NVR Logo
Sneak peek at Westin Verasa
Luxurious condo-hotel to open in September
Sunday, August 17, 2008
Save and Share Share
The first of a trio of new hotel projects in Napa is about to have a coming-out party.

The Westin Verasa condo-hotel on McKinstry Street will open for business Sept. 18, right on track with the owner’s plans.
The $100 million dollar hotel looms large on Soscol Avenue, near a burgeoning group of developments in the Oxbow district. A once sleepy part of town is evolving into a tourist Mecca, one that already has the Oxbow market and surrounding businesses, the Wine Train depot, and is expected to gain a Ritz-Carlton resort across the Napa River from Copia.

During a recent preview, Napa’s largest upscale lodging property bustled with activity as workers scrambled to put finishing touches on the two-year-long construction project.
Near a loading dock, trucks queued up to deliver furniture, carpets awaited unrolling and patches of dirt were prepared for planting. The swimming pool and spa were already filled with water. A number of workers assembled private cabanas nearby.

Guests at the craftsman-style hotel enter via a traditional port cochere, with a sandstone fountain centerpiece.
The grand entrance has polished oak floors, a glass-topped table with saguaro cactus trunk base and limestone and flagstone that trim the space. Wine lovers will recognize the riddling racks used as backdrop to the guest reception area.

On one wall, a fireplace trimmed in dark, polished flagstone soars more than 22 feet to the ceiling. Carpets and furniture will form a large living room area for guests to unwind, and nearby Bank Café & Bar will offer up culinary delights by La Toque chef Ken Frank.

La Toque restaurant, relocated from Rutherford, will also open in September, offering seating for more than 130.

The Westin Verasa has 180 rooms, including studios and one and two bedroom units. Each room features a flat screen TV, Xbox 360, DVD player, high-speed Internet access and private patio. Many also offer a full kitchen or kitchenette. Underground parking holds 232 cars.

Hotel rates will start at $299 per night. Condo-hotel units prices range from $400,000 to $1,174,900 for a two-bedroom unit, enabling owners a certain number of overnight stays a year.

Four meeting rooms and an outdoor terrace overlooking the Napa River provide 12,000 square feet of flexible meeting space. If you want to get married at the Westin Verasa in Napa, you can do that, too.

“There has been a lot of interest in weddings and corporate groups,” said Forrest Huisman, development manager with Intrawest Placemaking, the project developer.

“Two years ago this was a field of weeds and now we’re five weeks away from a grand opening,” said Huisman.

For Huisman and his staff, the transition from construction site to operating hotel is the culmination of years of work.

“Napa is seeing the fruits of our labor,” he said.

“This town has embraced us and given us a great opportunity to become part of the community,” he said. “I can’t say enough about Napa.”
12 comment(s)

reason-ator wrote on Aug 17, 2008 10:33 AM:

" Underground parking, They think they're hiding the traffic. "

SouthNapa wrote on Aug 17, 2008 12:46 PM:

" From the article: "Condo-hotel units prices range from $400,000 to $1,174,900 for a two-bedroom unit, enabling owners a certain number of overnight stays per year."

For those prices, any number less than 365 nights is too few. Yet another fu-fu tourist hotel and nothing for the residents. What a joke! "

napacabdriver wrote on Aug 17, 2008 1:39 PM:

" Wow only $300 a night . where does the line form. "

renrut wrote on Aug 17, 2008 2:54 PM:

" Wow! some peole cannot see that the Westin will create hundereds of jobs that pay above market for thos jobs. Is it that or do some people simply never get it? "

NapaNana wrote on Aug 17, 2008 3:07 PM:

" Hmmmm.....underground parking. I surely hope that all the flood project work that is being done will keep town dry.........otherwise.......can we all say.....Swim for it? How funny!
Renrut.........we get it all right. Say that again in a year. "

noblindershere wrote on Aug 17, 2008 8:36 PM:

" Wow, how beautiful. I feel lucky to live in a town that can attract such taste. $300 a night seems quite reasonable for a quality hotel such as the Westin. Based on the comments above, I'm guessing world travel isn't a big part of your lives. Obviously the cars would be moved to higher ground if flooding were coming...the vacation trailors on Lincoln are moved when flooding occurs. Do you really think that the engineers hired by the Westin didn't take flooding into account. Some of the comments that people make are very uneducated and closed minded. "

comment wrote on Aug 17, 2008 11:09 PM:

" The hotel is a bit higher than ground level as well. Any flooding would flood the parking lot and would not reach inside the hotel. A few flooded cars would be easier to replace than a flooded first floor of a hotel. "

abouttime wrote on Aug 18, 2008 12:12 AM:

" This seems like a great project. $300 a night is a bargain given the going rates some of the upvalley luxury resorts like Auberge, Solage, Medowood and Calistoga Ranch. As for the condo owners having a set number of nights, this is how hotels get financed today. These are investment properties for the owners. It is shocking to me how little most of you know about business, about economics and about what's going on in your own community.

The people building and financing and owning these projects are very smart folks. I know some of them and know their Law Degrees and MBA's are from some of our top universities. It sounds as if those of you passing poor judgement haven't even made it out of Napa Valley College. Try and educate yourselves before you pop off.

This is a new day in Napa. We are fast becoming a world class, educated city. Either get up to speed or get left behind. "

reason-ator wrote on Aug 18, 2008 1:47 AM:

" To rennut turner and about time.

You're right. We can not see anywhere about all these hundreds of jobs that will pay above market rate. We can't see martians either. We do see the whiz-bangs that have made Copia such a rousing success. Even I can, with my lowly 3.9 GPA College degrees, but I don't work for Westin or the Downtown Merchants Association. Stupid me.

Wanna buy a bridge ? I'll even sell you the swampland underneath it. You can charge tolls to fix your roads. Meanwhile, show me all those hundreds of high paying slightly-above minimum-wage jobs you're talking about. Seems like the unions that wanted to do that were run out of town with the last project from over the rainbow.

If you can see all these hundreds of jobs, share them with us. Otherwise, try and fool someone else. Someone dumb enough to buy your sales pitch. Start with the City Council. "

LewisWilliams wrote on Aug 18, 2008 10:14 AM:

" Many of the craftsmen on this project were Napa residents and Napa contractors, including Ledcor the general contractor who is also working on the First Street project. We are very fortunate to have such upstanding, hardworking people in our community capable of creating such a beautiful place.

Soon you will be able to say you are a Napa old-timer if you can remember Brewster’s, the highlight of old downtown Napa.

Congratulations to Cass and all the people with the vision to help Napa evolve into the world-class destination we have become.

Best wishes to Copia who took the lead in this revitalization and the people who work at Copia, our neighbors and friends, who have hung in there for these last several years with high quality programming, events, exhibitions and restaurants.

To the world, all these venues are ours, Napa's pride and joy. My husband and I live and work in Napa and we are very proud of the changes our community has made in the last decade. We are proud to live in Napa.

Bravo to all the mothers and fathers, friends and neighbors, employees and companies . . . people from Napa who have been and continue to be involved in our transformation! "

Zeeman wrote on Aug 18, 2008 10:54 AM:

" That's right, nothing for the "residents" excpet a place to meet, a place to eat, a place to work, and tax dollars pumped directly into the city instead of going to the State to be "begged" back. Yep, nothing at all. "

elb wrote on Aug 19, 2008 5:28 AM:

" abouttime,

Way to inspire! Has anyone ever told you that you can be just a wee bit condescending?

Further, for someone who professes to be so educated, and who has an "in" with the who's who... I am surprised you could not come up with something better than, "Pop off" to describe someone who runs off at the mouth without thought or care as to what is actually being spewed.

As for the hotel, near as I can gather, having had a family member in the hotel industry (In this valley) for some time now, most hotel employees (Even those in supervisory positions) have to have second jobs in order to even make ends meet.

And with the garbage my relative has had to put up with from these "elite" hotel guests sporting those fabulous degrees you just mentioned...

Trust me, having to yank, in the middle of the night, a drunk and very naked medical doctor out of a hotel swimming pool along with his drunk and very naked friends because of a long series of noise complaints from other paying guests isn't exactly easy or fun. Especially when Mr. (Local PhD) is, --Let's use your fancy description, "popping off" the whole time, asking; "Do you know who I am? What is your name? You'll never get away with this!"

Nope, even $12.00 an hour isn't nearly enough for that and most hotel employees aren't even making that. "

Comment guidelines
All comments will be screened and may take several hours to be posted.
• Keep comments clear, concise and focused on the topic in the story.
• Comments exceeding 300 words will not be posted.
• Refrain from personal attacks, degrading comments or remarks that do not add to a constructive dialogue.
• Comments implying suspects in crime-related stories are guilty before they have been proven so in a court of law will be deleted.
• Do not post e-mail addresses or links except for pages on Napavalleyregister.com or government Web sites.
• Comments will not be edited - they will be approved or declined.
• Comments may be used in the print edition of the newspaper.
• If you feel a posted comment has violated our guidelines, please contact dross@napanews.com or bkennedy@napanews.com
For further information on the comment guidelines, click here.
Search:
Advanced searchWeb Search Powered By Yahoo! Search
Copyright © 2008 Napa Valley Publishing, a member of Lee Enterprises, Inc.
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy