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This Charming City in Upstate New York Is Home to Quirky Museums, Historic Inns, and Natural Mineral Springs

Saratoga Springs Hotels Saratoga's hotel scene may have waxed and waned over the years, but historic properties abound today. The luxe Adelphi Hotel is undoubtedly the town's grande dame, with a prime...
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This Charming City in Upstate New York Is Home to Quirky Museums, Historic Inns, and Natural Mineral Springs

Saratoga Springs Hotels

Saratoga's hotel scene may have waxed and waned over the years, but historic properties abound today. The luxe Adelphi Hotel is undoubtedly the town's grande dame, with a prime location on Broadway and four restaurants. In Saratoga Spa State Park, the Gideon Putnam upholds Saratoga's resort tradition — and is the site of the Roosevelt Baths & Spa. 

Then there's a seemingly endless number of inns and bed-and-breakfasts. The Batcheller Mansion Inn is, as its name suggests, housed in a Victorian-era mansion, while the Inn at Saratoga is the longest continuously operating lodging in town; it opened its doors in 1843. For an upscale boutique stay, there's the Saratoga Arms, a family-run property in downtown Saratoga built in 1870. Other popular B&Bs include Springwater Bed & Breakfast, Anne's Washington Inn, Saratoga Farmstead, Circular Manor, the Brunswick at Saratoga, and Union Gables Inn.

For something more modern, try Saratoga's two motels: the Bluebird Spa City Motor Lodge on Broadway and the Brentwood Hotel, just five minutes outside of town. And if you're a points chaser, don't worry — Saratoga has plenty of chain hotels, so it's easy to earn and redeem points here, too.

Read the original article here https://www.travelandleisure.com/how-to-visit-saratoga-springs-7495899

Adelphi-View-from-Broadway-edited

It will be condos, not apartments for this $75 million Saratoga Springs hotel resort project

Developers Mike Dubb and Larry Roth have decided to build condominiums instead of apartments as they charge ahead with a $75 million-plus expansion and renovation of the Adelphi Hotel in...
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It will be condos, not apartments for this $75 million Saratoga Springs hotel resort project

Developers Mike Dubb and Larry Roth have decided to build condominiums instead of apartments as they charge ahead with a $75 million-plus expansion and renovation of the Adelphi Hotel in downtown Saratoga Springs.

The strategy shift comes after the developers discovered during last year’s test marketing that there is a growing number of potential customers who are more interested in buying than renting a piece of the 200,000-square-foot Broadway resort.The vision for the project is to create a 5-star lodging and dining experience unlike anything else in the affluent city of 28,000. The resort will expand its number of hotel rooms from 32 to 65, while constructing an additional 79 condos that will be marketed for somewhere between $600,000 to $1.5 million apiece. The Adelphi also will offer customers access to a spa, concierge services, housekeeping, a ballroom and on-site restaurants serving sushi, raw oysters and $90 Delmonico steaks.

Development partners Dubb and Roth hinted they were thinking about a shift from apartments to condos last fall. Since then, they decided to seek approval for their condo offering plan from the New York State Office of the Attorney General.

The fellow thoroughbred owners and racing fans teamed up two years ago to map out a strategy for expanding the Adelphi.

Dubb is the founder of Beechwood Homes, a company that has constructed more than 10,000 houses on Long Island. Dubb also has had success developing large-scale luxury resorts. He developed The Vanderbilt with 197 apartments and hotel rooms in Westbury on Long Island four years ago. Demand was so strong, he constructed a similar project about a mile away, The Selby in Westbury, with 237 apartments and hotel rooms.

Roth is the former owner of Marchon Eyewear Inc., one of the world’s largest eye care companies. He also was part of a separate group that invested $28 million to renovate the Adelphi into a 32-room boutique hotel about five years ago, offering guests rooms with heated floors, heated toilet seats, bidets and fiber optic internet connections.

Now, Roth and Dubb are expanding the Adelphi by tying it into the former Rip Van Dam hotel next door.
Bonacio Construction of Saratoga Springs is the contractor for the project and Gilbane Building Co. of Albany is the owner’s representative.

Dubb said the Adelphi expansion remains on track to be completed by spring of 2024. Some of the new hotel rooms are expected to open next month. And the remainder of the hotel rooms will be ready in time for the 2023 thoroughbred racing season this summer.


