Press and Media
Our track record of successful sales and achievements have been well documented by the local media. Here are some of the articles where we’ve been featured.
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Sep 18
MaineBiz, June 7, 2017

Lewiston Ramada Inn sold for $4 million
A Massachusetts-based hotel investor group called Atithi LLC, which owns and operates a large portfolio of hotels under major brands, purchased the Ramada Inn & Conference Center in Lewiston for more than $4 million.
Roger Daigle, president of the Daigle Commercial Group in Portland and his associates, Mitchell Muroff and Nick Farrell, represented the seller, George Gendron, in the transaction. The group also found the buyer. The sale closed May 26.
The Ramada, which has 117 guest rooms and executive suites, is at 490 Pleasant St.
Buyers bullish on Maine’s potential
Ashutosh Nayak, a New Jersey resident, is one of three partners who comprise Atithi LLC. He told Mainebiz the investor group owns a variety of businesses, including hotels in Massachusetts, New Jersey and New Hampshire. Atithi is building its first hotel, in New Hampshire.
The Ramada is the investor group’s first venture in Maine.
“We wanted to expand in Maine and New Hampshire,” Nayak said. “This location has potential.” Nayak explained that the Ramada has its own niche in the mid-scale market that targets a huge customer base between lower-scale motel type of lodgings and luxury lodgings. The Lewiston facility, in particular, is uniquely positioned not only for its hotel rooms but for its huge conference center, banquet facility, restaurant and bar.
“We feel all the businesses combined complement each other,” he said.
The investor group first looked at the property nine months ago, but kept the idea on hold as the construction project in New Hampshire unfolded. The group decided to actively pursue the property in January.
Nayak expressed appreciation to the city of Lewiston and to Mechanics Savings Bank in helping the investors close on the deal.
“We chose a local bank, and they’ve been great partners toward the process,” he said.
Passion for the hospitality business
Originally from India, Nayak arrived in the United States with his partners when they were all students. In New York, he pursued an undergraduate degree in management information system technology, his other area of interest. His first job out of college was as a front desk clerk in a hotel, and he fell in love with the hospitality business.
“It’s always been my passion to be in the hospitality business,” he said. “It’s my hobby also, because I travel a lot. I see hotels in the U.S., Europe and Asia. There’s money there, but also it’s the satisfaction that we can serve customers. We can be part of people’s lives.”
The Lewiston Ramada, employing up to 90 people, dates to 1974. The hotel is in good condition, but the group is planning some upgrades. Partial renovations, starting this year, include upgrades to the restaurant, banquet area, and 40 to 50 rooms, followed by upgrades to remaining rooms and the technology infrastructure. Nayak said he expects investment this year to be $500,000, and between $800,000 and $1 million in all.
The seller, George Gendron, is a well-known businessman in Lewiston, said Daigle. The Ramada was Gendron’s only hotel property, acquired seven or eight years ago. At that time, said Daigle, the property was “in need of shoring up,” so Gendron invested in improvements and stabilized operations. Daigle listed the property about a year ago, receiving interest from other buyers, but no takers until Atithi.
It’s not unusual for a property like this to take a while to sell, Daigle said.
“This is not just a hotel. It’s also a meeting and conference facility,” he said, with 15,000 square feet of event space that can accommodate 600 conference or banquet guests, as well as amenities such as a restaurant, bar, fitness center, and gift shop. “They’re known as full-service hotels in the industry, and that requires someone who has the right background, because a lot of business comes from weddings, conferences, and other events.”
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Sep 18
Maine Business News Source, March 16, 2017
Some well-known inns put up ‘for sale’ sign
With the tourism season around the corner, a few prominent Maine inns are on the market.
In keeping with the past year’s record of significant lodging transactions, Daigle Commercial Group’s newsletter this week listed four offerings, ranging from an upscale island resort to a city hotel.
The firm’s latest offerings also include:
- The Trade Winds in Rockland, which opened in 1965, is listed at $3.495 million.
- The Ocean Gate Resort on Southport Island, listed at $5.89 million. The current owners, who bought the property in 2006.
- The Augusta Inn is on the market for $1.675 million.
- The Cedar Crest Inn, on Route 1 in Camden, is listed at $2.35 million. This property has a long history, dating to 1918, when it was Cedar Crest Camp, then Cedar Crest Overnight Cabins in the 1920s and 1930s, according to the inn’s website.
