| Addiction Treatment Industry Newswire |
02/19/2014 -ATIN – The founder and developer of Alta Mira Recovery, a Sausalito addiction treatment center that broke the size barrier at 48 beds in a highly aggressive use of the California Six-Bed Model of luxury care, is looking to make lightening strike twice in a conversion of a former luxury retreat center into a high end facility with nearly 80 beds of capacity. Over the last couple of weeks, Ray Blatt’s Stillpath Recovery Center plan won a key vote of the San Mateo County Commission seeking permission to convert the Stillheart Retreat Facility, a choice 17-acre, 14 building site nestled in a redwood forest that Blatt bought last year from Stillheart, a non-profit that will still run its remaining retreat facility in Hawaii.
Another Quick Flip? When Blatt opened Alta Mira – Blatt is a real estate developer by trade who was opened to the financial possibilities of addiction treatment when he paid the steep Sierra Tucson bill of a significant other – he did not run the treatment operation for long at all, quickly in late 2008 entering into a management contract with Foundations Recovery Network. But Foundations pulled out of that deal in early 2009 due to lack of census and Alta Mira is now controlled by ![]() ![]() Congested Northern California High-End When Blatt opened Alta Mira there was very little Six-Bed Model luxury addiction center competition in the San Francisco Bay, with just one other major center having been previously opened in the area. The San Francisco/Silicon Valley region now has a plethora of higher end competition with existing centers, as well as other newly proposed centers on the way. read our Special Report on the California Six-Bed Model read our Story on a New Luxury Hotel Conversion North of San Francisco POST YOUR COMMENTS BELOW… start a debate! Got Addiction News? …TELL US! |
02/19/2014 -ATIN – The founder and developer of Alta Mira Recovery, a Sausalito addiction treatment center that
make lightening strike twice in a conversion of a former luxury retreat center into a high end facility with nearly 80 beds of capacity. Over the last couple of weeks, Ray Blatt’s Stillpath Recovery Center plan won a key vote of the San Mateo County Commission seeking permission to convert the Stillheart Retreat Facility, a choice 17-acre, 14 building site nestled in a redwood forest that Blatt bought last year from Stillheart, a non-profit that will still run its remaining retreat facility in Hawaii.