Read the original article here.

Adelphi-View-from-Broadway-edited

Roth and Dubb Bring New Level of Luxury to Downtown Saratoga

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-RKqYwgC20 While racing draws thousands of visitors to Saratoga Springs every summer, its biggest appeal is its graceful, bustling downtown. Two buildings on Broadway are now undergoing a huge transformation...
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Roth and Dubb Bring New Level of Luxury to Downtown Saratoga

While racing draws thousands of visitors to Saratoga Springs every summer, its biggest appeal is its graceful, bustling downtown. Two buildings on Broadway are now undergoing a huge transformation without losing their historic charm. The Adelphi Hotel, which recently underwent a major renovation, will be merged with the adjacent Rip Van Dam Hotel, expanding the number of luxury hotel rooms from 33 to 78 and adding 85 luxury apartments to the Rip Van Dam. We spoke with Larry Roth and Michael Dubb about the renovations.

View the original video here

Anna House Graduation

Anna House Graduation: Child Care and So Much More

To read the original article, please visit www.thoroughbreddailynews.com. https://player.vimeo.com/video/723839687?h=875132bb92 Finding affordable quality day care is a struggle most working parents face, but for parents working on the backstretches of America's...
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Anna House Graduation: Child Care and So Much More

To read the original article, please visit www.thoroughbreddailynews.com.

Finding affordable quality day care is a struggle most working parents face, but for parents working on the backstretches of America's racetracks, the combination of low pay and early hours make it even more of a challenge. For years, too many backstretch parents were forced to leave their children in less-than-ideal situations or drive to work at 5 a.m. with their kids sleeping in the back of their car.
But in the late 1990s, after talking to his good friend Jerry Bailey about the situation, Michael Dubb took matters into his own hands and built Anna House, a model day care program for backstretch workers located right in the Belmont barn area.
This past Tuesday, a dozen children graduated from the program, and will head to the local public school system this fall. But the Anna House care doesn't stop there. Early-morning care, breakfast, after-school care, tutoring, summer programs, and literacy programs for parents are all a part of the remarkable and comprehensive system overseen by the Belmont Child Care Association (BCCA).
“Most of the children come from bilingual families, and so we teach them English first and foremost,” said Dubb. “We teach them computer skills. We teach them arts and crafts. We teach them interaction. We teach them gardening. We teach them how to play chess. We teach them how to climb walls. We teach them how to build character and confidence. And it really sets them up for life. These are happy, exuberant kids ready for the challenges that life is going to bring them and ready to excel.
For the past 10 years, Libby Imperio has served as the President of the BCCA, and oversees fundraising, grants to expand the programs offered, and more.
“I became involved because my husband and I went to their Saratoga fundraiser, Racing for the Children. And they had a wish list asking for diapers, books, changing tables, formula and with the thousands of fundraisers we go to, no one had ever asked me for a specific item before, and it really tugged at my heart. That was the beginning. And I just kept asking, `What can I do? What can I do?'”
Years later, she knows the answer.
Since its inception, Anna House has gone beyond educating preschool children and has expanded its programs to parent literacy, basic childcare, and more.
“I'm so proud of our expansions,” said Imperio. “Our first expansion was after-school tutoring, which we provide to up until 13 years old. Then we took that concept and provided a school-age program, so our graduates and even kids that did not originally attend here who are in elementary school, when they have the day off or school vacation, they have now a safe and healthy and nurturing place to attend. And we have about 20 kids enrolled in that program.”
The BCCA and Dubb built Faith House in Saratoga so that workers relocated for the eight weeks could bring their children knowing they would have a safe place to go for a summer which involves both learning and fun.
They also provide basic life and childcare skills. “We joined with the other backstretch charities, BEST and the Racetrack Chaplaincy to develop `The ABCs of Life' for the mothers of the backstretch,” she said. “That course is teaching things that we all take for granted: how to write a check, nutrition on a low income, basic health and dentistry for children, cooking, and just your basic ABCs of life. But my favorite program has become the women's literacy program. It started out with about just five moms on the backstretch, and we now have about 25 mothers. And it makes me so happy because that just will help not just themselves, but their children as they go forward in life.”
Tuesday's graduation was the 20th time that the Anna House kids left the program to head for the public schools, and Dubb said that some of them were now circling back.
“I've seen familiar faces back here at the racetrack working,” said Dubb. “But one of them, a young child at the racetrack named Angel Torres whose father was an assistant trainer, he was a child of the backstretch, and went on from here to get his college degree. And he's one of the now one of the top financial people at my company.”
Anna House's most important fundraiser is coming up at Saratoga, said Imperio-the very event she attended all those years ago which inspired her involvement. Every year, the BCCA needs to raise $1.7 million for operations.
“Our biggest fundraiser of the year is Racing for the Children, being held in downtown Saratoga August 25th at the Universal Preservation Building (at 25 Washington Street). It's a new location for us this year, so we're really excited about it. I think it will be a beautiful event.”
Dubb said that initially, he saw the need and thought as a builder, he could fix it, and move on.
“When I built this, I really just wanted to donate a building and ride off into the sunset,” he said. “But I couldn't do it. And in 20 years, I'm most proud of the children and I'm most proud of their parents. This is the real American dream. Come here to work hard and to do right by your kids. That's what my grandparents did. And I'm just so happy that I can share my good fortune and make this happen, but it's really not about me. This is the gift that keeps giving to me. It brings me more pleasure than anything else on the racetrack-more pleasure than winning any kind of race. A race is for a moment, but a child's life is for a lifetime. And knowing that we're making a difference, really, that's what really, really drives me.”
To make a donation to Anna House, or to learn more about their upcoming fundraisers, visit www.belmontchildcare.org.
Aerial view of Saratoga Lake

