White Sulphur Spring Travel Guide
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The Greenbrier Resort Is Looking Sexy

Last week we shared the good news that West Virginia’s iconic Greenbrier Resort seems to be back on its feet — and freshly pedicured feet at that. But in addition to adding a new resto and coming-soon casino, C2 Limited Design Associates is injecting the resort with some mod accents.
Indeed, the ol’ Greenbrier is looking sexy — and not even in that Sean Connery distinguished sort of way. Check out the photos below.
Right on trend, the Greenbrier’s new lobby is awash in pink, gray, and black.
Yes, the old pink and white candy-striped awnings remain but those are a Greenbrier tradition.Hotel News / Hotel Restaurants / Historic Hotels / → All Tags
The Greenbrier Resort Might Be Back On its Feet After All

It’s been a little while since we checked in on the owners-swinging Greenbrier in West Virginia. We’ll spare you the saga from this summer (click here for a quick summary) but we were encouraged to hear the iconic resort is on its feet enough to have opened a brand-new steakhouse, Prime 44 West.
Designed by C2 Limited Design Associates, Prime 44 West replaces Greenbrier’s “outdated dining venue” with a restaurant that honors basketball legend and West Virginia native, Jerry West. Not to mention, C2 Limited is also designing Greenbrier’s new, $25-million, 50,000-square-foot casino and entertainment venue, set to debut next April with coffee, wine, sushi, ten retail shops, and a nightly 8 p.m. good-luck Champagne toast.
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Greenbrier to Marriott: 'Let's Call the Whole Thing Off'
This year's drama at the Greenbrier in West Virginia unfolded a bit like this: the resort was having some issues, so it shed about half of its staff. Then the rumor goin' around town was something about Marriott coming in to purchase and save the resort (um, and by "rumor" we mean there was a contract involved) but then another buyer stepped in and snapped it up, and furloughed employees were called back.
But then the new buyer reached a tentative marketing agreement with Marriott, where the chain would receive "a special fee for every Greenbrier guest booked through the hotel chain's marketing network" and if it didn't work out, the hotel's new owner would have to pay Marriott "a $7 million 'break-up fee'" if he ended Marriott's marketing partnership.
And it looks like that's what just happened.
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Marriott Involvement Adds Another Layer to The Greenbrier Saga
Alright. So. In a very, very compact nutshell, the drama at the Greenbrier in West Virginia goes a bit like this: the resort was having some troubles, shed about half of its staff, and word on the street was Marriott was gonna purchase and save the resort but then another buyer stepped in and snapped it up last week, and furloughed employees were called back.
Now, here's this, from the Charleston Gazette:
The Greenbrier's new owner and Marriott International have reached a tentative agreement that allows the hotel giant to market the historic resort. In exchange, Marriott won't challenge the resort's sale, said Jim Justice, who purchased the Greenbrier's stock earlier this month.
Apparently, under this arrangement, Marriott will be receiving "a special fee for every Greenbrier guest booked through the hotel chain's marketing network" or else the hotel's new owner would have to pay Marriott "a $7 million 'break-up fee' if he ends Marriott's marketing partnership," presumably because Marriott had a contract to purchase the resort from its previous owners.
What's not clear is, well, a lot of things. Among them: who is going to manage the resort? Will it be flagged as a Marriott? Guess those are the "details" that need to be worked out.
[Photo: Bloomberg News via WSJ]
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The Greenbrier Asks For Its Employees Back
Alright. There's been some hot drama going down at the Greenbrier in West Virginia (Hotels Mag's Derek Gale did an awesome recap of it here), but to summarize very, very briefly: the historic Greenbrier was having trouble. The Greenbrier shed about half of its staff, and word on the street was Marriott was gonna save the troubled resort but then another buyer stepped in and snapped it up last week.
This week, the Charleston Gazette is reporting that the Greenbrier is now recalling its furloughed employees which, actually, is something that they'd hinted at when they did the initial employee-shedding ("Greenbrier said in the statement that historically, business improves in the late spring and summer, and that it anticipated that some of the furloughed employees could return at that time.")
Oh, also? The Gazette mentioned this goodness:
Earlier this week [new owner] Justice said he plans to build a casino by the end of the year at the resort costing $15 million to $20 million and hire up to 600 new workers.
A casino. Lovely. Well, that's one way to make some cashola back after the reported $90 million the place has lost over the last five years.
[Photo: Bloomberg News via WSJ]
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Someone Steps In Front of Marriott to Save the Greenbrier
Oy, the drama. The troubled, historic and gorgeous Greenbrier Resort in West Virginia which (fun fact!) sits atop a 112,000-square-foot bunker built during the Cold War has been having some troubles lately. After business slowed majorly, the resort slashed about half of its staff and then had to file for bankruptcy but word on the street was that Marriott was looking to step in to buy it and save the place.
But now it's become a big ordeal because, according to the WSJ, a "family-owned West Virginia mining-and-farming company" acquired the resort for $20 million yesterday, and plans to ask a bankruptcy court to drop the hotel's Chapter 11 proceedings:
The transaction this week [...] is a sale of the bankrupt company itself. By buying the Greenbrier outright -- not just the hotel and assets -- the Justice family hopes to reverse the bankruptcy and assume full control of the resort.
Huh. But, um, also: Marriott said Thursday that they were "surprised by the sale" and that they plan to keep pursuing its purchase of the Greenbrier assets themselves.
Interesting. Sounds like it's game on, then.
[Photo: Bloomberg News via WSJ]


