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Lindsay Lohan didn’t pay her bill at Anthony Bourdain’s favourite hotel in the world – is LA’s infamous Chateau Marmont to become a private residential club?

Jim Morrison and Anthony Bourdain stayed there, F Scott Fitzgerald and Quentin Tarantino wrote there, movies like La La Land and A Star Is Born were filmed there and John Belushi died there – now Sunset Boulevard’s notorious Chateau Marmont is feeling the Covid-19 fallout, and hotelier André Balazs wants to turn it into a private members club

What is the future for LA’s iconic Chateau Marmont? Photo: Discover Los Angeles

Chateau Marmont, an iconic Los Angeles hotel beloved by celebrities, may be converted into a private residential club by the end of the year, its owner told The Wall Street Journal.

Hotelier André Balazs said the coronavirus pandemic had sped up his plans to transform the hotel, which he’d been considering for the past three years.

Like hotels across the US, the Chateau has suffered during the pandemic. The hotel laid off most of its staff without severance – more than 200 employees – in late March. Page Six reported that Balazs himself created a GoFundMe relief fund for the staffers – but by May 1, many of them said they hadn’t yet received the funds.

A spokesperson for Balazs told the Journal that the hotel’s lack of severance pay was consistent with other non-union properties. A Chateau spokesperson told Business Insider that, on May 4, more than US$250,000 was distributed from the GoFund Me to laid-off staffers in order of seniority.

Although Chateau Marmont has been a traditional hotel that can be booked online, its exclusivity means it wouldn’t be such a stretch to turn it into a members-only club, according to the owner.

“We have always screened our guests,” Balazs told the Journal. “Guests are never more than one degree of separation away.”

Chateau Marmont has built up a reputation as an iconic Hollywood destination. Over the years, the hotel’s guests have included writer F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Doors frontman Jim Morrison, and countless other celebrities. Late celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain once said the Chateau was his favourite hotel in the world.

In 2012, actress Lindsay Lohan was reportedly banned from the Los Angeles property after skipping out on paying a more than US$46,000 tab following her 47-day stay.

Through his André Balazs Properties, Balazs also owns The Mercer hotel in New York City, the Chiltern Firehouse hotel in London and Sunset Beach, a beachside property near the Hamptons.

The hotelier told the Journal that depending on the response to Chateau Marmont’s transformation, he may open up members-only clubs around the world in places like Milan, Paris, Tokyo and the south of France or a private island in Greece.

An uncertain future for hotels

The upcoming transformation of Chateau Marmont is just one example of the shifting landscape of the hotel industry, which has been ravaged by the coronavirus pandemic.

On May 20, seven out of 10 hotel rooms in the US were sitting empty and thousands of hotels were completely closed, according to the American Hotel and Lodging Association (AHLA). Hotels have lost billions in room revenue since the start of the pandemic, and at least seven per cent of hotel employees were laid off or furloughed, according to the AHLA.

To make guests feel safe and attract desperately-needed business, the industry scrambled to implement creative solutions. Hotels started offering contactless check-in, limiting capacity and cutting out daily housekeeping to reduce person-to-person interaction.

In the long-term, some top travel and hospitality CEOs expect the pandemic to prompt a shift toward smaller, boutique hotels. Hotel designers and architects predict that amenities like gyms will be replaced by in-room fitness offerings, meetings and conference space swill be reconfigured and the hotel breakfast buffet will be no more.

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This article originally appeared on Business Insider.