Trump Organization’s First Australian Project Canceled
The plan to build a Trump Tower in Australia was canceled after the local developer said the brand had become "toxic" because of the war in Iran, according to a BBC report. The project, estimated at $1.1 billion, was announced only three months ago and was to include a 91-story luxury hotel in Queensland. The tower, which was to carry the branding of the U.S. president’s family real estate company, was designed to rise 335 meters, making it the tallest building in Australia. David Young, chief executive of the Australian real estate company Altus, and Eric Trump, the president’s second son, attended the contract signing in February. Both were photographed smiling and full of praise.
Now, however, both sides are trading accusations. A spokesperson for the Trump Organization said the project was canceled because the Australian real estate company did not meet its commitments. "After months of negotiations and one empty promise after another on a $1.5 billion project, Altus failed to meet the basic financial commitments on which the execution of the contract was based," Kimberly Benza of the Trump Organization said. Young rejected the claims. "Let’s just say that with the war in Iran and everything else, the Trump brand has become toxic in Australia," he said in a statement. Accordingly, 120,000 residents signed a petition against the project, compared with 3,600 who signed a petition in favor. Even so, the Trump Organization does not believe there is any connection to the war in Iran. "Young’s attempt to blame certain events in the world for the end of our contract is simply a ploy to distract from his failures," Benza added.
Construction was supposed to begin in August, and the tower was to include 258 hotel rooms and 272 luxury apartments, as well as stores, restaurants and an exclusive beach club. Paul Burton, emeritus professor at Griffith University and a local resident, told The Guardian that Australia’s Gold Coast has a long history of ambitious projects that never materialized. According to him, most failed because they could not obtain approvals or raise the capital needed to finance construction. "One of the problems today is that you can feed something into Claude or ChatGPT and ask them to create an image of a spectacular gold-clad tower in the middle of surfers’ paradise, and it will do it in five seconds." But in practice, almost all developers "have to go to a bank or another financial institution and borrow money, and those institutions tend to be cautious and sensible."