Sarona Hotel

Last updated

Sarona Hotel
Sarona Hotel
General information
Type Luxury hotel
Address Sarona, Tel Aviv, Israel
OwnerNitsba Group
Technical details
Floor count47
Grounds6 dunams
Design and construction
Developer
Other information
Number of rooms880 hotel rooms

The Sarona Hotel is a proposed luxury hotel building in South Kirya, a section of Sarona, a neighborhood in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Contents

Site

The Sarona Hotel is set to be constructed south of the Azrieli Sarona Tower, the tallest building in Israel, at the corner of Harbaa Street and Begin Road in South Kirya, a section of Sarona, a neighborhood in Tel Aviv, Israel. [1] In June 2025, Sarona was hit by an Iranian airstrike in the Iran–Israel war. [2]

Architecture

The Sarona Hotel is designed as a 880-room—the most of any hotel in Israel—luxury hotel. [3] It is set to be the tallest hotel in Israel upon its completion. [2] Forty thousand square meters of land have been allocated for hotel space, with an additional two thousand square meters of commercial space, twenty thousand square meters of above-ground service space, and thirty-nine thousand square meters of underground service space. [1] The underground areas were constructed by Danya Cebus, while the above-ground areas are being constructed by Electra Construction. [1] Renderings of the hotel depict features restaurants, a spa, indoor and outdoor pools, a ballroom, and hundreds of rooms and suites on the first floor, with the second floor containing an exclusive lobby, lounge, suite, and a corner presidential suite. The hotel features a sky lobby and roof garden. It is planned to have forty-seven floors, though Eric Trump has urged Nitsba Group to add twelve floors; a request would require approval from the Civil Aviation Authority as the hotel is in the flight path of Ben Gurion Airport. [2]

History

The Israel Land Authority began promoting the site of the Sarona Hotel in 2009. [4] In September 2011, Nitsba Group purchased the site for NIS 30.6 million, in addition to NIS 24.2 million in development costs, from the Israel Land Authority, [1] beating only one competing bid amid a contentious land bidding environment. [4] Three years later, the company received a building permit and began construction in 2015. [1] After the Knesset approved a law giving municipalities the authority to approve forty percent of building rights for hotels, Nitsba submitted an unsuccessful request to add sixteen thousand square meters that would partially be used to construct over one hundred apartments. [4] By 2020, much of the hotel's interior had been constructed; the hotel's construction was affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. [1] In December 2020, the Israel Land Authority fined Nitsba NIS 14 million for not constructing the hotel within five years. [4]

By October 2022, Nitsba was involved in a dispute with Electra Construction that had been referred to arbitration, delaying the project further. The Tel Aviv-Yafo Municipality continued to review Nitsba's plan for the hotel in compliance with Tel Aviv's master plan by that month. [5] Construction continued until the 7 October attacks and the Gaza war, leading to a smaller workforce. A report from Airport City, Nitsba's parent company, indicated that "five basement floors and five foundation floors" had been cast, in addition to the areas from the ground floor to the thirty-sixth floor. [1] Airport City invested NIS 47 million in the hotel in 2022 and an unspecified amount of NIS 44 million the following year. Airport City attributed work on Tel Aviv Light Rail to delays. [1]

Prior to the Gaza war, the Trump Organization expressed interest in the Sarona Hotel. [3] In 2025, after the second inauguration of U.S. president Donald Trump, the organization's executive vice president and Trump's son, Eric, began negotiations to partner with Nitsba Group, allowing the Trump Organization to manage the property. According to The New York Times , a potential partnership would pose "ethical and security perils" and complicate the elder Trump's foreign policy initiatives. Peter Bazeli, the managing director of Weitzman, a real estate advisory firm, told the Times that a Trump-branded property would risk becoming a military target. [2]

See also

References

Works cited