Exploring Saratoga Springs: Guide to the Spa City

By Malerie Yolen-Cohen Special to Newsday A weekend in Saratoga Springs is an immersive experience in many ways. You can feel the warm, bubbly, effervescing mineral waters at the Roosevelt Baths and Spa,...
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Exploring Saratoga Springs: Guide to the Spa City

By Malerie Yolen-Cohen

Special to Newsday

A weekend in Saratoga Springs is an immersive experience in many ways. You can feel the warm, bubbly, effervescing mineral waters at the Roosevelt Baths and Spa, cheer on your favored horse at the Saratoga Racetrack, dance to the music at Saratoga Performing Arts Center, eat at a local landmark or spend the weekend at a boutique hotel. 

Saratoga Springs is built around two industries: spring/mineral water and thoroughbred horse racing. A New Deal era State Park promotes mineral water soaks and free gallons of fresh spring water. And you’ll find horse sculptures, equine sidewalk posts and racing colors everywhere you look.

Saratoga Springs was the country’s very first spa resort town. For eons, this area was sacred ground to the indigenous Iroquois Nation, due to the water’s healing properties. But health seekers started coming in droves to “take the cure” in 1802, when entrepreneur Gideon Putnam learned about the restorative powers of carbonated waters himself. He built a guesthouse across from Congress Spring, and the rest is history.

No Victorian resort was complete without horse racing. So, in 1863, Irish immigrant John Morrissey opened the Saratoga Racetrack. Mentioned in Carly Simon’s song, "You’re So Vain," the track is so distinctive, it served as film sets for "The Horse Whisperer" and "Seabiscuit" among many others.

WATCH A HORSE RACE

The racing season at Saratoga Racetrack, the nation’s oldest thoroughbred horse racing course, runs from July 14 through Sept. 5. Sure, you’ll pay dearly for tickets and lodging during that time, but come weekends from end of June through mid-July and you can still get a feel for the ponies as they train. Enter Gate 21 for the Whitney Viewing Stand — a solitary Adirondack-style elevated platform that can hold about a dozen viewers.Sign up for the NewsdayTV newsletter

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EXPLORE A STATE PARK

Saratoga Spa State Park encompasses 2,300 acres containing bathhouses, two golf courses, two museums (The Dance Museum and Hall of Fame and Automobile Museum), pools, tennis courts, the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) and the Gideon Putnam Hotel.

Saratoga Spa State Park is also where you’ll find several springs with faucets. You can’t miss these special fountains — there are generally lines of people waiting to fill their empty 5-gallon bottles with clear Saratoga Spring Water. Join the crowd, even if all you want is a splash from your hands for a taste.

Enjoy a 40-minute effervescent soak at Roosevelt Baths and Spa in Saratoga Spa State Park. Indulge in the strange but pleasant sensation of a warm and tingly effervescent soak in the mineral water that gave the Spa City its name. You can settle into a deep bathtub in a private room for 40 minutes for only $40. 

