OPINION AND ORDER
The Greystone Hotel (“Greystone”) claims that it is meant to be a transient hotel, housing guests at its own rate of $90 per night, but the law forces it to give leases to permanent tenants at a much lower rate set by the state. 1
Greystone is a Class B hotel 2 located in Manhattan and subject to the Rent Stabilization Law (“RSL”) 3 and Rent Stabilization Code (“RSC”) 4 , under which rooms in Grey-stone that are occupied by permanent tenants have a maximum legal rent. A permanent tenant is a person who has continually resided in the hotel for at least six months or has a lease of six months or more. RSC § 2520.6(j). Any occupant of the hotel may request a lease, and the hotel must grant a lease, with a term of at least six months for a rent not exceeding the legal regulated rent. RSC § 2522.5(a)(2) (“Mandatory Lease Provision”).
To maintain classification as a hotel, Grey-stone must provide weekly maid and linen service, furniture and furnishings, and a continually staffed lobby. RSC § 2521.3 (“Mandatory Service Provision”).
The Rent Guidelines Board (the “Board”) determines annual rent increases pursuant to RSL § 26-510, and promulgates the increases through hotel orders. While the Board has allowed rent increases to Class B hotels in 21 of the last 27 years, it has not allowed one in any of the last three years. 5 See Affidavit of Doug Hillstrom, sworn to July 9, 1997, Ex. M; Reply Affidavit of Ira Drukier, sworn to September 8,1997, at ¶ 17.
Greystone states that all of its rooms are now occupied by permanent tenants, which does not allow it to operate as a transient hotel, and that the large difference between what it could charge transient customers and what it must charge permanent tenants deprives it of economically viable use of its property. It claims that the mandatory lease and service provisions and the hotel orders constitute uncompensated physical and regulatory taking, and deprive it of property in violation of its rights to due process and equal protection of the laws. It further claims that the hotel orders are beyond the authority of the Board because the Board is creating social policy without legislative authorization by considering what tenants can afford to pay instead of only market data and the hotels’ costs.
Both sides move for summary judgment.
DISCUSSION
A. Physical Taking
Physical occupation of property by the government is always a taking,
Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp.,
*527
In
Seawall Assocs. v. City of New York,
Plaintiff argues that it was intended to be a purely transient hotel, and the challenged provisions force it into a landlord-tenant relationship with its occupants, a situation it neither planned nor desires.
However, the forced conversion from renting to transients, on the one hand, and leasing to permanent tenants, on the other, is not a physical taking. Whether a room holds a different resident each day or a permanent tenant with a léase, the room is still occupied. Furthermore, since § 2522.5 requires that one be an occupant of a hotel before the hotel is required to give him a lease, Greystone is not required to enter into a landlord-tenant relationship with a stranger: rather, it is required to expand its relationship with someone to whom it has already rented a room. That is a regulatory effect, not a physical taking.
“The government effects a physical taking only where it
requires
the landowner to submit to the physical occupation of his land.”
Yee v. City of Escondido, California,
In
Seawall,
where the owners were forced to rent units which they did not wish to offer, but to hold vacant, the New York Court of Appeals looked to the same factor and found a physical taking: “It is the forced occupation by strangers under the rent-up provisions of the law, not the identities of the new tenants or the terms of the leases, which deprives the owners of their possessory interests and results in physical takings.”
Seawall,
The challenged provisions regulate the terms on which Greystone can rent its rooms, the amounts it can charge, and the services it must provide. That is not a physical occupation of Greystone.
B. Regulatory Taking
Greystone’s grievance is that it cannot use its property as it wishes — to rent to transients only. It claims that because
Most of the Greystone’s hotel is occupied by tenants who, because of the Mandatory Lease Provisions, are entitled to permanent occupancy at a nominal cost ... the *528 Greystone barely makes -a profit and is forced, by the Mandatory Service Provisions, to provide hotel services which farther diminish any profit.' The effect of the Challenged Laws has been to deprive the Greystone of its means of earning a fan-profit by renting its rooms to transient occupants or guests. They are therefore constitutionally void.
Pl.’s Br. at 28.
If the regulation does not substantially advance a legitimate state interest, or if it denies an owner economically viable use for his property, there is a regulatory taking.
Nollan v. California Coastal Comm’n,
1. Substantial advancement of legitimate state interest
The legitimate state interest in the RSL and RSC is coping with an acute shortage of available housing, and preventing unjust and oppressive rents and profiteering.
