Post on 23-Aug-2014
description
HOTELIER MIDDLE EA ST | July 2014 | Volume 13 Issue 07
SPECIAL REPORT
44
Viability Management Consultants’ latest survey of the future plans of hotel chains in the GCC has revealed the largest pipeline ever registered in the 14-year history of the
research. Hotelier Middle East unveils the key findings
The Lusail Iconic Towers in Qatar.
Capella’s Solis brand is planned for Doha.
Hilton Worldwide tops the all-important rooms-based ranking with 9,593 keys (30 hotels),
which compares favourably with the record pipeline of 10,472 rooms set by Marriott back in 2009”
tion, which revealed its distribution among no less than 34 cities and towns across the GCC. With 28,419 keys, Dubai has more than twice the pipeline of its nearest rival, Mak-kah (13,724), which was followed in the top 10 by Doha (10,777), Abu
By comparison, the previous record numbers were registered in 2009, with 325 pipeline hotels contain-ing 92,016 keys. 2014 was the first year in which we conducted a full GCC survey that included all kinds of transient accommodation letting units, i.e., hotel rooms, suites, apartments and villas, whereas histori-cally we had excluded the latter two unit types. We felt it more logical to include them this time, as they have become ‘mainstream’ for most operators.
As per the chains’ current expectations, almost 80,000 or 80% of the pipeline should materialise be-tween 2014 and 2016, with the remainder opening by 2019. Major deadlines like those of Expo 2020 in Dubai and the 2022 World Cup in Qatar should help ensure that construction programmes do not slip as much as usual.
Some 61% of the pipeline keys will be rated five-star, 30% four-star, just 9% three-star (mainly compris-ing the 10 Premier Inns in the pipeline), and just one two-star property, the Swiss-Belinn Ghubrah Muscat. However, both Wyndham Hotel Group and Emaar Hospitality Group have significant budget hotel pipe-
DEMAND DRIVES BRAND INVASION
B y G u y W i l k i n s o n
VIABILITY SURVEY
lines, but these were excluded as per the rules of our survey because they could provide no details on an indi-vidual property basis. Wyndham is opening nine Days Inn hotels with a total of 800 keys, as well as 19 Super 8 hotels totalling 900 rooms, all in Saudi Arabia with investment part-ners there. Both brands are new to this region. Emaar is partnering with another Dubai government devel-opment company, Meraas, to open a reported five budget hotels in the city under a new brand called Dubai Inn. Union Properties, another lead-ing Dubai developer, has also prom-ised to build 1000 ‘a!ordable’ hotel rooms in the next five years. It is worth noting that there continues to be major investment in budget hotels across the GCC, but mostly by own-er-operators with no chain a"liation.
DEVELOPMENT SPREADS INTO TERTIARY LOCATIONSAgain for the first time in the sur-vey’s history, we provided a detailed breakdown of the pipeline by loca-
Altogether, Viability Management Consultants canvassed 134 hotel chains, large and small, international and local, that are active in this region for the 2014 edition of the GCC Chain Hotel Pipeline Survey. This was a record num-ber, representing a 15% increase over last year. Of these, 72 companies — or 54% of the total — confirmed new hotel projects coming up under their management. Between them, these operators will be opening 391 hotels and hotel apartment buildings with 101,123 keys across the six GCC states between now and 2019. This is the first time ever that the pipeline has broken the 100,000 unit barrier.
E X C L U S I V E R E S E A R C H
SPECIAL REPORT
HOTELIER MIDDLE EA ST | July 2014 | Volume 13 Issue 07 45
Spanish resort operator Blue Bay, for example, which has 27 ho-
tels under six brands in Spain and the Caribbean, will be opening two proper-ties in Dubai, with further expansion expected soon in other UAE emirates.”
