Sam Chang

Pussycat Lounge Preserved! Sam Chang Sells Building To Club Owner for $2.5 M.

Chris Shott

After a lengthy legal fight, ravenous hotel developer Sam Chang has apparently given up his plan to tear down the old Pussycat Lounge at 96 Greenwich Street.

Mr. Chang has agreed to sell the ancient, circa-1799 building to Pussycat owner Robert Kremer for $2.5 million, according to city records -- that's $1 million less than Mr. Chang paid for it in 2005.  read more »

Sam Chang Strikes Again: $60 M. Sale On Stone Street


Hotelier to the masses Sam Chang continues to retrench amidst market turmoil, selling a Financial District lot to Magna Hospitality for $60 million, according to a report in The Real Deal.  read more »

Hotelier Sam Chang Snags Another Site

6-12 Water Street
PropertyShark.com
6-12 Water Street

Voracious hotel developer Sam Chang has acquired yet another piece of Manhattan.

City records show that Mr. Chang's Great Neck, N.Y., company has paid $27 million for a building at 6-12 Water Street.

According to PropertyShark.com, the 21,000-square-foot building includes a two-story McDonald's -- quite appropriate for the McSam gang.

Sam Chang Can't Work As A Parking Attendant Forever

Prolific hotelier Sam Chang just keeps on a-wheelin' and a-dealin'.

One day, he's selling his unfinished Sheraton on Canal Street for $83.5 million, according to The Real Deal.

A few days later, he picks up a new site for $24 million, according to city records. Mr. Chang's latest acquisition, at 431 West 33rd Street, is, according to PropertyShark.com, a 7,000-square-foot parking lot.

Now, the voracious developer may not be known for his valet skills, but he did build a Holiday Inn Express.

One can only assume another McSam hotel is in the works. But which chain? Hilton? Comfort Inn? Candlewood Suites? Stay tuned.

Sam Chang Unloads Unfinished Midtown Holiday Inn

New York's "build now brand later" hotel king, Sam Chang, has sold his Holiday Inn Express in Times Square for $42 million, according to city records--and the hotel has not even opened yet.  read more »

99 Washington Street--Poof! Sam Chang Strikes Again! Next On The Chopping Block: 50 Trinity Place

99 Washington Street, before and after.
Chris Shott.
99 Washington Street, before and after.

Ravenous hotel developer Sam Chang continues to devour buildings in the Financial District.

Just a month ago, 99 Washington Street, site of Mr. Chang's forthcoming 350-room Holiday Inn, was still standing--albeit shrouded in a death-black curtain (pictured left).Over the past several weeks, crews have dismantled almost the entire building (right).

Next up to come down: 50 Trinity Place, just one block away, site of an unnamed 186-room McSam hotel. (The demolition permit was issued Jan. 12.)

Both hotels are scheduled for Mid 2009 opening.

Hotel King Chang Stakes Another McSam Flag in Hell's Kitchen

548 West 48th Street.
Propertyshark.com.
548 West 48th Street.

Sam Chang is at it again!

According to public records, the voracious developer has snatched up yet another plot of land, this time in Hell's Kitchen, paying $6.6 million for the current Pace Auto Parts Inc., building at 548 West 48th Street.

What will become of the lot?

Another hotel?

Condominiums?

A condo-hotel?

Stay tuned.

Cha-Chang! Sam Chang Builds First, Brands Later

He’s on his way to making 50 hotels in the city, whether you Mc-like it or not.
Chris Shott
He’s on his way to making 50 hotels in the city, whether you Mc-like it or not.

Sam Chang isn’t your typical New York hotel developer.

While others strive to emulate the chic boutique model, popularized by luxury lodging pioneer Ian Schrager, Mr. Chang has taken an alternative approach, bringing the suburban-style comforts of national hotel chains to urban explorers across the five boroughs.

Sure, even Mr. Schrager himself has a new line of hostelries now in the works under the Marriott moniker. But it’s hard to imagine him ever erecting a Holiday Inn Express, Comfort Inn or Candlewood Suites—much less sticking them all on the same block, as Mr. Chang is doing on West 39th Street.  read more »

Sam Chang Sells Chelsea Lot for $55 M.

Prolific hotelier Sam Chang has sold a lot at 121 West 28th Street to a North Carolina-based firm for $55 million, according to city records.

The Chelsea lot is zoned for hotel construction, according to PropertyShark.com. We have a call out to buyer Inland American Winston Hotels. According to the company's Web site, it already has two hotels in New York State, but none in the city; one in Albany is a Hilton Garden Inn and one in White Plains is a Hampton Inn.

Sam Chang Buys Whitehouse Hotel for $7.8 M.

Can anyone in the New York City hotel business keep up with Sam Chang?

On June 11, the prolific hotelier purchased the Whitehouse Hotel at 338 Bowery for $7.8 million, according to city records.

However, unlike a number of properties that Mr. Chang has purchased, he has no immediate plans to change anything about the hotel.

“At this time, I have no plans to develop anything on the property,” Mr. Chang told The Observer. “I think that eventually we will build something, but as for now, nothing will change.”  read more »

The Afternoon Wrap: Wednesday

  • Down in DUMBO and Vinegar Hill, there's a bunch of "brash adolescents swaggering around a yard of surly and sober old-timers." Those adolescents are condos, of course, and they've "emerged from hardcore puberty growth spurts." [Gothamist]
  • Scandal! Bribery! Cat-fights! A pair of huge local hotel developers (and ex-partners) John Lam and Sam Chang are "battling over a subcontractor that one claims the other tried to lure away illegally." Manhattan is the new LA. [The Real Deal]
  • The American Society of Interior Designers has released a five-part series of "sustainable design white papers." Question #716c: is gold lame recycleable? [I.D.]
  • Today's pedestrian death in Brooklyn Heights "is not an isolated event," and, in fact, six people have been killed at Henry and Montague streets since the mid-90s. There's even a scary homemade map with little statistics/illustrations. [Streetsblog]
  • - Max Abelson