See
RSL § 26-501; RSC § 2520.3; Defs.’ Reply Br. at 19;
Manocherian v. Lenox Hill Hosp.,
The challenged provisions require a hotel to issue a lease to an occupant at no more than the governmentally-established rent. This increases the availability of affordable housing to meet a need which is so great that, as Greystone itself states, when one person terminates a lease, another takes his place. See Pi’s. Br. at 13. The nexus between the challenged provisions and then-advancement of the legitimate state interest of increasing affordable housing is clear beyond argument.
2. Economically viable use
Plaintiff claims that the RSL and the RSC, when combined with hotel orders which have not allowed it to raise its rent from year to year, deprive it of economically viable use of its property. The determination of this issue depends on a comparison between Greystone’s costs and the rent it is allowed to charge.
Greystone has not provided that information, relying instead on the conclusory statement that it is “barely making a profit.” Its failure to offer facts showing that it is denied economically viable use of its property (which it was obliged to do once presented with defendants’ motion for summary judgment,
see
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e) (“an adverse party may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of the adverse party’s pleading, but the adverse party’s response, by affidavits or as otherwise provided in this rule, must set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial”);
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Indeed, its concession that it is profitable undercuts Greystone’s claim because although the regulation may not validly preclude Greystone “from realizing any profit whatsoever,” Greystone is not guaranteed a “reasonable return” on its investment.
Park Ave. Tower Assocs. v. City of New York,
It is clear that plaintiff has no constitutional right to what it could have received in an unregulated market.
See Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. v. New York State Div. of Hous. and Community Renewal,
Furthermore, Greystone’s claim is premature because it has not attempted to obtain a hardship increase authorized by RSL § 26-511(c)(6) and (6-a) and RSC § 2522.4(b) and *529 (c). These sections allow a hotel owner to apply for rent increases above those authorized by the Board because of a hotel’s economic condition.
Although plaintiff states that it is extremely difficult to get a hardship increase, and that it cannot be known whether any increase it got would make its use of the property economically viable, it has not even tried. “Because petitioners do not claim to have run that gauntlet, however, this case provides no occasion to consider how the procedure has been applied to petitioners’ property, and we accordingly confine ourselves to the face of the statute.”
Yee, 503
U.S. at 528,
******
Accordingly, the argument that Greystone has suffered a regulatory taking fails because the regulations substantially advance a legitimate state interest, and Greystone offers no evidence that they deny Greystone economically viable use (albeit not Greystone’s preferred use) of its property.
C. Due Process and Equal Protection Violations
Since there is no physical or regulatory taking of its property, the right Greystone claims is violated can only be the right to run its business as it sees fit and charge what it wants. Because that right is not fundamen-tal
6
and Greystone is not in a protected class, the standard for both claims is the same: whether the law is rationally related to a legitimate state interest.
See Richardson v. Belcher,
D. The Authority of the Board to Promulgate the Hotel Orders
Plaintiff claims that the Board went beyond its authority in denying hotels any rent increase in the past three years. It states that the Board was creating social policy, something not within its power, by taking tenants’ ability to pay into account.
However, the legislature gave the Board this power in RSL § 26-510(b) when it allowed the Board to consider, “among other things” 1) “the economic condition of the residential real estate industry,” 2) “relevant data from the current and projected cost of living indices,” and 3) “such other data as may be made available to it.” The law gives the Board great latitude in deciding what factors to examine and what weight to place on each factor.
CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs motion for summary judgment is denied. Defendants’ motion for summary judgment is granted. The Clerk will enter judgment for defendants dismissing the claims.
So ordered.
Notes
. The court need not decide the accuracy of the amicus's claim that the Greystone consistently charges its residents more than the legal rate.
. A Class B hotel is a Class B dwelling that provides the hotel services listed in RSC § 2521.3. RSC § 2520.6. "A Class B multiple dwelling is a multiple dwelling which is occupied, as a rule transiently, as the more or less temporary abode of individuals who are lodged with or without meals.” N.Y. Mult. Dwell. Law § 4(9).
. City Admin. Code §§ 26-501 etseq. (1987).
. N.Y. Comp.Codes R. & Regs. tit. 9, §§ 2520 et seq. (1987).
. The Board has recently issued its proposed order for 1998, again proposing no increase for Class B hotels.
. Fundamental rights are those "specific freedoms protected by the Bill of Rights” and those liberties which have been designated by the Supreme Court in a long line of cases. See
Washington v. Glucksberg,