Dhabi (9,058), Riyadh (8,954), Jeddah (7,969), Mus-cat (4,587), Manama (3,078), Al Khobar/Dhahran/Dammam (1,729) and impressively, Ras Al Khaimah (1,698). Notable further down the location rankings were many other provincial towns across the Gulf re-gion, including Ajman and Khorfakkan in the UAE; Al Ahsa, Baha, Hail, Jizan, Jubail, Tabouk, Unaiza, Yanbu and Qurayyat in Saudi Arabia; and Duqm, Jebal Akh-dar and Sohar in Oman. This reflects not only the rapid economic or tourism development of such locations, but also the maturing of the large chains to the extent that they have established their key brands in primary locations and are now seeking to develop their net-works into secondary and tertiary communities.
MASSIVE CHAIN DEVELOPMENT2014 has seen 22 chains each declaring more than 1000 rooms under development, a figure just shy of the peak of 23 achieved in 2009. The average number of keys per property under development by each of the 71 chains that declared pipeline activity was an impres-sive figure of 259.
Hilton Worldwide tops the all-important rooms-based ranking with 9,593 keys (30 hotels), which com-pares favourably with the all-time record pipeline of 10,472 rooms set by Marriott back in 2009. Starwood is in second place with 7,912 keys. The other management companies in the top 10 comprise — in order — Marri-ott, Accor (with the largest number of hotels at 31 prop-erties), Rotana, InterContinental Hotels Group, Millen-
The Jeddah Marriott Hotel was announced in May this year. Meraas Holding will develop the first luxury Bulgari Hotel in Dubai.
nium & Copthorne, Wyndham, Hyatt and Golden Tulip. At 11th place with 3,070 keys, Rezidor is ranked ninth in the hotel ranking with 17 properties under development.
Within the top 20, it is impressive to see local companies Anjum, with one single upcoming hotel in Mak-kah boasting 1743 keys, Time Hotels from Dubai and Bin Majid from Ras Al Khaimah, the former now expand-ing beyond the UAE into Doha and Riyadh, for example, and the latter spreading from its provincial base into Abu Dhabi and Dubai.
Among the 134 hotel management companies to whom we requested information this year were a number of interesting new names. Spanish resort operator Blue Bay, for exam-ple, which has 27 hotels under six brands in Spain and the Caribbean, will be opening two properties in Dubai, with further expansion ex-pected soon in other UAE emirates. Thai hotel company Centara Hotels & Resorts, which boasts 45 Thai properties and almost 20 elsewhere in the Far East, in Ethiopia, Mauri-tius, the Maldives and Sri Lanka, will make its Gulf debut with two hotels in Doha. The formerly one-o! Emir-ates Grand Hotel in Dubai has now become a brand that will be featured on a hotel apartments property in Dubai and a hotel in Sharjah.
In Doha, The Souq Waqif Bou-tique Hotels have grown into a group of six jewel-like properties in the eponymous, most attractively re-stored historic district. In the pro-cess, they have become a benchmark
14th continual year of survey
All chains active in the GCC are
canvassed directly
All letting units included (rooms,
suites, apartments & villas)
Excluded:
All rumoured projects
All unsigned projects
All projects with unconfirmed
room counts
All projects on hold or with uncon-
firmed opening dates
All single owner-operated
properties
Ranking Methodology
for orientally-styled boutique hotels. A seventh property, Soy, will open with just 19 rooms later this year.
Back in Dubai, Teal Hospital-ity, run by former Rotana veteran Daniel Hajjar, will open a second hotel under its Cosmopolitan brand, the Grand Cosmopolitan, in 2016. Named after a famous New York hotel, Warwick International Hotels now has a global network of 57 prop-erties including one recently opened on Dubai’s Sheikh Zayed Road. A Doha hotel is due to open in phases over the next few years.
