Some people are enjoying a recovery. Among the super rich, conspicuous consumption is back in style:
The latest project of Hyatt hotel heir Anthony Pritzker is a 49,300-square-foot building designed by an architecture firm in Paris. It involves a small army of specialized consultants and boasts amenities like a bowling alley, hairdressing area and gym. […]Yeah, we’re lucky all right. Our obscenely rich elites are sequestering themselves away from the rest of society, becoming even more inoculated from the consequences of all their bad decisions. In his book, Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed, Jared Diamond lists this as a recurring feature of civilizations that failed, like Easter Island and the medieval Norse settlements of Greenland. The misery they created simply didn’t affect them up close and personal and so they didn’t do anything about it. They lived in denial until it was too late.The project, in the hills above Los Angeles, isn't a luxury hotel—it's a private home for Mr. Pritzker and his family.Plans filed with the city of Los Angeles, which deemed the mansion finished in November, provide more details. The 49,300-square-foot, two-story home surrounds a courtyard and includes a two-level basement with amenities including a game room, bowling alley, bar and media library. Above ground, there's a gym with changing rooms, his-and-hers offices, an arts-and-crafts room and a hairdressing area. Other buildings on the property, including a detached recreation room and a guest house, bring the total square footage of the compound to just over 53,000 square feet.
The home has a large skylight, roof-mounted solar panels and a curving driveway. A lawn spreads around part of the home, with a “floating pool” and spa anchoring one end of the property.
Critics of such mega-mansions “want to penalize people for being successful,” says Mr. McCoy, the builder of the estate. Referring to the scores of people large projects employ, he adds, “People have done this all along because they could, and aren't we lucky that they can?”
Their ruling classes also displayed a marked lack of adaptability. As the world fell apart all around them, they doubled-down on all the bad habits that caused the problems in the first place. They drilled, baby, drilled, when what was needed was fresh thinking and fundamental reform. They were rigid and mentally sclerotic. Sound familiar?
It’s interesting that they’re building self-sufficient enclaves, isn’t it? Maybe they do know something about the future the rest of us don’t?
But don’t penalize Mr. Pritzker for being successful: he deserves every penny he inherited.
Been reading for some time that the tourism industry is reorganizing to cater to smaller numbers of "high-end" customers. I.e. the average punter can't afford a vacation so sellers of vacations have to look higher to find any business at all.
Posted by: Martha Bridegam on February 29, 2012 11:38 PMInteresting that this kind of story about conspicuous consumption is in Rupert's paper. Seems to me a rather odd story for that paper and perhaps he's feeling a little heat from that investigation over there and over here perhaps and is toning things down a little towards a true reality based view. At least as much as you're going to get from someone as dishonest as Rupert.
But I like how Juan Cole analyzes this mess. He argues that it could go from bad to worse. I don't think we're at Hearst mansion levels, at least not yet. But if people give the Republicans another shot at it, we're going to get there. I don't mean to spoil the party for anybody. but it could get much worse down here in the bottom 99%.
http://www.juancole.com/2012/02/romneys-across-the-board-tax-cuts-benefit-the-super-rich.html
Posted by: Buck on March 1, 2012 12:08 PMPritzker is an heir to Hyatt not the founder
i guess he must be accustomed to mega residential living with hundreds of employees, staff. serfs, peasants etc and so on
a small house would cramp his style
i am curious about the arts and crafts room : looms, spinning wheels ?
Posted by: Katherine Hunter on March 1, 2012 9:59 PM