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Author: Zander Vera

1982

In 1982, Raleigh partnered with Executive Life Insurance Company (“ELIC”) to build a 211,000-square-foot office tower in West LA on Olympic Boulevard to serve as the home office for both companies.  Over the balance of that decade, the Executive Life relationship grew to include the development of an adjoining 250,000 square-foot office tower and the master planning of two additional development sites on Olympic Boulevard, which Raleigh designated as the “Garden District.”  Through its relationship with Executive Life, Raleigh ultimately acquired and/or managed approximately one billion dollars in assets, including a portfolio of nearly ten thousand Class-A apartment projects across the U.S. in a partnership with FSC Realty, LLC, and Executive Life.  Raleigh also oversaw and managed Executive Life’s nation-wide portfolio of 570 post-office and GSA buildings and 800 co-op apartments in NYC.

The year 1982 also marked the entry of the next generation of Rosenthals into the company, Mark joined Raleigh in 1982 and Deborah followed suit in 1984.

In 1982, Raleigh would acquire its first jet aircraft, a Mitsubishi Diamond Jet, and commenced operations of Raleigh Jet Enterprises, with its “Diamond in the Sky.”  That year also marked the opening of Raleigh’s shared workspace concept, long pre-dating WeWork, Raleigh Executive Suites.

1980

Despite the US-prime rate peaking at 21.5% at the end of 1980, it would become a busy decade of growth for Raleigh. 

The early-1980s saw an expansion of Raleigh’s hotel operations, with the company acquiring and reinventing the Stephen F. Austin Hotel in Austin, Texas and in taking a lead role in the restoration of the Hotel Jerome in Aspen, Colorado.  Additionally, the company was brought in by the Kaempfer Company, the developer of the Regent International Hotel in Georgetown, Washington to assist in repositioning that hotel which was experiencing significant operating losses.  Unfortunately, the financial challenges faced by that property were too formidable to overcome, even with the considerable experience of the Raleigh team.

1979

In 1979, Raleigh acquired and transformed a failed retirement community into the Westwood Marquis, one of LA’s earliest Grand-Luxe, European-style hotels.  The hotel became the inspiration for a host of new and rebuilt luxury hotels in the Los Angeles market.

At the end of the 1970s, Raleigh also pursued several projects in NYC. It purchased and rebuilt a luxury townhome on E. 64th Street in Manhattan for resale, put the Lowell Hotel in escrow, and flipped the contract at a significant profit.

Mid 1970’s

In the mid-1970s, Raleigh continued to broaden its reach in new fields of business.  George developed a close relationship with Emilio Azcarraga Milo, the controlling shareholder and CEO of the Spanish Broadcasting behemoth, Televisa, SA. Raleigh partnered with Televisa to cater to the growing U.S.-based Latin-American community with a series of projects, including: Discos America, Casa America Foods and the Los Angeles Aztecs. Raleigh and Televisa also launched the first of its kind satellite-based, theatrical display platform, using Swiss-built Eidophor Projectors, that allowed for global simulcasting of major sporting events, concerts and seminars to a global audience in theaters around the globe.

1975

In 1975, Raleigh acquired the first parcels of land that would ultimately become part of its 70-acre Jigsaw Ranch development in Aspen, Colorado.

1974

In 1974, the ever-inquisitive Rosenthal was inspired by an ABC News white paper on the growing need for paper storage because of the increasing adoption of computer printers and copiers. Moving beyond typical moving and storage companies, he and a partner, Bob Purcell, created File Keepers, a dedicated records retention service, that responded to a growing need in a burgeoning digital era.  Over the ensuing nearly five decades, this company would become the premiere storage and data management company in Southern California with more than four million cubic feet of document storage and services such as shredding, digitization, electronic content management and business process optimization.

