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What happens when your ‘office’ is the lobby

Mickael Damelincourt, managing director of Trump International Hotel, Washington D.C., spends at least five hours of every working day based in his “office” – one of the tables in the hotel’s unique lobby.

"There really are no disadvantages," says Mickael Damlincourt, MD of Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C.
“There really are no disadvantages,” says Mickael Damlincourt, MD of Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C.

“I am on hand to greet and talk to both hotel guests and colleagues. I schedule meetings here – most passers-by realize when I am in serious conversation and do not interrupt. There really are no disadvantages,” the French-born hotelier says.

The table has a Reserved sign on it from about 7 o’clock every morning, ready for Damelincourt’s arrival at 7:50 a.m. He is on hand to talk to guests, both in-house and locals coming for breakfast meetings, either in the lobby or its integral BLT Prime by David Burke restaurant. He himself invariably breakfasts on a croissant from a stylish glass-topped pastries cart rolling by, with a cup of coffee to drink. Depending on his own schedule, and on how busy the hotel is, sometime after noon Damelincourt retreats to his more formal back-of-house base, and the lobby table reverts to a profit center for guests buying food and drink.

As well as being providing such excellent customer service, Damelincourt feels that sitting at his lobby desk has another big advantage: He admits he is motivated by the ambience. The square lobby soars up to the glass roof of the nine-floor open atrium, formed by covering over the open courtyard of the city’s Old Post Office Building, completed in 1899, and converted into a 263-room hotel that opened in September 2016.

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