AppinVA wrote:I don't think anyone is disagreeing, as we all hate to see programs die, but anyone who grows plants knows that one of the best ways to ensure positive growth is to give it a good pruning every now and then.
On the subject of the Broyhill: I actually think one day a resort run by the University will return, but what is there now can't offer the amenities several other hotels around the area can. That wasn't the case back when the best hotel in town was The Red Carpet Inn. To make money, or to at least not bleed the school dry, a facility will need to be built that offers several things you can't currently get. You need tennis courts, spas (did the Broyhill even have a pool?), a golf course, etc. You can't begin to offer any of that on Bodenheimer Drive.
The Carolina Inn (CI) has been mentioned here as an example of what The Broyhill Inn woulda/shoulda/coulda been. The CI was my "dorm" a few years back when my employer sent me and a colleague to a school law seminar at the UNC Institute of Gov't and School of Law (one day a week for two years). The place was nice enough (in a 1900s to 1940s sort of way) and convenient enough, but it was by no means a Ritz Carlton. It had/has no pool, no tennis courts. What it did have was good food, heavy antique furnishings, valet parking; location, location, location; and UNC admin financial support out the ying-yang. In Obama-era lingo, The CI is deemed "too big to fail"--and the UNC admin will see to it that it doesn't.
http://www.carolinainn.com/chapel-hill- ... -sheet.php
I'm one of those still miffed at the apparent decision to nuke The Broyhill w/o giving deep-pocket university donors a chance and an incentive to step in to renovate and embellish it. They found someone to renovate Farthing Auditorium; so why not The Broyhill? Of course, I'm still miffed that the university didn't step in and buy the Daniel Boone Hotel years ago. Talking about
location--The Daniel Boone had it and still has it. That was another ASU admin blunder of major proportion IMO.