CATCH A CONCERT

Fans enjoy the music during a concert at Saratoga Performing Arts...
Fans enjoy the music during a concert at Saratoga Performing Arts Center in Saratoga Springs. Credit: AP/HANS PENNINK

The Lumineers open the Live Nation Concert Series on May 29, in a summer jammed with greats at Saratoga Performing Arts Center. The Doobie Brothers, Zac Brown Band, Steely Dan, Dave Matthews Band, Black Keys, Rod Stewart and Goo Goo Dolls are just the start. If Classical is more your thing, there’s the New York City Ballet and Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center on tap. 

VISIT A MUSEUM

World War II veteran Arthur Robinson of Saratoga Springs views...
World War II veteran Arthur Robinson of Saratoga Springs views a display at the New York State Military Museum in Saratoga Springs.  Credit: AP/Mike Groll

Wander through three floors of Saratoga Springs History Museum in Congress Park, (like the racetrack, built by John Morrisey in 1870 as a men’s gambling house) to discover why Saratoga Springs was called “American’s Baden-Baden.” Purportedly, the third floor is haunted. In addition to learning about the history of horse racing in Saratoga, a 2020 update of the Racing Museum and Hall of Fame offers visitors an opportunity to call one of the more iconic horse races in history, just like a professional announcer. Car lovers will want to visit the Saratoga Automobile Museum, located in the former Saratoga Natural Mineral Waters Bottling Plant, which covers the history of auto racing and “custom coach” industry in New York. The impactful New York State Military Museum and Veterans Research Center focuses on and pays tribute to New York State’s contribution to the country’s military history from the Revolutionary War to present through engrossing exhibits.

GRAB A BITE

Most agree that 15 Church tops the list for fine, inventive “New American” cuisine. Mains run the gamut of Filet Mignon to Singapore Street Noodles. And even the ordinarily staid side, Broccoli Rabe, ups its game with cherry peppers, roasted slivers of garlic and Pecorino.

Hattie’s has been a beloved Saratoga institution since 1938, when Hattie Moseley Austin, in possession of the best fried chicken recipe this side of Louisiana, opened her shack with “but $33 in the bank.” Although Hattie passed away in 1998, her spirit lives on in the little restaurant that remains wildly popular.

Fans of fresh beer and good pub grub should plan a meal at Druthers Brewing Company, right in town, the down-an-alley-setting allows for lots of outdoor seating off busy Broadway.

OVERNIGHT STAY

The Adelphi Hotel, with its trademark "Saratoga porch," is the last surviving...
The Adelphi Hotel, with its trademark "Saratoga porch," is the last surviving hotel in the city from the 19th century.  Credit: Getty Images/Barry Winiker

First built in 1877, the Adelphi Hotel was a town landmark in the early days of thoroughbred racing. Nearly 140 years later, it reopened after a five-year top-to-bottom renovation, as the swankiest, and most sumptuous, place to stay in the center of town. Summer rates from $550 per room, during Race Weeks from $650-$1,200.

The Spa City Motor Lodge, restored and improved within the bones of the former rickety Downtowner Motel, is a relative bargain here. It sits right on Broadway, in the midst of shops, restaurants and steps from Congress Park. The enclosed pool area is now a gathering place, with plenty of seating, and Nitro Coffee on tap 24/7. Summer rates from $260, Race Weeks from $385.

The Saratoga Arms, classic 31-room inn with wraparound veranda and updated, antique-filled rooms, is yet another option on Broadway in the thick of town. Summer rates from $500, Race Weeks from $780 includes complimentary breakfast, snacks and soft drinks.

If you prefer traditional and iconic, book at the Gideon Putnam Hotel. Built in 1935 within the Saratoga Spa State Park, this Grand Dame hotel has gone through several renovations. It remains a lasting part of Saratoga Springs hospitality. Summer rates from $360, Race Weeks from $530 per night.

Showcase Of Homes Marks 25th Anniversary

Showcase Of Homes Marks 25th Anniversary, Returns To In-Person Event This October

The Saratoga Showcase of Homes is back this fall, celebrating its 25th year, and executive director Barry Potoker said it will not disappoint. With a lineup of some of the...
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Showcase Of Homes Marks 25th Anniversary, Returns To In-Person Event This October

The Saratoga Showcase of Homes is back this fall, celebrating its 25th year, and executive director Barry Potoker said it will not disappoint.

With a lineup of some of the area’s high-end homes, Potoker said it’s the perfect event to get people out to enjoy all that Saratoga has to offer.

The 2021 Saratoga Showcase of Homes is being presented over two fall weekends: Oct. 9, 10 and 11; and Oct. 16 and 17.

Tickets will also be available at any showcase home during tour hours of 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., or can be purchased online at www.saratogashowcaseofhomes.com. The site includes an interactive map of home locations.

“Last year with the pandemic, we had to pivot and have the showcase as a TV show special. It was so important to us to be able to honor this tradition in its 25th year, and so we are so happy to be able to bring it back as an in person event, which is the best way to really show off what these spectacular homes have to offer,” said Potoker.

This year’s edition has 13 homes on display from 12 builders in Saratoga County.

Participating builders include The BDC Group, Beechwood Homes, Bella Home Builders, Belmonte Builders, Bonacio Construction, Caruso Builders, Kodiak Construction, Kohler Homes, McPadden Builders, R & M Homes, Trojanski Builders and Witt Construction.

The show is produced by the Saratoga Builders Association, a nonprofit, specialized professional trade organization that has donated over $1.3 million to local community charities over the past 24 years through the showcase event.

“Through this event we have been fortunate enough to give back to some very special charities,” said Potoker.

Proceeds from the Saratoga Showcase of Homes benefit Rebuilding Together Saratoga County and Habitat for Humanity of Northern Saratoga, Warren and Washington counties.

There are also other special events in the works to help commemorate the special anniversary. Potoker said each showcase ticket holder will receive a free tote bag at the first home they visit.

Hundreds of those in the real estate industry also take part in an awards ceremony where they honor all different aspects of the homes on display.

The event, Potoker said, takes about 300 volunteers to bring it together. He said they did run up against some challenges with builders waiting on materials and labor, challenges that were felt across the industry.

“We did have some lag time with supply chains for materials, and of course the labor market has been tough. So, with all that, we are especially grateful to be at this point. People love it and we are so happy to do it,” said Potoker.

Tickets are $25, available at all Adirondack Trust Co. branch locations, Curtis Lumber in Ballston Spa, Saratoga National Bank on South Broadway in Saratoga Springs and Roohan Realty on Broadway in Saratoga Springs.

Original article from Saratoga.com
By Jennifer Farnsworth

Adelphi five-star Resort

Transforming Rip Van Dam and The Adelphi into a five-star Resort in Saratoga Springs

Transforming Rip Van Dam and The Adelphi, in Saratoga Springs are the focus of a new redevelopement to unify the hotels into one large five-star Resort in Saratoga Springs.The real...
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Transforming Rip Van Dam and The Adelphi into a five-star Resort in Saratoga Springs

Transforming Rip Van Dam and The Adelphi, in Saratoga Springs are the focus of a new redevelopement to unify the hotels into one large five-star Resort in Saratoga Springs.
The real estate developers and thoroughbred racehorse owners, Michael Dubb and Larry Roth recently gained the city’s approval to begin their $50 million five-star Resort in Saratoga Springs which involves transforming Rip Van Dam and The Adelphi. They intend to renovate and expand the Rip Van Dam building on Broadway and have it connected to the Adelphi building, with the goal of reviving a piece of the luxury grand hotel era that made Saratoga a playground for the wealthy in the 1870s.
Also Read Alberta Place housing project completed, New York
A team of local builders, architects and support staff have been hired by the developers to start working on the Resort in Saratoga Springs. The general contractor is Bonacio Construction of Saratoga Springs, while the layout was overseen by The LA Group Landscape Architecture & Engineering, who also spearheaded the approval process. Design plans are being handled by Dominick Ranieri Architect of Schenectady.
Located in the center of downtown Saratoga Springs, this 200,000-square-foot development transforming Rip Van Dam and The Adelphi would convert both the Adelphi Hotel and former dilapidated and neglected Rip Van Dam hotel just around the corner, on Broadway into a spacious resort with concierge services, massages, a ballroom and a restaurant serving 20-ounce, dry-aged porterhouse steaks. Pricing for one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments within the 84 studio will range between $2,000 to $5,000 a month and the existing 32-room hotel will double in size.
Michael Dubb described their vision, stating that Saratoga was a special place and this was a great opportunity to restore these buildings that had fallen into a state of disrepair, back to their splendor. Dubb also said, “One of the goals of the apartments is to cater to a market that might be there, that’s not there now. We want to give Saratoga the crown jewel in the center of town that it deserves.”
Larry Roth also gave more insights on how the idea to build a five-star Resort in Saratoga Springs originated. He mentioned that he called in his close friend, Dubb and asked that he work with him because of Dub’s work experience in building premier homes on Long Island.
Roth said, “He looked at it and had the same vision I did. It’s the best piece of property in Saratoga and we should develop it.”

Original article from Construction Review Online
By Barbara Mangiri

Adelphi five-star Resort

Saratoga Springs approves $50 million downtown hotel and apartment project

Real estate developers Michael Dubb and Larry Roth won approval Thursday night for their $50 million Adelphi hotel and apartment project in the center of downtown Saratoga Springs.The 200,000-square-foot development...
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Saratoga Springs approves $50 million downtown hotel and apartment project

Real estate developers Michael Dubb and Larry Roth won approval Thursday night for their $50 million Adelphi hotel and apartment project in the center of downtown Saratoga Springs.
The 200,000-square-foot development would transform the Adelphi Hotel and neighboring former Rip Van Dam hotel on Broadway into a resort with concierge services, massages, a ballroom and a restaurant serving 20-ounce, dry-aged porterhouse steaks.
The 84 studio, one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments will rent for $2,000 to $5,000 a month. And the existing 32-room hotel will double in size.
“This will keep us on target for [completion in] late spring 2023,” Dubb said Friday.
Dubb is founder of Beechwood Homes on Long Island and his business partner Roth is the former owner of Marchon Eyewear Inc., one of the world’s largest eye care companies.

Together they want to bring a five-star quality resort to the center of downtown Saratoga Springs by renovating and expanding the Rip Van Dam building on Broadway and connecting it to the Adelphi, which Roth and former business partners rebuilt for $28 million four years ago.
“Saratoga is such a special place. This is an opportunity for Larry and I to make an imprint, to be able to restore something that fell into disrepair to its grandeur,” Dubb said in March when he and Roth first described their vision.
The developers, who also are avid thoroughbred race horse owners, have hired a team of local builders, architects and support staff. Bonacio Construction of Saratoga Springs is the general contractor. The LA Group Landscape Architecture & Engineering oversaw the layout and quarterbacked the approval process. Designs are by Dominick Ranieri Architect of Schenectady.
Renovations to Salt & Char restaurant and the exterior of the Rip Van Dam began several months ago.
The city planning board granted site plan approval for the expansion on Thursday and the design review commission approved the building’s mass and scale last week. There are a few remaining administrative approvals needed and the city must complete its architectural review.
Dubb is not overly concerned about the volatile market for building materials over the past year. Between his experience constructing more than 10,000 homes around Long Island and Bonacio Construction’s background constructing large urban infill condominium, apartment and commercial projects, Dubb said he is optimistic they will find a way to build the project as efficiently as possible.
The developers have a vision of reviving a piece of the luxury grand hotel era that made Saratoga a playground for the wealthy in the 1870s. In those days, the massive Grand Union and United States hotels were the focal point of downtown, forming an area known as Millionaire’s Row where 20 of the world’s richest people would meet each summer to talk business.
“One of the goals of the apartments is to cater to a market that might be there, that’s not there now,” Dubb said in the spring. “We want to give Saratoga the crown jewel in the center of town that it deserves.”

Original article from Albany Business Review
By DONNA ABBOTT-VLAHOS

Saratoga Springs

$50M restoration would link two luxury hotels in Saratoga Springs

SARATOGA SPRINGS – Two thoroughbred racehorse owners are joining in a $50 million proposed project to link the city’s two historic hotels – the Rip Van Dam and The Adelphi...
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$50M restoration would link two luxury hotels in Saratoga Springs

SARATOGA SPRINGS – Two thoroughbred racehorse owners are joining in a $50 million proposed project to link the city’s two historic hotels – the Rip Van Dam and The Adelphi – into one large luxury lodge.

Michael Dubb, founder of Beechwood Homes, said he is partnering with The Adelphi Hotel owner Larry Roth in the proposal to restore and expand the neglected and dilapidated 1840 Rip Van Dam Hotel into a 30-room spacious inn with concierge service, a gym and spa -- all of which will be linked to The Adelphi next door on Broadway.

“It’s in the heart of town,” Dubb said. “We are preserving and restoring the original façade and restoring the interior that is in disrepair. It really will be nice to bring back the Rip Van Dam building and the area of Broadway to its original grandeur.”

The Rip Van Dam will open with 15 rooms, larger than those in the 32-room Adelphi, by November. The old Italianate-style hotel, by then incorporated in to The Adelphi, will expand in the project's second phase -- an addition in the rear that will include the remainder of the rooms and and a complex of 90 luxury apartments with onsite parking for 100. Apartment dwellers, he said, will be able to share in the hotel amenities including an expanded ballroom and conservatory in The Adelphi -- and the distinctive menus at their restaurants Salt & Char and Morrissey's Lounge & Bistro.

Dubb and Roth also promised the Rip Van Dam will reflect the interior design and décor of The Adelphi – making for a seamless experience for guests. The Adelphi was fully renovated about four years ago.

“It will be beautiful,” Dubb said.

In recent years, plans to restore the Rip Van Dam have failed. The opulent hotel that once stood alongside other elegant 19th century resorts like the United States and the Grand Union hotels was purchased by Bruce Levinsky in the 1990s. He had an $11 million plan to renovate it into an upscale Ramada Plaza Suite.

When that didn’t happen, brothers James and Thomas D'Iorio, took over the site with a $45 million renovation plan for the brick building. But in their hands, the property fell into foreclosure. That was 2019 and that's when Roth stepped in to buy it.

Roth said he always wanted to buy the Rip Van Dam, because he thought he might want to add more rooms. He was also fearful that another hotel would move in.

"We are a boutique, exclusive, luxurious hotel," Roth said of The Adelphi. "My fear was it wouldn't be the same quality or same type hotel. When the property became available through foreclosure, I decided to buy it. I probably overpaid for it. But when you want something badly and you have a vision of what you could do, you sometimes have to pay a little more than you want."

He said he then brought in Dubb because he's a close friend and because of his work, building premier homes on Long Island.

"I asked him to develop the property with me," Roth said. "He looked at it and had the same vision I did. It's the best piece of property in Saratoga and we should develop it."

But when asked if a luxury hotel could survive a shaky, post-pandemic economy, Roth said it could and The Adelphi is proof. Though 2020 was tough, he said The Adelphi now has a 90 percent occupancy rate. He said the restaurant, Morrissey's, is also doing well. Because of that, he is expanding Morrissey's into the space once occupied by the hotel's other, now shuttered, Blue Hen restaurant.

Salt & Char, the Rip Van Dam's restaurant, is also getting an upgrade. It is currently closed and will be reopened in June.

Dubb said restorations, which have already begun, won't interrupt Adelphi guests as the work done by Bonacio Construction will be on the exterior and interior of the Rip Van Dam.

The expanded hotel and apartments, however, still need city approvals. If approved, Roth said the adjoining building is estimated to be open in the spring of 2023.

"It's going to be spectacular," Roth said. "It will be a great destination for the northeast -- three hours from Boston, three hours from Montreal, three hours from New York City and probably the same from Buffalo. We are very, very excited about the project."

Mike Dubb and Larry Roth

Developers Team Up For Saratoga ‘Crown Jewel’ Project

Two racehorse owners want to transform one of the most prominent corners in downtown Saratoga Springs into a resort with concierge services, massages, a ballroom and a restaurant serving 20-ounce,...
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Developers Team Up For Saratoga ‘Crown Jewel’ Project

Two racehorse owners want to transform one of the most prominent corners in downtown Saratoga Springs into a resort with concierge services, massages, a ballroom and a restaurant serving 20-ounce, dry-aged porterhouse steaks.

Beechwood Homes founder Michael Dubb is partnering with Larry Roth, former owner of one of the world’s largest eye care companies, on a plan to construct 90 apartments and 65 or more hotel rooms, creating a complex unlike anything else in the city.

They want to reimagine the northwest corner of Broadway and Washington Street by renovating the former Rip Van Dam Hotel, connecting the property to Roth’s Adelphi Hotel and constructing an adjoining five-story, 150,000-square-foot addition.

The proposed $50 million project seeks to revive a piece of the luxury grand hotel era that made Saratoga a playground for the wealthy in the 1870s. In those days, the massive Grand Union and United States hotels were the focal point of downtown, forming an area known as Millionaire’s Row where 20 of the world’s richest people would meet each summer to talk business.

“One of the goals of the apartments is to cater to a market that might be there, that’s not there now,” said Dubb. “We want to give Saratoga the crown jewel in the center of town that it deserves.”

ORHomepage_0002_Oak-Ridge-Estates-1

New childcare center serving Saratoga backstretch community to open summer 2021

Faith’s House to provide childcare and early childhood education programs for the children of backstretch families SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY – The Belmont Child Care Association, Inc. (BCCA) today announced that...
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New childcare center serving Saratoga backstretch community to open summer 2021

Faith’s House to provide childcare and early childhood education programs for the children of backstretch families

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY – The Belmont Child Care Association, Inc. (BCCA) today announced that its new childcare center serving families and children of the backstretch community at Saratoga Race Course is scheduled to open in summer 2021.

The 4,300-square-foot childcare center will be located on the Oklahoma side of the Saratoga backstretch. Funded by Michael and Lee Dubb, the facility will be named Faith’s House in honor of Faith Dubb, mother of BCCA founder and board chairman Michael Dubb.

Faith’s House will provide child care and early education programs for infants, toddlers and preschool-aged children. The center will be open seven days a week from 5 a.m. to 5 p.m. to accommodate the schedules of backstretch workers and horsemen.

“All working parents deserve to know that their children are being cared for in a safe, healthy and enriching environment during the workday,” said Dubb, who is a prominent thoroughbred owner in addition to his work with the BCCA. “We are thrilled to extend this important program to the hardworking families of the Saratoga backstretch community, who provide a vital service to the racing community.”

The Saratoga facility will complement BCCA’s sister childcare center Anna House, which serves families of the Belmont Park backstretch. More than 1,000 students have participated in Anna House’s programs since its opening in 2003.

“Faith’s House fulfills a dream that the BCCA has been working on for over ten years. We are so excited to bring a winning formula in child care to Saratoga,” said Libby Imperio, BCCA President.

The anticipated summer 2021 opening coincides with the annual summer meet at Saratoga Race Course, which brings approximately 950 backstretch workers and their families to the Spa. The opening of the new center is contingent upon licensing approval from New York State and the New York State Office of Children and Family Services.

“The backstretch community is the foundation of the racing industry,” said New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) President and CEO Dave O’Rourke. “All of us at NYRA extend our sincere gratitude to Michael and Lee, and the entire BCCA staff for their continued dedication and commitment to increasing access to affordable and reliable childcare for families on the backstretch. I would also like to thank our facilities team for their work on this project. NYRA is proud to host this new center of childhood education.”

Faith’s House will be operated by Bright Horizons, an organization known for excellence in the child care industry which manages early childhood education programs at more than 1,000 child care centers.

More information about Faith’s House, including details on registration and enrollment, will be announced in the coming months. Individuals interested in further details may contact BCCA Executive Director Joanne K. Adams by phone at (516) 488-2103 or via email at jadams@belmontchildcare.org.

The Belmont Child Care Association works to provide a safe, supportive, and academically inspiring environment for the children of parents working in the thoroughbred racing backstretch area located at New York’s historic Belmont Park, Aqueduct Racetrack and Saratoga Race Course. For more information, visit BelmontChildCare.org.

[Distributed by NYRA on behalf of the Belmont Child Care Association]

Horse owner Michael Dubb leads charge in child care for backstretch workers

As the Runhappy Travers Stakes contenders get ready to race for glory this weekend, prominent horse owner Michael Dubb and the Belmont Child Care Association (BCCA) is “Racing for the...
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Horse owner Michael Dubb leads charge in child care for backstretch workers

As the Runhappy Travers Stakes contenders get ready to race for glory this weekend, prominent horse owner Michael Dubb and the Belmont Child Care Association (BCCA) is “Racing for the Children”. Their week-long virtual party kicked off Monday at noon, and will run through Sunday, Aug. 9, with all the proceeds going toward their mission of helping backstretch workers and their children.

News10 ABC Sports Director Liana Bonavita spoke with Dubb about the new Saratoga Child Care Center that will open its doors next summer.

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