In a recent conversation with Mainebiz, Mitchell Muroff, a broker with Daigle Commercial Group, said the past year has been the busiest his firm has ever seen. The firm’s completed transactions have included old chestnuts like the century-old Linekin Bay Resort in Boothbay Harbor.
The offerings come at a time when Maine lodging occupancy continues to increase, which is stimulating purchaser interest in independent lodging facilities as well as franchise facilities throughout the state of Maine, Muroff told Mainebiz.
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Sep 18
Portland Press Herald, January 19, 2017
Hotel occupancy flat in Maine with more supply on the way
By J. Craig Anderson Staff Writer
As many as eight new hotel projects will create up to 650 additional rooms in 2017 and beyond. Despite a leveling-off of demand for hotel rooms statewide, there are five new hotel projects under construction in Maine and at least three more in the planning stage.
The occupancy rate at Maine hotels remained relatively flat in 2016 as the new supply of rooms nearly caught up with demand, said presenters at the Maine Real Estate and Development Association’s annual forecasting conference Thursday in Portland.
Three new Maine hotels were completed in 2016, adding 239 rooms to the state’s total supply, according to Mitchell Muroff of Mitch Muroff Hospitality Group in Newton, Massachusetts. They were Hampton Inn in Oxford, Homewood Suites in Augusta and 250 Main in Rockland Harbor.
A far greater number of hotel projects are under construction or expected to break ground in 2017 that would add an estimated 650 rooms to Maine’s overall supply. Five hotels are under construction and three more in are the planning phase.
If all are built, those eight projects would bring the total number of hotel rooms in Maine to roughly 38,000.
The five hotels under construction are Hampton Inn in Kennebunk, Tru by Hilton in South Portland, AC Hotel Portland on Fore Street in Portland, Home2Suites in South Portland and a still-unnamed upscale hotel at Oxford Casino in Oxford.
Why is this happening? Muroff said the reason is that despite little movement in occupancy rates, hoteliers in Maine have succeeded in squeezing progressively more revenue out of their guests each year since 2009.
“The average daily rate has increased every year for the past eight years,” he said. “It’s been a great run – it really has been.”
The hotel occupancy rate in Maine reached about 56 percent in 2016, up slightly from 55 percent the previous year, according to Muroff. In Portland, the average occupancy rate was 63.4 percent in 2016, up 4.6 percent from the previous year.
The U.S. hotel occupancy rate also remained flat in 2016 at just under 66 percent. Maine’s occupancy rate always lags behind the nation because of the state’s highly seasonal tourism industry.
But while occupancy is flat, the revenue numbers for hoteliers continue to rise.
The average daily room rate in Portland was $133.24, an increase of 4.7 percent over 2015. Revenue per available room, a metric used to gauge a hotel’s financial performance, was $84.54 in 2016, up “a whopping 9.5 percent” from the previous year, Muroff said.
Those are compelling statistics that have convinced many hotel developers once skeptical of building additional supply in Maine to change their attitude, said Jim Brady, developer of The Press Hotel in downtown Portland, which opened in May 2015.
Brady said that when he was seeking financing for that project, no lender in Maine would give him the time of day.
“I had to go with an out-of-state bank because not a single bank in Maine would loan us money,” he said.
But things have changed, in part because of the success of Brady’s project.
Brady said it’s possible that the Portland area, which already has about 5,500 hotel rooms, can absorb the additional supply that is under development.
However, he said it would require a continuation of the recent trend of growing popularity that the area has enjoyed.
“If we’re fortunate enough that the Portland market continues to expand,” Brady said, then it will be able to handle the new supply without a drop in occupancy rates. It really comes down to marketing the area properly, he said.
For instance, Brady said he would like to see a push to draw more tourists to Portland in the winter, possibly by creating and promoting holiday markets and festivals.
“We really don’t need more demand per se in July,” he said. “We need more demand in the off months.”
Major drivers of increased hotel occupancy in Portland included the “micro-brewing and foodie craze,” which kept demand high in the city, said Muroff.
Elsewhere in the state, lodging revenues are similarly strong. Maine’s average daily room rate reached $120 last year, a 33 percent increase over the $90 average rate from 10 years ago. Revenue per available room also increased, from roughly $57 in 2007 to $67 in 2016.
Total room sales volume in Maine was on track at the end of September to improve upon 2015’s total sales of $856 million by 9.2 percent.
Muroff predicted another flat year for Maine hotel occupancy in 2017, while the U.S. hotel occupancy rate is expected to decline slightly.

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