The latest delay in predicted would happen in early 2023 — is the latest insult to New York City by a Chinese company interested mainly in selling super-luxury condo apartments to globetrotting investors who might never turn on the lights.
To the Dajia Insurance Group, which took control of the Waldorf three years ago when another Chinese company collapsed, the fabled property’s great public spaces like Peacock Alley might as well be chopped liver — if they even understand what it means.
Sure, the Waldorf will reopen some day. But Hilton, which manages the property, let word dribble out last week that the re-launch initially scheduled for late this year is pushed back again to sometime in spring 2025 — and that’s merely the “expected” time frame.
The great landmark is still undergoing an eight years-and-counting restoration and redesign. Eight years! (Hilton sold it to Anbang in 2014 for $1.95 billion. Dajia took over when the government in Beijing dissolved Anbang for murky reasons.)
The Waldorf, a powerful skyline presence and symbol of Manhattan glamour was home to the legendary Peacock Alley and was the stomping grounds of Cole Porter, Frank Sinatra and Marilyn Monroe before closing in February 2017.
