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06/14/2010

Time Magazine: Key West, Florida Pritam Singh’s Strange Career (Part 3)

Singh’s efforts have generally gone down well among the blithe spirits of Key West. Without Singh, the Truman Annex might have become “Meldorado,” a pirate theme park. But if islanders appreciate having a developer as sensitive as Pritam Singh, they are also worried that he is exerting a more profound influence on the island, as an apostle of good taste in a place long known for exuberant tackiness.

Key West has begun cracking down on noise, street vendors, store windows filled with obscene T shirts. Singh acknowledges his power to influence this trend: he will in time be paying 25% of the island’s tax revenues. Before the recent election, two of the five city commissioners were, by amazing coincidence, slated to have shops in his coveted retail space. But he argues that the city would be adjusting its image, growing up, even without him.

It’s possible to grow up, he suggests, without becoming dull. Among other anarchic touches, he plans to rent office space in his complex to environmental groups that “will drive other developers crazy.” He is restoring the Little White House to its tacky Truman-era splendor, spending $15,000 just to repair the Sears, Roebuck fluorescent lights on the porch. Presidential bad taste doesn’t trouble him, in part because he has income projections for his planned Truman museum. “The Little White House is a little gold mine,” he says. But he also claims he does not mean to make Key West precious and yuppified.

“Yeah, you’ve got the nice guardhouse,” he says. “You’ve also got Harry Truman in the middle, and across the street you’ve got the Peekaboo Lounge.” For the foreseeable future, Key West also has Singh, who is weird enough all by himself to keep the place interesting.

“Eh,” he shrugs. “It works.”

12.11.89

06/13/2010

Time Magazine: Key West, Florida Pritam Singh’s Strange Career (Part 2)

When he is done with the $250 million project in 1992, Singh intends the Truman Annex to be an environmentally sound, architecturally pure, socially engineered complex of 700 homes, condominiums, shops and hotel rooms. His design guidelines, reflecting the conch-house architecture of historical Key West, run to 27 dogmatic pages: “White is the preferred and approved basic color for all structures.” “Each single-family unit shall have a bougainvillea within the front-yard area . . .” What he is building is an enclave away from the trashed-out, mixed-up modern world, and he gleefully plans to earn a pile of money doing it.

Singh has sea-blue eyes, magnified by thick, round glasses; his beard, unshaved since he was 17, is sparse and wiry. Born Paul LaBombard, he was, in adult eyes, a bad influence on anybody who knew him as a teenager. He ran away from his working-class family, smoked dope and organized a high school SDS chapter. Lacking money for college, he spent two winters camping out and gathering shells for a living in Key West. He was arrested at the Mayday antiwar demonstrations in Washington in 1971, and spent three days locked up in the basement of the Department of Justice. Afterward he sought spiritual growth in a Sikh ashram in Massachusetts, where he remained for five years before revolting against the power-hungry leader.

Singh says his past and present connect perfectly. He was always good at organizing things. He has always tried to live a moral life. “I don’t see any divergence in my program,” he says. In 1979 he borrowed $7,500, started rehabbing buildings in New England and prospered; luck or savvy got him into Key West before the Northeast real estate market went flat.

The odd thing is that he never stopped being a Sikh, and he remains full of admiration for the social reformers who founded the religion: “These guys were, like, wacko. They just appeared out of nowhere and were talking about justice and equality. Treat women equally, serve the poor, defend your rights. It fits the social and revolutionary agenda of the American republic to a tee.” He shrugs. “Except that we wear beards and turbans.”

Singh can be disarmingly frank about his failings: he has dealt with the problem of homelessness in Key West by putting up gates to close off his streets at night. His complex includes more affordable housing than required, but up to half may go to friends and vacationers, rather than to year-round residents.

He is most ardent about environmental issues, having become a rehabber at least partly because he believes it is wrong to build on open land. An aide informs him that Greenpeace will be tying up at his dock on Thursday morning. “That oughta impress the Japanese guys,” he jokes, referring to a group of financiers arriving the same day with the prospect of a $100 million loan. He dreads the idea of having lived in a period of ecological collapse and done nothing but good deals.

He also dreads power, which he admits is what he enjoys most about being a developer. “I read the papers and I think, ‘I could do that deal. Grrrrr.’ ” He makes a low self-mocking growl. “I could make $50 million on that deal.” The fingers of both hands wriggle in acquisitive frenzy. Sheer insatiability has convinced him that he must give up the business after Key West. “I’m successful only if I can walk away from it and deal with who I really am.” He aims to retreat to his sprawling farm in Vermont, where he has built a private Stonehenge, a Jeffersonian library in the middle of the woods, a Japanese teahouse. Cross-cultural follies.
12.11.89

(To be continued…)

06/12/2010

Time Magazine: Key West, Florida Pritam Singh’s Strange Career (Part 1)

At 9 o’clock on a weekday evening, having just flown in from his Vermont retreat, following the previous week’s human rights mission into the hills of El Salvador, Pritam Singh is touring the best piece of real estate on Key West: the Truman Annex, a former Navy property where Harry Truman had his Little White House.

Singh owns the place now, and one is unsure which jarring and inapposite piece of his biography best begins to explain him: That he is a former SDS organizer who is building a Ritz-Carlton hotel? Or that he is a developer whose fondest wish is to run away with Sea Shepherd, a Greenpeace splinter group, and ram whale ships? Perhaps that he is a 36-year-old Massachusetts- born Sikh of French-Canadian extraction, in a turban and a Ralph Lauren polo shirt? Or that he read about this 102-acre property one Sunday in 1986 and bought it on a hunch three days later for $17.25 million, outbidding a group of Alaskan Indians bearing federal pollution-compensation credits? Around Singh, one sometimes needs to stop, press rewind and take it all in once more, slowly.

“This is exciting,” he tells his architect, surveying the half-finished plaza he has conceived as the social center of the new community he is building. “Have you done the guardhouse? Let’s go see the guardhouse.” Singh is minutely attentive to aesthetics, even with interest costs and overhead running $30,000 a day. The guardhouse, it turns out, is coming along nicely, except for some ugly screens, which Singh promptly removes from the muntined French doors. He peers at a Government facility up the road: “Now we gotta get the Navy to straighten out the Stalag 13 look there. Those guys are so subtle.”

12.11.89
(to be continued…)

05/25/2010

Pritam Singh on Future Singh Resorts Projects

“I’ll always build buildings.  If I’m smart, I’ll build small buildings,” he said. Once Truman Annex is complete, Singh said he plans to take a break.

“Then I go tarpoon fishing for a year,” he said.

05/23/2010

For Pritam Singh, the Buck stops in Key West

And now, there’s Pritam Singh, 35, who is dedicated to turning and aged military facility steeped in history into a thriving sub-city that preserves the past and caters to the present.

On March 31, 1974 the U.S. Navy formally decommissioned of the base.  Then followed a dozen years filled with bureaucratic indecision, red tape and general Washington, D.C., snafus.  Finally, the Truman Annex, a 44-acre parcel plus the 55-acre Tank Island, was put on the public auction block.

The General Service Administration in Atlanta published a colorful brochure to entice bidders, requiring that each must pre-register, place a deposit of $250,000 and submit a bid in writing.

Seventeen parties responded.

Among them was an ex-Catholic whose given name was Paul LaBombard from Fitchburg, Mass.  During the 1960s, he had delved deeply into politics, fighting for social justice, political equality and other issues of the day.

But LaBombard grew disillusioned with the leftist movement of the flower children and began traveling the world in search of answers.  In 1971, he was baptized a Sikh and took the name Pritam (God’s beloved) Singh (royal lion).

Florida Today- September, 1987

Developer put public in Little White House

By: Careth Ellingson

05/22/2010

Harry S. Truman, the Inspiration for Pritam Singh’s Truman Annex

The base grew in notoriety following World War II, when Americans elected “the-buck-stops-here, give-‘em-hell” Harry S. Truman of Missouri to their 33rd president.  The post-war Navy soon discovered their new commander in chief liked the base at Key West, especially the commandant’s house constructed in 1898.

Within a year after his election, Truman was making regular trips there for relaxation in the Florida sun. Even as late as 1969, visitors to the Keys still could see the jaunty figure occasionally strolling the streets of America’s southern-most town.  The naval station long before had come to be known popularly as the Truman Annex.