1970s

The company’s activities continued to scale into the seventies.  Its long-term vision for real estate investment was evidenced by its acquisition of a thousand-acre parcel of farmland on the Otay Mesa at the Mexican border early in the decade.  Unfortunately, the recession in the mid-70’s sapped the will of the investment group, and the property was sold.  In the coming years, parcels carved from this property would be sold for several hundred million dollars.  It was an early lesson in the importance of staying power for real estate investing.

This decade brought about a continuation of residential projects in Beverly Hills, with one remodel on Crescent Drive and one on Westwanda Drive.  Raleigh additionally completed one of the first condo-conversions in Beverly Hills.

During this decade, the company also created a 30-unit retirement community in Hemet, California called Sunrise Villas.

1961

The year 1961 brought about a significant increase in the scale of Raleigh’s projects.  In that year, Raleigh formed a partnership with Playboy Enterprises in the creation of the Playboy corporate office and club on the Sunset Strip, an iconic high-rise tower which opened in 1963. Extending this partnership, Raleigh developed and built the Playboy Club in downtown San Francisco in the mid-1960’s.

Initially, the Playboy project in Los Angeles was to include a hotel.  However, as the Playboy brand was controversial in its early days, there were no lenders willing to become affiliated with the hotel aspect of the project.  Although George did not succeed in his efforts to finance a Playboy Hotel, he remained convinced that lodging for Playboy’s executives visiting from Chicago, and, more importantly, that visiting entertainers performing at the club on Sunset would supplement demand for hotel accommodations created by the other music venues along the Sunset Strip.  As a result, Raleigh opened the Sunset Marquis Hotel in 1963 just down the block from the club.  It was a pioneering “all-suite” hotel built with the longer-term lodging needs of entertainment performers in mind.  It was Raleigh’s first of many ventures in the hospitality industry. 

The expansion of Raleigh’s real estate activities accelerated throughout the sixties to match the explosive growth in Southern California. 

  • The company acquired 20-acres of land on Kearny Mesa in San Diego, which it subdivided for the development of a Volkswagen dealership and the offices for an Affiliate of Mexican Television Broadcast company, Televisa.
  • Raleigh developed and built the tropical-themed Islander Restaurant on La Cienega for Los Angeles restauranteur Bernard Toll, replete with an indoor tropical rainforest.

Never shy about new entrepreneurial ventures, Raleigh also launched a mortgage brokerage business in Los Angeles in partnership with Pennsylvania Life Insurance Company during the sixties.  That company both originated and serviced loans for the Southern California market.

While most of Raleigh’s activities during the sixties was as a merchant builder of real estate projects, it started to pursue a longer-term investment strategy, as well.  The shopping center in Altadena, an office building on Third Street and the Sunset Marquis Hotel, all remain in the company’s portfolio to this day – more than sixty years after they were completed. 

1956

In 1956, Raleigh completed its first luxury residential development, a home in Beverly Hills at 1309 Davies Drive for Woolworth heir, Lance Reventlow. Profiled in the January 1958 Architectural Digest, the success of this luxury home project inspired the company to develop eight new luxury homes in the hills above the Sunset Strip on Weatherly Drive. These early days in the company’s history also included land development, including the purchase and resale of a former airport property in East San Jose.

With its growing success as a developer and builder of for-sale residential projects, Raleigh began pursuing commercial investment properties at the end of the 1950’s. These early commercial projects throughout Southern California included: an apartment building in Belmont, California, and construction of the first of two office buildings on Third Street at Martel Avenue.

1955

On January 13, 1955, George Rosenthal and his father, David, founded Raleigh Construction Company, Inc. In its first decade, the company designed, developed, built, and sold tract homes. The first project, twenty-five homes, was in Garden Grove, California. After earning a profit of one thousand dollars per home at a sales price of $12,250, George knew he had found his calling.

Raleigh commenced a residential subdivision and development in San Carlos, California in 1957. This second venture, however, nearly destroyed the fledgling company. Torrential rains in the Bay Area of California that year threatened to wash away the newly graded lots. George and David spent long nights, in the rain, digging trenches to redirect the flow of water, to save the project.