July 1 (Bloomberg) – Onefinestay Chief Executive Officer Greg Marsh
discusses how technology is offering disruptive innovation in the luxury
hotel market and investing in tech companies. He speaks with Caroline
Hyde on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.” (Source: Bloomberg)
Hyatt Hotels Corp. (H) is seeking to make its Park Hyatt New York,
opening next month at the base of the ultra-luxury One57 condominium
tower, Manhattan’s first new five-star hotel in more than a decade.
The
25-floor property is making its debut on West 57th Street in the area
known as Billionaires Row for its residential skyscrapers with
apartments costing tens of millions of dollars. Plans for the Park Hyatt
call for 210 guest rooms starting at $795 a night, spa-treatment suites
with private balconies, and amenities such as an indoor pool with
underwater speakers that pipe in music from neighboring Carnegie Hall.
Hyatt is seeking a competitive edge in Manhattan,
where it already operates seven properties, none rated five stars, said
Steve Haggerty, global head of real estate and capital strategy for the
Chicago-based company. The new Park Hyatt would be the city’s first
hotel with the coveted distinction since 2003, when the Mandarin Oriental
opened in the nearby Time Warner Center. Since then, most growth in the
city’s lodging market has been in the select-service category, hotels
that offer few amenities and cost less to operate.
“There’s a
fairly deep demand for this level of luxury,” Haggerty said in an
interview from a suite on the Park Hyatt’s eighth floor. “It’s very
difficult to replicate in New York City, and there’s a certain barrier
to entry.”
Source: Park Hyatt New York via Bloomberg
Plans for the Park Hyatt call for 210 guest rooms starting at $795 a night,... Read More
Just
six hotels that are considered luxury have opened in New York in the
past five years, according to lodging-research firm STR Inc. That
compares with 51 projects in the three lower-tier categories, which
comprise such select-service brands as Holiday Inn, Best Western and Super 8.
Most Expensive
New York was the most expensive
U.S. city to stay in this year through May, with rooms costing an
average of $241 a night, STR data show. Luxury hotels citywide led the
nation in occupancy with a rate of 89.4 percent in May, meaning they sold nine out of 10 rooms every night.
New
York’s lodging industry also has been expanding faster than the
nationwide pace, with 74 new hotels and more than 13,500 rooms opening
since 2006, according to NYC & Co., the city’s marketing and tourism
website. About 15,000 more rooms are expected in the next three years,
bringing the total to more than 107,000.
“New York City
is just hot,” said Jan Freitag, senior vice president at
Hendersonville, Tennessee-based STR. “It’s expensive and is at this
perfect intersection of transient business demand, group and leisure,
and international demand. Everyone wants to come to New York.”
Source: Extell Development Co. via Bloomberg
Pool at the Park Hyatt New York.
Costly Extras
Only about 10 percent of the city’s
hotels are in the luxury category, according to Nikhil Bhalla, a lodging
analyst at FBR & Co. in Arlington, Virginia. The properties are
less profitable for investors because they offer costly extras such as
valet parking, 24-hour room service, multiple restaurants and
full-service spas.
The Park Hyatt will be on the lower levels of
Extell Development Co.’s One57 condo tower, Manhattan’s second-tallest
residential building at 1,004 feet (306 meters). Hyatt and Extell spent
an average of $1.8 million a room constructing the hotel, according to
Bhalla.
The rooms, ranging from 475 to 2,239 square feet (44 to
208 square meters), were designed to resemble high-end apartments, with
floor-to-ceiling windows and wood flooring. Bathrooms are stocked with
products by boutique perfumery Le Labo and the mirrors have television
screens. Two restaurants, The Back Room at One57 and The Living Room,
will be run by chef Sam Hazen, formerly of New York’s Veritas. Walls of a
ballroom are covered with 26 tons of back-lit white onyx.
Source: Extell Development Co. via Bloomberg
The Park Hyatt New York, opening next month at the base of the ultra-luxury One57... Read More
‘Missing Component’
The hotel will be the 34th worldwide and sixth in North America
under the Park Hyatt brand, which is the top tier for the company. A
five-star property is “a missing component of Park Hyatt’s network,”
said Daniel Lesser, chief executive officer of New York-based LW
Hospitality Advisors.
“Their guests travel to world capitals and
when they come to New York, they want a five-star hotel,” he said.
“Hyatt doesn’t want them staying at the Four Seasons and liking it.”
A subset of luxury hotels, mostly located in the heart of large cities, qualify for a five-star rating, the highest by the Forbes Travel Guide. Properties with the distinction include the Peninsula Beverly Hills in California, the Four Seasons Hotel Chicago and the Ritz-Carlton New York.
Five Stars
To
earn five stars, hotels must provide room amenities including fresh
flowers and wine by the glass presented in the bottle and poured by
room-service staff, according to Forbes. If there is a pool, guests are
greeted and escorted to their chairs and set-up assistance is provided
or offered.
Every rated property is visited by an inspector, and
those that might qualify for a four- or five-star ranking get a second
anonymous inspection, according to Forbes.
New York has eight
five-star hotels, with the Mandarin Oriental the only one built in the
past 11 years, according to STR. The hotel, located on Columbus Circle
with views of Central Park, has suites as large as 2,640 square feet and a spa room with a fireplace and private steam shower.
With
other luxury projects under construction, including Marriott
International Inc.’s boutique Edition hotel in Times Square and the
Baccarat Hotel and Residences on 53rd Street, Park Hyatt will face some
competition, according to Bhalla.
“At the moment the demand is all right, but there’s a lot of new supply growth in New York,” he said.
Billionaires Row
Upon
completion, Hyatt’s $253 million investment will make it the owner of
more than 65 percent of the hotel in partnership with Extell, according
to Haggerty.
One57 and other luxury residential skyscrapers
being developed on 57th and 53rd streets are transforming an area of
Midtown that’s known for its corporate offices, restaurants and tourist
destinations. Three blocks east of Extell’s tower, a penthouse is under
contract for $95 million at 432 Park Ave. Macklowe Properties and CIM
Group’s project has surpassed One57 in height and is slated to reach
1,397 feet when completed.
At One57, more than 75 percent of the
units have sold, according to Jeffrey Dvorett, senior vice president of
development at Extell. Bill Ackman,
founder of New York hedge-fund firm Pershing Square Capital Management
LP, is part of an investor group that agreed to purchase one of the
apartments, a duplex on the 75th and 76th floors, for more than $90
million.
Recently completed deals at the 90-story tower include a
$30.4 million unit on the 61st floor bought by a limited-liability
company and a $17.8 million apartment that sold to Richard Kringstein,
the CEO of outerwear company Herman Kay Co., city property records show.
87th Floor
One of the tower’s 11 full-floor units is
still for sale, at $67 million, Dvorett said. The 6,234-square-foot
condo on the 87th floor offers views of Central Park, Midtown and
Downtown, as far as the eyes can see.
One57 residents will be able to use hotel services, including the spa, with a menu of treatments that changes seasonally.
The
Park Hyatt brand was due for an image upgrade and the Midtown hotel
provides that boost, said Sean Hennessey, CEO of New York-based Lodging
Advisors LLC.
New York “is the No. 1 city in the world to have
the flagship property of your hotel brand,” Hennessey said. “So it was a
great opportunity” for Hyatt.
To contact the reporter on this story: Heather Perlberg in New York at hperlberg@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Kara Wetzel at kwetzel@bloomberg.net Christine Maurus
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