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Turks Cay Resort and Marina receives final planning approval

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#Providenciales, June 14, 2018 – Turks and Caicos – International Developer, Arik Kislin of Circle Holdings Limited has been granted Detailed Development Permission (DDP) by the Physical Planning Department for Block and Parcel 60713/ 56, 125, 387, 357, 358, 360.  The former and historical site of the Third Turtle Inn development.

This final approval clears the way for the construction of the Turks and Caicos Islands’ newest multi-million dollar luxury accommodations in Providenciales – the Turks Cay Resort and Marina in Turtle Cove.  Hamilton Real Estate an association of Savills International is the exclusive listing agent for the sales and marketing of the $100 million six stories boutique resort.

Sam Hunt, Sales and Marketing Manager of Hamilton Real Estate and the Turks Cay Resort and Marina, has already been meeting with interested buyers as the developer gets ready to break ground at the Turtle Cove site.

Commenting on the property’s sales progression, Hunt said: “We currently have two sales offices, one at our new Grace Bay location and we have an on-site Sales Villa located on the beach right next to the property in Turtle Cove.

“From these two locations we have been meeting interested persons who come in and view a model of what the entire resort will look like upon completion. They can also view the property next door to the Villa office.

“We also have brochures outlining every one of the amazing amenities that will be offered at the Turks Cay Resort and Marina.

“Basically anything you need to know with regard to the selling and marketing of the property, we will provide you with that information at either our Grace Bay Office or our Villa Sales office.”

Kislin said: “The Turks and Caicos Islands has done a fantastic job of marketing itself – in really getting the word out to the rest of the world that they are open for business for new developments and opportunities.

“With Turks Cay Resort and Marina we will offer a very high end product with the amenities that the upper tier market around the world is really looking for in a vacation getaway.

“This is how the Islands have been presenting themselves, and that is what I am going to deliver for the country.”

The land on which the resort will be built is a very unique piece of property; it stretches over 16.5 acres with 780 linear feet on a cove, all of which is abutting the Turtle Cove Marina.

In the middle of the marina there is a small island called Diddle Cay which now belongs to the development. Prices will start in the early $600’s for studio units with a make-up and mixture of studio, 1 bedroom and 2 bedroom units as well as 11 luxury Penthouses set over two floors with their own roof top swimming pools. There will be a total of 143 rooms within the resort.

The entire resort development will consist of condominiums, casino, spa, sporting facilities, restaurants, bars, retail shopping, a boardwalk, swimming pool and deck and a marina.  It also boasts 775 feet of beach frontage on Grace Bay and 2,300 linear feet of dockage.  The property will be one of the lowest densities in the TCI.

Please see link below!!

http://www.hamilton.tc/brochure/TurksCay_Brochure.pdf

 

  • About the Developer

Arik Kislin is a very successful real-estate investor, and part owner of the Gansevoort hotel and Alerion Aviation, and several other businesses.  He is also a philanthropist.  He started in the real estate business in 1991, developing over four million square feet of New York City’s real estate in the 1990s.

Through his former company Around the Clock Management, Kislin and his partners developed the Chelsea Market Complex in Manhattan’s Meatpacking district from 1991 to 1999.  Since then that property has become an icon for Manhattan, New York City and was recently sold a month ago to Google for $2.4 billion.

In 2001 he co-developed the Gansevoort hotel group in New York. The first property was the Gansevoort in the Meatpacking District, and shortly thereafter another Gansevoort in Miami.

Kislin was then invited by the owners to complete the deal for the Gansevoort in the Turks and Caicos Islands in 2008.

 

 

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TCI News

TCI Marks National Day of Thanksgiving with Calls for Unity and Gratitude

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Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands — Turks and Caicos observed its National Day of Thanksgiving with an ecumenical service at Faith Tabernacle Church on Sunday, November 23 — a scheduling choice that placed the ceremony ahead of the official public holiday on Friday. The early observance allowed congregations, officials and visiting clergy to gather in worship, reflection, and national contemplation.

The service featured spirited performances from local choirs and worship teams, weaving together traditional hymns and contemporary praise in a sequence that set an unmistakably reverent tone. The TCI Christian Council, through its president Rev. Wilbert Jennings, delivered a message centred on humility, gratitude and national grounding — urging residents not only to give thanks, but to remember the posture of gratitude even in strained seasons.

Acting Premier Jamell Robinson, bringing greetings on behalf of the government, leaned heavily on the theme “A Grateful Nation in Thanksgiving — Blessed Beyond Measure, Kept by Grace.” He reminded the country that giving thanks “in everything” rather than “for everything” is a discipline that strengthens national unity. Robinson highlighted the collective resilience of the Turks and Caicos Islands and praised the Church for its continued spiritual leadership, calling it the “backbone” that steadies communities and undergirds national life.

While the holiday itself will be observed later in the week, Sunday’s service provided the public-facing reflection point — a moment of pause before a busy commercial weekend and the start of the festive season.

“He kept our communities. He kept our nation from dangers seen and unseen. And for that, we stand today with hearts full of thanksgiving. But thanksgiving is more than reflection, it is also a call to unity. A grateful nation is a united nation. A grateful nation is a compassionate nation. A grateful nation is a nation that sees beyond differences and comes together for the common good. As people of faith, we understand that division weakens, but gratitude strengthens. Gratitude softens hearts. Gratitude opens doors. Gratitude reminds us that we are one people under God, moving forward by His grace,” said Hon Robinson.

Angle by Deandrea Hamilton. Built with ChatGPT (AI). Magnetic Media — CAPTURING LIFE.

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TCI News

Michael Misick Rejects Government’s 60/40 Shift as Business Licensing Debate Reignites

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Turks and Caicos, December 4, 2025 – For the first time in his long political career, former Premier Michael Misick appeared on Drexwell Seymour’s “Financially Speaking” radio programme this week — and he used the platform to forcefully reject the Government’s new 60/40 business-ownership model, arguing that Turks and Caicos Islanders are once again being positioned to lose ground in their own country.

The interview came at a pivotal moment: the Washington Misick Administration has just issued a detailed press statement confirming that the controversial 100% Islander-only ownership requirement — praised by some as overdue protectionism and criticised by others as unconstitutional and discriminatory — was never Cabinet’s intended position. A “drafting error,” the Government now says, caused the blanket 100% clause to appear in the Business Licensing (Amendment) Bill, prompting a pause in Parliament and a full review.

This week, Cabinet reaffirmed its balanced 60/40 framework, arguing that meaningful majority control for Turks and Caicos Islanders must coexist with access to external capital, expertise, and investment partnerships. The Government cited international models, financing constraints for local entrepreneurs, and the need to avoid “harsh outcomes” that could unintentionally weaken local businesses or violate constitutional safeguards. It further pledged strengthened anti-fronting mechanisms, tighter oversight, and mandatory protections for local shareholders.

But Michael Misick isn’t convinced.

During the wide-ranging RTC interview, the former Premier dismissed the 60/40 model as inadequate and accused successive governments of diluting the rights and economic standing of heritage Turks and Caicos Islanders. He argued that fronting has flourished under the existing 51% rule, and that only full, uncompromised Islander ownership in certain industries can prevent locals from being reduced to symbolic partners with no real power. Misick described the Business Licensing Board’s disappearance, the rise of unchecked approvals, and the growing dominance of expatriate capital as evidence that the country is “losing itself, bit by bit, every sunrise.”

Seymour, a CPA and economic commentator, echoed concerns about fronting and asked whether the territory’s leaders were “afraid” to implement robust protections. Misick went further, accusing modern politicians of lacking political courage and failing to defend the long-term interests of heritage Turks and Caicos Islanders.

“Every time legislation comes to empower our people, there is resistance,” Misick said.
“When it’s something that penalises our people, no one objects.”

The Government’s clarification attempts to neutralize that narrative, insisting Cabinet did not “retreat” under pressure but merely corrected an error to restore policy integrity. Still, the timing — after months of public debate, stakeholder pushback, and ongoing reference to the Grant Thornton economic impact report — has only deepened suspicion among critics who say the Administration is wavering.

What is clear is this:
The Business Licensing reform has cracked open the deepest unresolved question in the Turks and Caicos Islands — how to protect a small population from economic displacement while maintaining an investment climate that supports national development.

With Parliament scheduled to revisit the Bill this month, the clash between political philosophy and economic pragmatism is now on full display. And as Misick made clear on RTC, this debate will define not just policy, but identity.

Angle by Deandrea Hamilton. Built with ChatGPT (AI). Magnetic Media — CAPTURING LIFE.  

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Health

Bruce Willis’ Brave Gift to Dementia Research – And His now Quiet Link to Turks & Caicos

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December 4, 2025 – Hollywood legend Bruce Willis – arguably the most famous former home owner in Turks and Caicos Islands – is facing the most difficult role of his life and turning it into one last act of service.

Willis, 70, retired from acting in 2022 after his family revealed he had been diagnosed with aphasia. The following year, specialists confirmed he is living with frontotemporal dementia (FTD), a degenerative brain disease that attacks language, behaviour and personality.

In recent interviews and appearances, his wife Emma Heming Willis has said Bruce is “surrounded by love and care” and that the family is learning to find joy in new ways, even as the disease progresses.

Now, Heming Willis has gone further.  In her 2025 memoir The Unexpected Journey, she writes that the family has decided Bruce’s brain will be donated to science after his death to advance research into FTD.  That decision has been highlighted in recent coverage by futurist and science outlets, which describe it as a carefully considered step after months of watching a still-physically-strong man steadily lose speech, reading and independence.

Neurologists have long stressed how rare donated brain tissue is for FTD, and how essential it is to understanding which proteins, mutations and mechanisms are actually driving the disease.  The Willis family’s choice means the brain that powered some of cinema’s most iconic characters could one day help researchers diagnose the condition earlier and design better treatments – even if it cannot help Bruce himself.

For Turks and Caicos, the story lands close to home.  For nearly two decades Willis owned “The Residence” on exclusive Parrot Cay – a 7.3-acre, Asian-inspired beachfront compound with a five-bedroom main house, two guest villas and a yoga pavilion.  He and Emma listed the estate in March 2019 for US$33 million; it sold a few months later for about US$27 million, one of the biggest residential deals in TCI history.

So, while Bruce Willis no longer has a physical address in Turks and Caicos, his connection to these islands remains part of his global story – a story now shifting from blockbuster fame to medical legacy, as his family turns private heartbreak into a public contribution that could change what we know about dementia.

Developed by Deandrea Hamilton • with ChatGPT (AI) • edited by Magnetic Media.

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