| Issue #46, February 23, 2007 |
BIG TROUBLE FOR 50-STORY SKI MOUNTAIN HERE
By Dan Rattiner
It looks as if the 50-story
tall artificial ski mountain proposed for Riverhead might not get
built after all.
It’s been a pretty fantastic
idea. Year-round indoor artificial ski slopes have been pretty big
business in Kuwait, Japan, Australia and elsewhere. We ought to
have one here in the United States — at the former site of
Grumman Aerospace in Calverton.
Talking about this for the past few
months has been a Scottish entrepreneur named Tom Stewart, who arrived
out here two months ago to begin the process of bringing exactly
that to the East End. He had a meeting set up for the Riverhead
Town Board to make his proposal later this month. But first he had
to go to Turkey to take title for a similar project there. There
was going to be a big ribbon cutting and celebration. The President
of Turkey was going to hand over the deed to 240 acres of vacant
land in the province of Afyon. And then, after that was done, which
would be on February 14, he was going to fly back to Riverhead to
meet with the town board.
Stewart’s plan for both projects
was pretty much the same. There would be villas, a 4,000-room hotel,
a sport center, a ski training center and a shopping center. An
estimated 30,000 visitors would come to the ski mountain in Turkey
that first year. Triple that number would come to Riverhead in that
first year. The total cost in Turkey, which also would include a
74-acre artificial lake connected with canals traversed by gondolas,
would exceed $600 million. Here in Riverhead, the project could
probably be built for less than half that.
So Stewart went to Turkey and on
February 14, the event was postponed. He would need to transfer
$15 million into a bank in Turkey before they could proceed. That
didn’t happen. They extended the time when they could offer
the property to him for three months.
“It’s a wait-and-see
situation,” Stewart told reporters on Saturday as he embarked
back toward Riverhead.
Here’s some additional information
that you might want to know. It’s come out in bits and pieces.
Newsday has found out that the company
Stewart heads has only about $500,000 in assets. He also is in bankruptcy
on some earlier venture, and will remain in bankruptcy until August,
which is okay as long as others on his board make the decisions.
He’s very close to announcing some European backers for his
project, but not just yet.
The day before the expected closing
in Turkey, an article in Hurriyet, an Istanbul newspaper, headlined
WHAT IF THE $700 MILLION IS A FAKE? It is believed that it was that,
and one other thing, which made the Turkish officials hesitate to
hold the deed transfer.
The other thing was that it was widely
reported that Stewart plans to use the Turkish property, which he
would be paying $14 million for but over an extended time payment,
as collateral for the Riverhead project. And Turkish officials say
that would not be possible.
Turkey had gone ahead with the approvals
for this sale because of an unusual Turkish law. In Turkey, if you
buy property with plans to develop it and then don’t develop
it, the property reverts to the State. And then there are financial
penalties to be paid, and there might even be jail time. That can
happen in just twelve months. Apparently, after learning of the
bankruptcy and his lack of funds, the Turks came to the conclusion
that, in spite of the law, they would want to see he had the $15
million somewhere in a bank in their country. Otherwise they felt
that he would have almost no prospects in creating a $700 million
development. And of course, with the encumbrance of the law, the
land could not be used as collateral for another project until it
was fully paid for and the development fully in place.
But you know what? You never know.
An attorney for Stewart in England said that Stewart is still working
every day to get the “seed capital” for the project.
When the $15 million is raised, everything flows from that. Stewart
is a big man with grand plans. He is not thinking small. Riverhead
has postponed their meeting with him, awaiting developments.
|