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Bed Bugs Steal New Yorker Hotel\'d5s Renovation Thunder


â??I havenâ??t slept in forever,â? a visibly traumatized Michelle Hopkins announced last week.

The teary, trembling, 21-year-old Fordham University senior couldnâ??t help but scratch as she discussed the â??itchy itch·y
adj.
Having or causing an itching sensation.
, disgusting bitesâ? that spread all across her body after just a few nights inside Manhattanâ??s ragged New Yorker Hotel The 43-story New Yorker Hotel was built in 1929 and opened its doors on January 2, 1930. Much like its contemporaries, the Empire State Building (opened in 1931) and the Chrysler Building (opened in 1930), the New Yorker is designed in the Art Deco style that was popular in the .

Talk about a learning experience: â??I never knew what a bedbug bedbug, any of the small, blood-sucking bugs of the family Cimicidae, which includes about 30 species distributed throughout the world. Bedbugs are flat-bodied, oval, reddish brown, and about 1-4 in. (6 mm) long.  even looked like,â? said Ms. Hopkins, who first checked into the old concrete fleabag flea·bag  
n. Informal
1. A seedy, rundown hotel or other lodging place.

2. An animal considered to be inferior or in poor condition.

Noun 1.
 at the corner of Eighth Avenue and 34th Street on Sept. 2.

Nor did she ever imagine the severe allergic reaction allergic reaction
n.
A local or generalized reaction of an organism to internal or external contact with a specific allergen to which the organism has been previously sensitized.
 that would result from her painful introduction to the tiny blood-sucking insects.

Eighteen days and two hospital stays later, Ms. Hopkins, still sporting her in-patient wristband wristband An identifying bracelet attached to a Pt's wrist at the time of admission to a health care facility, which may be the only identifier used during a person's stay in a hospital , appeared alongside her attorney in his downtown office, where an array of enlarged photos of her many oily, inflamed welts went on display for a whole room full of camera crews.

â??This is a disgusting story,â? grumbled WCBS-TV correspondent Brendan Keefe.

Bad timing, too, for the New Yorker Hotel, which is desperate to shed its run-down reputation.

The 40-story Art Deco-style building, erected in 1929 and owned for the past three decades by the Rev. Sun Myung Moonâ??s Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity, is undergoing a reported $65 million makeover.

â??[R]enewing a once-tired product,â? is how the hotelâ??s own publicists trumpeted the planned resurrection, which is scheduled for completion by August 2008.

More than 100 rooms on the upper floors have already been refurbished, boasting new high-tech heating and cooling controls, flat-screen TVs, wireless Internet and, perhaps most important to insomniac in·som·ni·ac
n.
One who suffers from insomnia.

adj.
Having or causing insomnia.
 entomophobes like Ms. Hopkins, brand-new beds and bed linens.

â??It has that new car smell,â? declared Thomas McCaffrey, the New Yorker Hotelâ??s director of sales and marketing, as he took The Observer on a tour of the newly revamped 37th floor.

Golden-framed artworks adorned the hallway. The carpet, once a shabby, stain-spotted green, was now dark chocolate, lined with a shiny marble baseboard base·board  
n.
A molding that conceals the joint between an interior wall and the floor. Also called mopboard.

Noun 1.
.

The marble actually isnâ??t new, Mr. McCaffrey noted; itâ??s been there for years, trapped under the drab old flooring scheme. Even the hotelâ??s head salesman agreed it was an odd cover-up: â??Why would you do that?â?

The lobby has long suffered from a similarly baffling baf·fle  
tr.v. baf·fled, baf·fling, baf·fles
1. To frustrate or check (a person) as by confusing or perplexing; stymie.

2. To impede the force or movement of.

n.
1.
 marble-blanketing program.

Stripping that floor of its own downtrodden down·trod·den  
adj.
Oppressed; tyrannized.


downtrodden
Adjective

oppressed and lacking the will to resist

Adj. 1.
 carpet is just part of the sweeping changes at ground level, which further entail the tearing out of an existing café and a newsstand to make way for more common-area seating. The chandeliers will be restrung with existing crystal and given a more modern design. The former lobby-level Italian restaurant, La Vigna Ristorante & Bar, will be relaunched as Cooperâ??s Tavern, complete with a new chef and a new menu.

The whole massive overhaul comes at a time of booming hotel construction in Manhattan, with more than 13,000 new and renovated rooms expected by 2010, and also at a time when the 860-room New Yorkerâ??s closest competitor, the 1,700-room Hotel Pennsylvania, is slated for demolition as part of the planned redevelopment of the whole Penn Station region. With new office towers looming and the nearby Javits Center expanding, the New Yorker is repositioning itself to better cater to business travelers and conventioneers. â??Certainly, our prices will go up,â? Mr. McCaffrey said. Next page >

Copyright 2007 The New York Observer
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Article Details
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Author:Chris Shott
Publication:The New York Observer
Date:Sep 25, 2007
Words:546
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