MORE BRANDS THAN EVERViability’s research showed that there were 140 di!erent brands (as distinct from the 72 chains) in this year’s pipeline, of which 44 were completely new to the region. In a fast-growing, highly competitive ho-tel market like that of the GCC, it is
HOTELIER MIDDLE EA ST | July 2014 | Volume 13 Issue 07
SPECIAL REPORT
46
natural that there should be an increase in the number and variety of available brands. Hotel investors want new names that help their properties stand out from the crowd, while operators need to add brands so that they can o!er fresh options to compete in increasingly saturated — and product-dif-ferentiated — destinations.
Local firms are jostling with the inter-national chains for business. For example, most people think of the Gulf Hotel as a one-o! five-star hotel in Bahrain. In fact, the company also manages the K Hotel in Manama and the Ocean Paradise Resort in Zanzibar. By 2017, it will be running two further ‘Gulf Hotel’-branded hotels, one in Bahrain’s Amwaj Islands and the other in Dubai’s Business Bay. Over the past few months, Dubai-based Gloria took over Mourouj Hotels & Resorts from Abu Dhabi, and hence a new hybrid brand was born, Mourouj Gloria, soon to be seen at
Specialist apartment-only operators Frasers
and The Ascott, both from Singapore, are introducing more of their brands, including Fraser Place, Fraser Residence and Ascott’s mid-scale Citadines, a popular European aparthotel concept”
Hotel chain ranking by pipeline: number of rooms
0
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
Hilto
n
IHG
Rezid
or
Vicer
oy
Starw
ood
Mille
nnium FR
HI
Time
Marri
ott
Wynd
ham
The A
ddre
ss
Kemp
inski
Rota
na
Golde
n Tuli
p
Anjum
Four
Seas
ons
Othe
rs
Acco
r
Hyat
t
Prem
ier In
n
Bin M
ajid
an unusual hunting lodge project near Al Ain. Emaar in Dubai, fresh from the suc-cess of launching its Vida lifestyle brand near the Dubai Mall, is now about to turn the formerly independent Al Manzil Ho-tel into an Arabesque brand called simply Manzil. Meanwhile, Abu Dhabi’s Rotana will formally introduce its new branded residence insignia, The Residences, at a project in Doha.
Hotel or serviced apartments are an in-creasingly attractive option for many ho-tel operators. Specialist apartment-only operators Frasers and The Ascott, both from Singapore, are introducing more of their brands, including Fraser Place, Fraser Residence and Ascott’s mid-scale Citadines, a popular European aparthotel concept. In Dubai, the trend to o!er ‘condo apartments’ or hotel apartments that are individually for sale freehold has become a genuine phenomenon. Following the lead of The Address and other early pio-
neers, the major Dubai developer Damac has embraced the concept wholeheartedly, having established its own Damac Maison management company/brand for the pur-pose of o!ering serviced apartments to its buyers. A senior Damac executive recently made a public statement to the e!ect that it had some 9,000 such condo apartments under development, with a major concen-tration in Dubai’s Downtown and Business Bay districts. Had the company elected to
Emaar Hospitality is developing the first Dubai Inn hotel.
A rendering of the Paramount Hotel Dubai.
HOTELIER MIDDLE EA ST | July 2014 | Volume 13 Issue 07
SPECIAL REPORT
48
Saudi Arabia:36,880
Bahrain:3,251
Qatar:10,777
UAE:43,232
2015:29,353
2018:5,2802014:24.418
2017:12,570
YEAR
5-Star:62,074
3-Star:8,631
4-Star:30,231
Breaking down the pipeline
Room distribution by city, country, year and star rating
Nobu Riyadh is hotly anticipated in Saudi Arabia. A room rendering of Nobu Riyadh.