But Truman wasn’t the only notable name associated with the site over its 165 years.  There were Presidents Grant, Taft, Eisenhower and Kennedy; British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan; and Jordan’s King Hussein.

Florida Today- September, 1987

05/21/2010

Pritam Singh and the Truman Annex

“Key West is not 19 anymore,” said Pritam Singh, a New England Developer who bought the 102-acre former naval base on the island called Truman Annex in September 1986.  It includes the Little White House where President Harry S. Truman used to vacation and the 27-acre manmade islet on which the hotel is to be built.  Once known as Tank Island, it housed fuel tanks for the Key West’s Navy installations.

The New York Times- Sunday, June 11, 1989

05/18/2010

Truman Annex Takes Public Bow thanks to Pritam Singh

Pritam Singh, the new owner of Truman Annex in Key West, opened the tall iron gates of the Annex to the public on Tuesday with more pomp and circumstance than the tiny island has seen in years.  More than 500 visitors were present for the gate-opening ceremony and even more attended the shrimp and fruit lunch Singh threw in the gardens of the Little White House later in the afternoon.

The Miami Herald- Friday, March 27, 1987

By: Susan Ornstein

05/16/2010

Pritam Singh Initiates Largest Development in Key West

When the Presidential Gates at the Truman Annex opened for the first time in 50 years two years ago this Friday, it signaled the beginning of the largest private development ever undertaken in Key West.

Since then, developer Pritam Singh and his team have established a firm foundation for the $250 million mixed-use development that is starting to come out of the ground at this 100-acre landmark property.

“Now that the infrastructure is nearing completion and our development plans are fine tuned to everyone’s satisfaction, we have advanced to a new stage of progress,” said Singh.

Key West Citizen and Tradewinds                 March 20, 1989

05/14/2010

Pritam Singh’s Truman Annex earns FL Design Arts Award

KEY WEST – Truman Annex, the residential community set on the western Point of Key West, has been awarded one of Florida’s most prestigious awards for design excellence: The 1994 Florida Design Arts Award.

Presented by Secretary of State Jim Smith and the Florida Arts Council, the award recognizes public and private facilities that represent the “most effective collaboration among the design professions: architecture, engineering, landscape architecture, and graphic, interior and urban design.”

Applicants from across the state of Florida enter in competition for this coveted award.  Of these entries, only four properties were honored this year.  Among the winners, Truman Annex was the single private property chosen.  Other recipients were the Florida National Cemetery, in Bushnell, the Fort Lauderdale Beach Revitalization in Fort Lauderdale, and Mandarin Park in Jacksonville.

Situated in Key West’s historic Old Town District on the site of a former naval base, Truman Annex faced a number of design and usages issues in its development.  In addition to the preservation of historic buildings, the property was built to include such diverse elements as private homes, condominiums, museums and office spaces.

Pritam Singh, owner and developer of Truman Annex, stated that his goal in building the project was to “blend seamlessly into the island community,” preserving every historic structure that could be successfully renovated, following traditional architectural styles in all new construction, and landscaping in the “island vein.”

Upon receipt of the award, Singh said, “we are truly honored to receive such a prestigious award.  We feel that we have succeeded in bringing out the traditional style and architecture unique to Key West in our work, and therefore feel that this award is not only for the Truman Annex, but for the City of Key West as well.”

The attainment of this considerable goal was accomplished through the efforts of seven different companies: Landers-Atkins Planners, Inc., Planning/Urban Design; Grassi Design Group, Architects; David Plummer and Associates, Inc., Engineers; Elizabeth Newland, Landscape Architect; A. Quinton White Associates, Engineers; and Coastal Technology Corporation, Engineers.

Howard Landers of Landers-Atkins Planners submitted the application on behalf of the design group.  Said Landers, “I felt that Truman Annex was an ideal candidate for the award.  With the complexity of design and special difficulties we faced in completing the project, I feel that Truman Annex really stood out among the candidates.  To me – it was a slam dunk!”  Landers received the award on behalf of the group at a presentation ceremony in Jacksonville on Oct. 18.  

The Citizen                                               November 6, 1994

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