Jamaica Gleaner

Hotel to be built in Barbican

- Steven Jackson Senior Business Reporter

ARCHITECT JEREMY Millingen is part of a design team working on a new high-rise hotel that will overlook Barbican square, which itself is in the process of a transforma­tion to bring better traffic flow management to the expanding commercial hub.

The roadwork, which have begun with the demolition of structures in the square to make way for wider roads and realignmen­t of the traffic system, is already changing the look of the square.

The planned six-storey hotel would add a different type of business to an area that is largely populated by retailers, with a few offices in between, and would be one of the tallest edifices in the vicinity.

The hotel will be developed at 23-25 East Kings House Road. The property adjoins Barbican Centre, which is owned by the Loshusans, but the grocery family is said to have no part in the hotel project.

Millingen, the project engineer, held back on the identity of the hotel developer, but said it was being done in partnershi­p between Jamaican and American interests.

The hotel will cater to a mix of clients, including business travellers and visiting Jamaicans. It would become the latest high rise in Kingston currently undergoing a redevelopm­ent of its skyline. The complex is still in the design stages.

“It is a Jamaican and American joint venture,” said Millingen. “It is proposed to have approximat­ely 120 rooms,” he said.

Titles Office documents show that the land was acquired by George Naim Habib in 2016 from Edward Charles Hanna.

The ornate stone house that sits on the property is being incorporat­ed into the design of the hotel complex, which is aiming to project a mix of contempora­ry and old-world charm.

Millingen said it was up to the developers to comment on the investment to be made.

The National Environmen­t and Planning Agency (NEPA) approved the hotel project earlier this year. Millingen said the hotel

will have five floors above ground, while the sixth would be at basement level.

Talks are ongoing with the Loshusans to open up a gateway linking the hotel and Barbican Centre.

“One of the strengths of the developmen­t is the shopping plaza,” said Millingen.

He affirmed that the Loshusans were not the developers, but declined to comment on whether it was Habib.

The Loshusans’ Barbican Centre and Barbican Circle properties are held under the same company, Kenneth Loshusan & Sons, said a person with knowledge of the structure of the holdings. Ken Loshusan passed away six years ago.

The Sunday Gleaner contacted a member of the family business, Gladstone Loshusan, for additional informatio­n on the gestating plans for Barbican Circle, but was referred to Bruce Loshusan, who was overseas and unreachabl­e by Gleaner Business.

“That project is bigger than me,” Gladstone Loshusan said.

It was always the considerat­ion that the public road that splits Barbican Centre and the Barbican Circle property would be eliminated in the traffic redesign by National Works Agency.

Last week, the Loshusans were cleared to acquire more of Barbican Circle when the Kingston and St Andrew Municipal Corporatio­n voted in favour of selling 29 East Queen Street to Kenneth Loshusan & Sons and Grant Marketing Company, signalling that the family was getting closer to executing plans for either the extension of Barbican Centre or developmen­t of a new commercial complex that has been talked about for at least seven years.

Barbican is an untested location for a hotel. Millingen said the joint venture developers are in talks with a few global hotel chains under whose brand the property hopes to operate.

“We think the hotel will work and we are talking to a few brands overseas,” he said.

The hotel market in Kingston is expanding, with new projects like the ‘R’, 77 Knutsford, and PanJam’s Caribbean Place under developmen­t. Millingen believes the Barbican hotel would still find its market given its juxtaposit­ion with the busy plaza, and by flying the flag of a global hotel brand.

The majority of top hotels in Kingston are centralise­d in and around the business district of New Kingston.

 ?? PHOTO BY STEVEN JACKSON ?? The property at 25 East Kings House Road on which a hotel is to be built.
PHOTO BY STEVEN JACKSON The property at 25 East Kings House Road on which a hotel is to be built.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica