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===Previous Hotel Properties===
===Previous Hotel Properties===
* Alyeska Prince Hotel, [[Girdwood, Alaska]] (now [[Alyeska Resort]])
* Alyeska Prince Hotel, [[Girdwood, Alaska]] (now [[Alyeska Resort]])
* Grand Prince Hotel Akasaka: [[Chiyoda, Tokyo]] (closed March 31, 2011)<ref name='princehotelnihongo' />
* Grand Prince Hotel Akasaka: [[Chiyoda, Tokyo]] (closed March 31, 2011)<ref name='princehotelnihongo'>{{cite web|url=http://www.princehotels.co.jp/hotels_resorts/list/|script-title=ja:ホテル一覧|trans-title=A list of hotels|publisher=Prince Hotels|accessdate=August 11, 2013|language=Japanese}}</ref>
* Maui Prince Hotel, [[Wailea-Makena, Hawaii]] (now Makena Beach and Golf Resort Wailea)
* Maui Prince Hotel, [[Wailea-Makena, Hawaii]] (now Makena Beach and Golf Resort Wailea)
* Toronto Prince Hotel, [[Toronto|Toronto, Ontario]] (now a [[Westin]] property)
* Toronto Prince Hotel, [[Toronto|Toronto, Ontario]] (now a [[Westin]] property)

Revision as of 12:39, 7 February 2017

Prince Hotels
Native name
プリンスホテル
Purinsu Hoteru
IndustryHotels
Founded4 June 1956 Edit this on Wikidata
Headquarters
3-1-5 Higashi Ikebukuro, Toshima-ku, Tokyo
,
Japan
ParentSeibu Holdings, Inc.
Websitewww.princejapan.com
Shinjuku Prince Hotel, incorporating Seibu-Shinjuku railway station

The Prince Hotels (プリンスホテル, Purinsu Hoteru) is the name of a hotel chain company headquartered in Toshima-ku, Tokyo, Japan. It is a subsidiary of Seibu Holdings, Inc. Together with Seibu Railway, Prince Hotels is the core company of Seibu Group.

Overview

During the Allied occupation of Japan following World War II, many members of the Japanese peerage lost their titles and were subject to crippling taxation on their real estate holdings. Yasujirō Tsutsumi, who controlled the Seibu Railway through the Kokudo Corporation, arranged to buy several of these families' properties at a discount and used them to develop hotels. The first of these hotels, the Grand Prince Hotel Takanawa, opened in 1953 on the site of the Takeda-no-miya residence. The Tokyo Prince Hotel opened in 1964 on a site that originally housed graves of several Tokugawa family shoguns, whose bodies were moved to the neighboring temple of Zojo-ji.

Originally, hotels branded as Prince Hotels were not wholly owned by Prince Hotels Company, but were instead operated by different companies, such as Seibu Railway, Kokudo, or Izuhakone Railway. The management system of Prince Hotels was described as "debt operation" by the media. It borrowed funds from banks, developed land using the funds, and borrowed more funds with the growth of land values. The system worked in the 1960s with Japanese economic growth, until the 1990s when the bubble economy burst.

Under the reorganization of the Seibu Group following the de-listing of Seibu Railway in 2005, Prince Hotels Company merged with Kokudo. All the Prince Hotels are now operated by Prince Hotels Company. Because of the unreasonable expansion in the past, the company has many underperforming facilities. Under the current[date missing] plan of turnaround, it closed, sold, and plans to close or sell roughly 40 facilities.

Reorganization

Tsutsumi registered Seibu Railway shares owned by Kokudo in the names of various affiliated individuals, often without their permission, so that the true ownership of the company was not readily apparent.[1] Following the death of Tsutsumi in 1964, his third son Yoshiaki Tsutsumi inherited control of Kokudo and continued the practice of falsifying shareholder records. His holdings in Kokudo and Seibu led to his being deemed the "world's richest man" by Forbes magazine for four consecutive years from 1987 to 1990, with estimated net worth of $15–20 billion during the height of the Japanese asset bubble. He was arrested on securities fraud charges in March 2005.[2]

On December 21, 2005, Seibu Railway was delisted from the Tokyo Stock Exchange. A reorganization of the group, completed in February 2006, created Seibu Holdings to act as a holding company for both the railway and Prince Hotels. Cerberus Capital Management, an American investment fund, became the largest shareholder in Seibu Holdings with a 29.9% share of the new company.[1]

In late 2012 and early 2013, Cerberus proposed that Seibu Railway abolish five non-core lines, along with other restructuring measures throughout the Seibu Holdings group, but management refused to implement these changes. Cerberus then executed a tender offer to increase its stake to 35% as of June 2013, giving Cerberus the power to veto shareholder resolutions.[3] Cerberus had aimed to raise its stake to 44%, bringing it closer to an outright majority, but Seibu management engaged in a massive campaign to thwart the tender offer, including advertising within Seibu trains to passengers who owned stock. The East Japan Railway Company and several financial institutions also planned a support scheme to keep Cerberus from acquiring control of Seibu, but it was ultimately not implemented due to a lack of potential financial benefit for the investors. At the June 2013 shareholder meeting, several proposals by Cerberus were voted down, including the election of outside directors and the abolition of non-core lines.[4]

As of June 2013, Yoshiaki Tsutsumi remains a major investor in Seibu Holdings through his 36% investment in NW Corporation, the second-largest shareholder in the company with a share of around 15%. Tsutsumi refused to respond to the Cerberus tender offer at the urging of Seibu management.[4]

Hotels

The prince gallery Tokyo Kioicho

The following list uses the English translations of the hotel names.[5]

  • The prince gallery Tokyo Kioicho

The Prince

The Prince is the brand name for the most luxurious hotels by the company.

Grand Prince Hotels

Grand Prince Hotels is the brand name for city hotels.

Prince Hotels (Japan)

Others

  • Ashinokohan Takagowa Onsen Fuyō-Tei (ryokan): Hakone, Kanagawa
  • Ashinokohan Takagowa Onsen Ryūgūden (ryokan): Hakone, Kanagawa
  • Hakone En Cottage West: Hakone, Kanagawa
  • Hakone En Cottage Camping: Hakone, Kanagawa
  • Hakone Yunohana Onsen Hotel: Hakone, Kanagawa
  • Hotel Daihakone: Hakone, Kanagawa
  • Hotel Sea Paradise Inn: Kanazawa-ku, Yokohama
  • Izu Nagaoka Onsen Sanyō-Sō (ryokan): Izunokuni, Shizuoka
  • Kawana Hotel: Itō, Shizuoka
  • Ryūgūden (ryokan): Hakone, Kanagawa

Overseas

Previous Hotel Properties

Ski areas and aerial lifts

Sayama Ski Resort

Chairlifts are excluded.

  • Furano Ski Resort : Furano, Hokkaidō
    • Furano Ropeway
    • Kitanomine Gondola
  • Shizukuishi Ski Resort: Shizukuishi, Iwate
    • Shizukuishi Gondola
    • Ropeway
  • Karuizawa Prince Hotel Ski Resort: Karuizawa, Nagano
  • Manza Onsen Ski Resort: Tsumagoi, Gunma
  • Mt. Naeba Snow Resort: Yuzawa, Niigata
    • Naeba Ski Resort
      • Prince First Gondola
      • Prince Second Gondola
      • Naeba Tashiro Gondola (Dragondola)
    • Kagura Ski Resort (Kagura Area, Mitsumata Gelände, and Tashiro Area): Yuzawa, Niigata
      • Kagura Gondola
      • Mitsumata Ropeway
      • Tashiro Ropeway
  • Muikamachi Hakkaisan Ski Resort: Minamiuonuma, Niigata
  • Myōkō Suginohara Ski Resort: Myōkō, Niigata
    • Myōkō Suginohara Gondola
  • Sayama Ski Resort: Tokorozawa, Saitama
  • Shiga Kōgen Yakebitaiyama Ski Resort: Yamanouchi, Nagano
    • Yakebitaiyama First Gondola
    • Yakebitaiyama Second Gondola
  • Manza Highway: Tsumagoi, Gunma
  • Onioshi Highway: Karuizawa, Nagano–Tsumagoi, Gunma

See also

References

  1. ^ "Kokudo faked names of all shareholdings when Seibu debuted in 1949", Kyodo News, March 15, 2005, retrieved June 26, 2013
  2. ^ "Tycoon Tsutsumi -- from world's richest man to detention cell", Kyodo News, March 3, 2005, retrieved June 26, 2013
  3. ^ "Cerberus Boosts Seibu Stake but Misses Goal", Wall Street Journal, June 1, 2013, retrieved June 26, 2013
  4. ^ a b "西武TOB攻防に幻の「助っ人」", 日本経済新聞, pp. 朝刊 総合2, June 26, 2013, retrieved June 26, 2013
  5. ^ "Prince Hotels Search From List". Prince Hotels. Retrieved August 11, 2013.
  6. ^ ホテル一覧 [A list of hotels] (in Japanese). Prince Hotels. Retrieved August 11, 2013.