Newsletter Newsletters Events Events Podcasts Videos Africanews
Loader
Advertisement

Australian property developer says Trump hotel plan scrapped due to 'toxic' brand

An impression of the proposed Trump hotel on Australia's Gold Coast
An impression of the proposed Trump hotel on Australia's Gold Coast Copyright  Altus Property Group
Copyright Altus Property Group
By Gavin Blackburn
Published on
Share Comments
Share Close Button

The Australian developer's statement followed a report in the Australian Financial Review that the Trump Organisation had pulled out of the deal.

Plans for a $1.1 billion (€940 million), 91-storey Trump hotel and apartment tower in Australia have been scrapped because the American brand has become "toxic," the developer says.

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

The Trump Organisation announced in February the project for a soaring Trump tower on eastern Australia's Gold Coast, saying it would "redefine beachfront sophistication."

David Young, chief executive of Australian developer Altus Property Group, said the project was scrapped because the Trump brand had become "toxic to Australians."

Young said he still aimed to complete the development with another brand.

"The writing was on the wall when the war started and I have been in discussions with many high-end luxury brands," he said in a post on LinkedIn.

The Trump Organisation is run by President Donald Trump's adult sons, not by the American leader himself, Young said, describing the brand's deteriorated reputation as "grossly unfair."

US President Donald Trump gestures from the stairs of Air Force One as he boards at Joint Base Andrews, 12 May, 2026
US President Donald Trump gestures from the stairs of Air Force One as he boards at Joint Base Andrews, 12 May, 2026 AP Photo

"There is no acrimony between the Trump family and myself, why would there be after knowing them for 19 years when no one here then even knew who Donald Trump was. It is pure business."

The Australian developer's statement followed a report in the Australian Financial Review that the Trump Organisation had pulled out of the deal.

"While we were very excited about the opportunity to bring a world-class development to the Gold Coast, the project was dependent on our licensing partner meeting certain obligations," a Trump Organization spokesperson was quoted as saying.

"Unfortunately, those obligations were not fulfilled," she told the paper.

An Australian online petition against the hotel gathered more than 124,000 signatures.

Directed at the Gold Coast city council, the Stop the Trump Tower petition criticised the US president's "contempt for democratic norms."

Additional sources • AFP

Go to accessibility shortcuts
Share Comments

Read more

Trump called Nvidia's Jensen Huang to join China summit at last minute, report

Donald Trump vows to push Xi Jinping to 'open up' China at superpower summit

Watch: Inside the Trump-Xi visit that could leave Europe in the cold