SS United States at a shipyard, then tow the vessel to its mooring place for six months of site work.

“In the current environmen­t, people are looking for authentici­ty,” Mr. Rechler said. “They’re not necessaril­y looking for the next big glass box of a hotel. You can get that anywhere in the world. But where can you get the ship?”

 ?? Matt Rourke/Associated Press ?? A 2010 photo of the SS United States, a luxury ocean liner removed from service in 1969.
Matt Rourke/Associated Press A 2010 photo of the SS United States, a luxury ocean liner removed from service in 1969.

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