In 2002, Málaga Council approved a proposal submitted by the Mirador group to build a four-star
hotel complex in the grounds of the Cortijo Jurado and to renovate the original building to provide a cultural edifice, open to the public. In December, 2004, the construction licence was issued and a high-profile event was arranged, during which Málaga's Mayor,
Francisco de la Torre, laid the symbolic
foundation stone to inaugurate the commencement of the project. Four years later, not a single brick has been laid. Since then, the Mirador group has faced a number of
lawsuits from clients to whom they sold properties which were never built. The courts froze the lands of the Cortijo to protect
debts of over five million euros, most of which is owed to Promociones Pantie, from whom Mirador secured the
mortgage for this property. Málaga Council is also owed 365,000 euros by the Mirador group. Málaga Council then contentiously extended the building licence for the original project when it expired in December 2008. In February 2009, opposition councillor, Antonio Serrano, of the ‘
United Left’, lodged an official complaint accusing the town hall of
bribery and abuse of power in relation to their dealings with the Mirador group. One of the main issues raised by Serrano was that the
town hall had waived the obligatory ten per cent fee for the building licence, which in this case was 900,000 euros. The town hall defended its position by claiming that the regulations had not come into force at the time the agreement was signed. In May 2009 a Málaga judge ordered the troubled property group, Mirador, who own the property to sell it by
public auction, on May 11, at the behest of one of the group's principal
creditors, Promociones Pantie. The auction did not go through due to an
administrative error. ==References==