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Multiple Personalities
Owning one of San Francisco's coolest hotel groups is a full-contact job.
By Libby Ellis
Yvonne Lembi-Detert, a trained interior designer turned hotelier, gives
new meaning to the concept of hands-on management. She doesn't pick
textiles out of a catalog or bulk order generic prints. She unrolls a bolt
of fabric and throws herself on a bed with it to see if it's itchy. She tests
the strength of potential building materials by whacking samples with the
heel of her shoe.
Design is the core of Lembi-Detert's business. To avoid the monotony
she could easily fall into, she doesn't work with designers who have
hotel experience, she rarely works with the same designer twice and
she's constantly updating her spaces. Three of the five Personality Hotel
Group properties are undergoing changes—Hotel Union Square, Hotel
Diva and The Metropolis—and good design is just the beginning. She is
promoting the hell out of them with packages and promotions reinforcing
each individual brand.
It all started about 25 years ago when Lembi-Detert traveled to
Europe. Staying in a number of distinctive boutique hotels, she realized
that San Francisco was full of impersonal, cookie-cutter options. Her
father, a prominent real estate investor, bought their first property,
Hotel Union Square, in 1980. He hired his daughter to design and run
the space.
As the historian of the hotel group, it just seems right that you can
hear the fabled cable car from the Hotel Union Square's 1930s art deco
lobby. "People love history and come to San Francisco for that. I wanted
to bring history back to the hotel," Lembi-Detert says. She established
a vintage feel and then, last March, kicked it up with the creation of the
Dashiell Hammett suite. Best known for penning The Maltese Falcon and
the Thin Man, Hammett is credited for elevating the literary status of detective
fiction. He was a fan of the hotel and booked a corner suite for his
bride-to-be, Josephine Dolan, the night before their 1921 wedding.
While in the process of conceptualizing the suite, Lembi-Detert got
a call from Warner Brothers. The company was working on a documentary
about Hammett. She told them about the suite project and committed
to finishing it in only a month. She turned to local artist and art
teacher Lisa Compagno to do the job.
"Yvonne had first asked me just to create a collage and it turned
into me doing an entire room celebrating Hammett's life and work,"
Compagno says. In addition to time, her biggest challenge was the existing
furniture—including a mission-style headboard. "I looked to the fabrics
and patterns popular during Hammett's time but I had to work with
the furniture in the room. I made the detective agency the focal point,
[Hammett worked as a detective prior to becoming a writer] adding the
lettering to the window, a replica of his typewriter and a vintage desk."
Other touches include the collage, a variety of memorabilia and a Thin
Man silhouette.
The suite is now the focal point of the hotel and guests can purchase
special packages that include dinner at Joe's Grill where Hammett is rumored
to have written part of The Maltese Falcon. The suite sparked a
major overhaul of all 131 rooms and bathrooms beginning this fall.
With Hotel Union Square up and running, Lembi-Detert purchased
her second property, Hotel Diva, in 1985. She hired Olle Lundberg
(known for high-profile home and restaurant designs) to create a modern,
sexy, elegant space. She recently brought him back in to update the
lobby and guestrooms.
"Our original goal," Lundberg says, "was a hip boutique concept
and it had just gotten a little tired. It was time to reinvent and make the
hotel even sexier by introducing new materials and new elements and
asking, 'What does sexy mean?' On the one hand it can be literal sexual
illusions, like the headboard [lots of people think it looks like pants being
unzipped] or it can be done more subtly with material choices." He
used stainless steel to capture the feel of a 1920s ocean liner and evoke
an escapist, restful feel. "I think that's one of the goals of a hotel. You
want a little bit of a fantasy." The water imagery also helps center guests in the city. "Hopefully guests say, 'Oh yeah, this is San Francisco,'"
Lundberg says. Cobalt blue carpet, custom stainless furnishing and
accessories and a backlit onyx wall in the lobby all contribute to the
cool sensuality of the Diva.
Fully aware that sex sells, Lembi-Detert created the VIP
Hook-Up package for "singles or wanna-be singles." Guests receive
a room, Axe Body Spray, invitations and VIP access to a hot
restaurant and club, condoms and Vox water.
Comfortable with its sensuality, the Diva currently is being outfitted
with new artwork, more relaxing meeting rooms and uniquely
styled lounges on each floor. Lembi-Detert also has plans for
Diva LA, naturally.
True, you may have to endure the more transitional part of
the city (translation: about three blocks from a Starbucks instead of
50 feet and more homeless people on the sidewalk) when lodging
at Hotel Metropolis, but once you walk into the lobby with its
cascading slate wall waterfall and restored Spanish Revivalist ceiling,
you'll forget all about the outside world.
An urban oasis celebrating the elements of earth, wind, fire
and water, Hotel Metropolis is the zen master of the group. It provides
guests with easy access to the Castro. Like the Diva, it is very
popular with LGBT travelers. "The gay market is huge for us and
we're really pleased," Lembi-Detert says. She recently offered a
campy Brokeback Mountain package that included a deluxe room,
a six-pack of beer, two Rough Rider condoms, a sheepskin throw,
two cowboy hats and a pony stick.
When Lembi-Detert was in the process of conceptualizing
the property she took a tough trip to Spain with her daughter.
"Creating a kids' suite at the Metropolis was a no-brainer for me
because I was a parent experiencing the woes of traveling with a
kid… moving the desk chair to the bathroom so she could brush
her teeth, her being miserable with nothing to do in the room.
Back then nobody had done it and now it's taking off," she says.
There also are kids' suites underway at the Diva and at Hotel
Union Square.
Lembi-Detert is about to take on a huge project - her first
ground-up construction - the 157-room Hotel M31, named for
the largest known galaxy in the universe. The newest member of
the group will delight tech-heads looking for a truly unique experience.
"It's going to be in the Galatia somewhere and very technologically
advanced because it's technology—as well as 25-year olds
searching for new travel experiences—dictating pop culture.
And that's the challenge: meshing cultural influences with the realities
of running a hotel. You still have to have a bed in the room that
will last three to four years, it has to work functionally but there are
so many exciting things you can do," she says.
No matter how technologically advanced she gets or how
many hotels she eventually acquires, Lembi-Detert realizes that
personality isn't confined to her business name or to the hotel
designs. It's also her personality that keeps guests coming back.
She's just as hands on with them as she is with her textiles, sending
regular newsletters and corresponding with visitors. As she continues
looking for ways to infuse creativity into her properties, it's
her guests that will remind her why she got into the business in
the first place. "Talking to guests... that's my fun work, that's my
downtime," Lembi-Detert says.
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