From Billion Dollar Union Scandal To Luxury Reinvention: Hilton’s Bold New Transformation Of The Diplomat

Last year The Diplomat in Hollywood, Florida was sold to Honolulu-based Trinity Investments and Credit Suisse Asset Management for $835 million. The property remained part of Hilton’s Curio Collection. Now it’s transitioning to Hilton’s Signia brand.

The Diplomat is currently in phase one of its repositioning, Lane said. That comprises the front entrance, including the lobby and new lobby bar, as well as an infinity pool that will have an outdoor bar and private beach club. The first phase is scheduled to conclude in late December.

The full renovation will include refinished interiors, updated furnishings and elevated banquet and catering services…It will have an oceanfront event terrace that will have paved and turf flooring, shade structures and infrastructure to allow for year-round events…

The grand atrium and lobby will turn into a multi-story conservatory with exotic plants and arrangements of naturally inspired furnishings. The bar will focus on Mediterranean-inspired small bites, and the bar opens to a reimagined pool deck with multiple pools that lead down to a nearly a quarter mile of beach.

Described as “exceptional hotels in gateway cities and resort destinations” there are currently Signia properties in Atlanta, San Jose, and Orlando and the Indiana Convention Center is another in the pipeline. Marketed as ‘approachable luxury’ I’m not sure I understand the brand at all, though I understand the Diplomat very well. The hotel used to be a Westin, and the story of how it became one is interesting.

In the 60’s and 70’s the original Diplomat was frequented by Rat Pack types. The hotel closed in 1991 and was acquired by the United Association of Plumbers and Pipefitters in 1998, torn down, and rebuilt at a cost of ~ $800 million in construction costs and $40 million for the property. That’s about what it was sold for last year – without adjusting for inflation.

When the feds looked at a building project funded by a union pension to a tune just shy of $1 billion dollars they said… nah, fuggedaboutit.

The Department of Labor found that the union had done “no feasibility studies, market analyses, market-tested construction budgets, construction schedules, economic models or gathered other information with which to make an informed decision.” They just embarked on a billion dollar project with untold potential for untold sorts of activities. And since the union’s pension fund was doing it, ERISA law came into play.

The suit also alleged that the trustees failed to maintain adequate financial controls over construction costs and paid excessive fees to service providers on the project.

The suit alleged that the sale of the real estate from the union to the pension plan was prohibited under ERISA because of the relationship between the union and its pension plan, without special DoL permission.

In their DoL exemption application, the suit charged that the trustees failed to disclose that the anticipated development would require the further investment of hundreds of millions of dollars of the plan’s assets.

The exemption approved by the department covered only the terms of the $40 million sale of the property from the union to the pension plan, not the prudence of the property’s subsequent redevelopment using union pension funds, the government said the plan invested more than $800 million in the Diplomat project.

So the union’s pension fund was forced to get an independent trustee, and couldn’t independently manage the property.

The hotel was flagged as a Westin even before the case was settled, but I understand it still went ahead and purchased its own mattresses in what must have been an interesting contract for a 1,000 room resort. While the sheets at time of opening were all Westin-regulation Heavenly Bed, the mattresses at the time were not.

The Labor Secretary who sued on behalf of union members to protect their pension investment, and obtained $10 million back from union officials, was future Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao.

As a Starwood Platinum this hotel was for years among my very favorites. There were 86 suites in the upgrade pool, most corner suites with wraparound balcony. The Atlantic Ocean views were fantastic. And the hotel’s club lounge was a serene space, once quite generous with its offerings, and itself featuring views of both the Atlantic and the Intracoastal Waterway.

I would stay there several times a year as my go-to when visiting family in the area, and over many years think I failed to receive a suite upgrade only one time.


Club Lounge Outdoor Deck


Pool Deck

The Diplomat was sold and first became a Hilton property in fall 2014.

About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

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Comments

  1. I stayed there for a conference earlier this year, and it was really busy with that traffic– there were multiple conferences going on at the same time. Which I guess makes it perfect for the Hilton Signia brand, because aren’t those basically gigantic Hiltons with lots of meeting space?

  2. Have stayed at the Orlando Signia, and, yup, gigantic Hilton with lots of meeting space. It was.a zoo and most definitely not luxury. Of course, luxury and Orlando generally are not found together too often. I have also stayed at the Conrad and the WA. The WA is the best of them but is still not close to the WA standard I have experienced elsewhere.

  3. The whole point of the Signia brand by Hilton can be summarized as massive convention-oriented hotels, where Hilton elite status benefits are not “Hhonored”.

  4. It’s weird that Hilton positions Signia in its luxury portfolio alongside Waldorf Astoria, Conrad, LXR, and NoMad (and indeed all five brands participate in the Hilton for Luxury program, formerly Impresario). By all accounts, the Signia properties are nice but firmly not luxury.

  5. This is not a true luxury hotel. It is a nice, premium hotel that was well-branded I thought as a Westin back when Westin was nicer. It is a busy property with great views over the Atlantic and of the intra-coastal waterway, with tons of suites, and a nice club lounge space. But it’s a factory for the most part.

  6. @Gary

    Can you give us some more words on the Westin brand. I used to enjoy Westin 20 years ago with some properties in the top 100 or 500 hotel lists. Now no one talks about Westin. It was getting stale even before the acquisition.

  7. The whole point of the Signia brand by Hilton can be summarized as massive convention-oriented hotels, where Hilton elite status benefits are not “Hhonored”.

    Actually, you are dead wrong about that. Convention-oriented hotels are precisely the types of properties where Hilton elite benefits are Hhonored because very top elites are frequently upgraded to expensive suites that most convention attendees cannot afford in order to free cheaper rooms that would be more affordable for convention attendees. I memorably scored an upgrade to a presidential suite at Embassy Suites Montreal, located right next to the city’s biggest convention center, based precisely on that premise 😉

  8. I know alot of men that lost their pension to this scandal. Nobody was ever held accountable. Sad, gives the union a really bad name.

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