Detroit Free Press

Historic Detroit tower to become extended-stay apartment hotel

- Detroit Free Press USA TODAY NETWORK

JC Reindl

A 12-story 1960s tower in Midtown Detroit that was previously converted from offices to upscale apartments is slated to undergo yet another conversion, this time into an extended-stay apartment hotel.

Detroit-based developer The Roxbury Group said Tuesday it has signed a deal with hotel giant Marriott to fully convert The Plaza, 3800 Woodward, into the first Apartments By Marriott Bonvoy property in the U.S.

All of the building’s existing 72 apartments will become extended-stay, fully furnished apartment hotel units. The unit count could grow to roughly 92 units, mostly by converting some two-bedrooms into one bedrooms.

The conversion is expected to start later next year and existing residents can stay until their leases expire.

The tower had been an empty office building until Roxbury bought it and redevelope­d it as apartments in 2015-2016. Prior to Roxbury’s purchase, the tower faced the possibilit­y of demolition.

David Di Rita, principal of The Roxbury Group, said in a phone interview Tuesday that The Plaza has been doing well as traditiona­l apartments. However, Marriott was one of several groups that approached Roxbury Group with the idea of converting the building into extended-stay. Roxbury will remain the building’s owner.

“The building has performed just fine since we opened it,” Di Rita said. “Candidly, it was more of an evaluation of the evolving nature of the residentia­l demand downtown. This allows us to reach a wider audience than the more traditiona­l, unfurnishe­d long-term lease approach that we’ve been following there.”

Similar developmen­ts in Detroit include the newly opened 117-unit ROOST Apartment Hotel

in Dan Gilbert’s Book Tower and Sonder extended-stay properties at 305 Michigan Ave. and 139 Cadillac Square.

News of this latest conversion plan for The Plaza was first reported by Crain’s Detroit.

Di Rita said he believes that demand for furnished extended-stay apartment hotels still exceeds the available supply in Detroit.

“I think it speaks to the evolving nature of work and of what people define as home,” Di Rita said of demand for extended-stay. “And so I think that this kind of residentia­l product is here to stay — and you’re going to see more of it.”

Back when it was an office building, the tower was officially the Profession­al Plaza Tower, yet widely known as the “Hammer and Nail” building for a neon sign atop the tower that illuminate­d in sequence to show a hammer striking a nail, a tribute to a local carpenters union

that had offices on the upper two floors.

The original hammer and nail signage was later mounted inside the Hammer & Nail cocktail bar that is open on the building’s ground floor. The bar is expected to remain in the building during the conversion. Another building tenant, Give Thanks Bakery, also could stay.

The tower was designed by architect Gerald Crane and opened in 1966 as a medical arts building to complement the nearby Detroit Medical Center. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2016.

Marriott announced Tuesday that the first Apartments by Marriott Bonvoy property, situated in San Juan, Puero Rico, will open soon. The news release says that Marriott’s Bonvoy brand “sits within the premium and luxury segments.”

Other Detroit hotels in Roxbury’s portfolio are the extended-stay Element Detroit at the Metropolit­an, the coming Autograph Hotel in the David Whitney Building and the future AC Detroit at the Bonstelle in Midtown Detroit, which is under constructi­on and could open next September.

Contact JC Reindl: 313-222-6631 or jcreindl@freepress.com. Follow him on X @jcreindl

 ?? PROVIDED BY THE ROXBURY GROUP ?? The Plaza on Woodward will be converted from traditiona­l apartments to extended-stay apartment hotel rooms.
PROVIDED BY THE ROXBURY GROUP The Plaza on Woodward will be converted from traditiona­l apartments to extended-stay apartment hotel rooms.
 ?? ROMAIN BLANQUART/DETROIT FREE PRESS ?? The Plaza’s Hammer & Nail cocktail bar that is open on the building’s ground floor is expected to remain in the building during the conversion. Another building tenant, Give Thanks Bakery, also could stay.
ROMAIN BLANQUART/DETROIT FREE PRESS The Plaza’s Hammer & Nail cocktail bar that is open on the building’s ground floor is expected to remain in the building during the conversion. Another building tenant, Give Thanks Bakery, also could stay.

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