Tag Archives: Bill Kohl

Whitaker Center to build out new STEM lab, thanks to sledgehammers, fundraisers, wine

Whitaker Center CEO Ted Black with artist’s renderings of the new STEM Design Studios.

When it opened two decades ago, Whitaker Center faced an issue that all nonprofits have to reckon with—how to raise money to continue its mission.

Soon, Bill Kohl and several other supporters stumbled on a fundraising idea that they had seen work elsewhere. How about a high-end wine event?

On Tuesday, Kohl introduced the 19th annual Très Bonne Année, which is French for “a very good year.” To date, this annual series of wine events, held each October, has raised more than $5.5 million for Whitaker Center, Kohl said.

“We look to add to that total this year,” said Kohl, chairman of the eight-member Très Bonne Année board.

Chairman Bill Kohl today introduced 2019 Très Bonne Année, which will feature wines by Verity Wine Group.

As an example of this money at work, Whitaker Center CEO Ted Black earlier in the day had announced the latest planned improvement to the downtown Harrisburg arts and sciences facility.

Over the next two months, Whitaker Center will turn tired, 20-year-old classroom space on the lower level of the Harsco Science Center into the new, 3,000-square-foot STEM Design Studios, which will feature STEM-based (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) labs, classes and activities.

Black said that Très Bonne Année, which last year raised $268,700 for Whitaker Center, is underwriting a large portion of the $450,000 cost of the new STEM studio.

“It was about this time last year that we started working with Très Bonne Année on a funded need,” Black said. “We wanted something that was very tangible.”

Black said that the idea for the STEM studio arose from brainstorming with his staff about how to enhance both the science center and the educational mission of Whitaker Center. This idea rose to the top of the list.

“We live in a STEM economy,” he said. “There is a gender gap pertaining to women and girls in STEM jobs. Our hope is that we spark an interest in STEM that carries through.”

State Rep. Patty Kim takes a swing as part of Whitaker Center’s “sledgehammer” event, which began construction of the new STEM Design Studios.

Black expects a Nov. 4 opening date for the new STEM facility.

On Tuesday, Kohl also announced that Très Bonne Année this year will feature wines from New York-based Verity Wine Group.

Jennifer Brown, regional state sales manager for Verity, said she was interested in participating in Très Bonne Année because it enables her and her company to contribute locally to the Harrisburg area.

“I feel it’s important to give back to the community I live in,” she said.

For more information about Whitaker Center, visit https://www.whitakercenter.org/. For more information about Très Bonne Année, visit https://tresbonneannee.org/.

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Denver Group Checks In: Harrisburg Hilton, Bricco bought by Greenwood.

The 341-room Hilton Harrisburg, the landmark project that lead to a downtown renaissance in the 1990s, and the upscale dining restaurant, Bricco, have been sold to Greenwood Hospitality Group, a Denver-based hotel investment and management firm.

The announcement was made June 29 by Mayor Linda Thompson, along with Russell C. Ford, president and CEO of Harristown Enterprises Inc., which built the Market Square hotel in 1990 as part of Harristown’s downtown revitalization efforts.

Thompson praised the sale because, she said, it showed the investment potential global investors see in Harrisburg and also because it frees the city of the millions of dollars in bonds it had backed for the hotel.

“Although the hotel has always paid this debt as scheduled,” Thompson said, “the fact that nearly $17 million in city-guaranteed debt has been permanently removed from the city’s balance sheet as a result of this transaction in an important outcome benefiting the city.”

Harristown’s hotel debt is not related to the city’s $326 million incinerator debt. Thompson said the city’s receiver, William Lynch, was consulted about the sale, though not required to authorize it, and gave his blessing.

Ford said Harristown decided to sell the hotel because it wanted resources to do more economic development projects in the city.

“We’ve looked at a number of ways to help this city,” he said. “This transaction does allow us to recover resources and re-invest them.”

Neither Ford nor Thomas W. Conran, a principal of Greenwood who works out of Hartford, Conn. and will oversee the hotel, would discuss the sale’s financial terms.

“It’s a purely private transaction,” Ford said, explaining public dollars used to help finance the hotel’s construction 22 years ago had long been paid off. And despite the city backing the bond financing, the hotel is a private business.

According to Dauphin County tax records, the hotel and its .77 acres of property combined are valued at nearly $20 million, on which the Harrisburg Hilton paid nearly $111,000 this year in county taxes. The hotel paid $148,870 in city real estate taxes and $404,074 in school taxes.

Conran said Greenwood, which has ownership interest or operates hotels in eight cities around the country including Baltimore and Princeton, N.J., intends to spend in the range of $5 million over the next three years upgrading and updating the hotel’s guest rooms and public spaces.

At the moment, there appears to be no plans for Bricco, which opened in 2006 at the corner of S. 3rd and Chestnut streets. Greenwood owns not only the hotel’s and restaurant’s businesses but also the properties.

Greenwood, which had been working with Harristown over the last year to purchase the hotel, has negotiated a long-term agreement with the Hilton and intends to keep the hotel’s 400 employees, half of whom reside in Harrisburg.

“Everyone over there will keep their jobs,” Thompson said at the press conference at City Hall, directly across the street from the hotel.

In addition, Bill Kohl, current president and CEO of the Hilton Harrisburg, will stay on in a management role as well as become a principal at Greenwood. Conran said he and Kohl have known one another for more than 25 years.

Tax abatements to help start the hotel two decades ago have long expired. City and Harristown officials said the hotel pays significant business and property taxes as well as generates more than $120 million in economic activity downtown.

“It’s a tremendous economic generator,” Kohl said.

Moreover, Thompson said, the millions of dollars in upgrades and renovations that Greenwood intends to make could lead to a reassessment of the property and potentially more tax revenue for the city.

While the Hilton brand and quality staff helped attract Greenwood’s interest, it was the hotel’s solid, consistently top-performing financials in a sound market that convinced the management group to make the purchase, Conran said.

Conran dismissed questions about whether the city’s fiscal troubles, known internationally, concerned Greenwood. “There’s a lot of chatter,” he said. “We believe the best days of Harrisburg are ahead.”

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