0
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
30000
Duba
i
Jedd
ah
Madin
ah
Jizan
Makk
ah
Musc
at
Shar
jah
Salal
ah
Doha
Mana
ma
Kuwa
it city
Ajman
Riyad
h
Ras A
I Kha
imah
Ai Ain
Tabo
uk
Othe
rs
Abu D
habi
AI Kh
obar
Fujai
rah
Soha
r
36%
29%
61.4%
11%
24%
3%
3%
0.2%
1%6%
5%
8.5%
43%
12%
29.9%
26%
Kuwait:1,147
Oman:5,836
2016:26,086
2019:3,416
2-Star:187
STAR RATING
COUNTRY
respond formally to our survey, it would then have been very near the top of our chain ranking – an amazing achievement for a start-up brand.
The global chains also had interesting brand developments to announce. Accor will introduce its first Ibis Styles-branded hotel at Dragonmart next year. The sub-brand is a more colourful version of Ibis, suitable for what the chain calls ‘non-standardised’ buildings. Accor has also re-cently opened its first Grand Mercure Ma-jlis hotel, a specifically Arabian concept, in Madinah. Mid-scale operator Best West-ern will soon open two hotels in Saudi Ara-bia under its upscale Best Western Premier brand. Fellow US lodging giant Wyndham is introducing two new mid-scale brands, Tryp and Wyndham Garden, at properties in Dubai and Doha respectively. Mean-while, Dusit and Steigenburger are debut-
ing two mid-scale brands, D2 (a location is yet to be announced) and Intercity (in Dubai) respectively.
Gratifyingly, boutique and lifestyle ho-tels are definitely ‘hot’ in the GCC pipeline this year. According to the theory, they promise an at least partial revival of the
traditional service values of the ‘grand ho-tels’ of the past. Two operators are prom-ising to open contemporary grand hotels: the Oetker Collection, with its Hotel Le Bristol, and Millennium, with its Biltmore Hotel, planned to come up in Abu Dhabi in 2015 and 2017 respectively. In Dubai, a
SPECIAL REPORT
HOTELIER MIDDLE EA ST | July 2014 | Volume 13 Issue 07 49
Paramount will be a new Dubai landmark.
Top 10 hotel chains by number of pipeline hotels
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Acco
r
Starw
ood
Marri
ott
IHG
Rezid
or
Hilto
n
Golde
n Tuli
p
Rota
na
Mille
nnium
Wynd
ham
new joint venture company established by MGM and Abu Dhabi-based Hakkasan, called MGM Hakkasan Hospitality is plan-ning three lifestyle hotels – MGM Grand, Skylofts and Bellagio – to open by 2018 at
the Dubai Pearl project facing Palm Jumei-rah. Next door will be a lifestyle hotel un-der the Baccarat brand of Starwood Capi-tal (which acquired Groupe du Louvre in 2005, owners of crystal maker Baccarat).
The big chains are also entering the Gulf’s lifestyle sector. Marriott has confirmed it will debut both its Autograph and Bulgari brands in Dubai, which will also be the ven-ue for Wyndham’s first Dream hotel in the region, with 720 keys within the 101-storey Marina 101 tower, set to become the tallest luxury hotel and serviced apartments build-ing in the world. Another first in the region will be IHG’s upcoming Hotel Indigo in Ri-yadh, while a Hyatt Andaz hotel is rumoured for Dubai. Rezidor has converted its former Missoni hotel in Kuwait to its new Quorvus brand, following a corporate ‘divorce’ from the Italian fashion house.
Spanish operator Meliá has been ap-pointed to manage a 100-room ME by Meliá designer hotel in Omniyat’s iconic 95m high Opus building, designed by leg-endary ‘organic’ architect, Zaha Hadid. M’s are all the rage, with Millennium promising
local launches of its trendy Studio M and M Hotel concepts, and Accor opening its lifestyle M Gallery concept in Doha. These are in addition to new lifestyle hotels to be opened soon by Morgans of New York, Nobu (in joint venture with Saudi Arabia’s Dhaliliyah Establishment) and Paramount, a new Dubai-based chain working with the prestigious Hollywood studio brand.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Guy Wilkinson is a director of Viability, a hospitality and property consulting fi rm in Dubai. For more information, email: guy@viability.ae