Hoteliers earn income from condo conversion
By Vinnee Tong
Associated Press
NEW YORK — When urban dwellers think of hotel-condos, they usually imagine sky-high city apartments that come with daily maid service, mints on pillows and the option to order chilled champagne for delivery at any hour.
In New York, perhaps, their fantasy would not be far from reality.
More often, though, hotel-condos are proliferating into mid-size and smaller cities across the nation and, in some cases, transforming the places where they're being built.
Hotel-condo projects can be found in different stages of development in cities such as Berkeley, Calif.; Provo, Utah; Pittsburgh and Little Rock, Ark. And they've been proposed for towns as varied as Yankeetown, Fla.; Asheville, N.C.; and West Wendover, Nev.
The founder of the Phoenix-based hotel chain Inn Suites decided about a year ago that hotel-condos might work for his 11 properties. Since then, Chief Executive James Wirth has started converting the company's Arizona properties in Yuma, Tempe, Tucson, Flagstaff and Phoenix, nearly half of the company's total portfolio. The conversions should be completed in six to 12 months.
More hotel-condos are being built because they simply make financial sense, experts say. Hotel developers can spread risk to condo owners and earn income from condo sales at the time projects are finished. In some cases, developers can break even upon completion.
Hotel-condos by nature are better suited to surviving than a hotel on its own, experts say.
"Hotel-condos earn like commercial hotels and appreciate like residential condominiums," said Dante Alexander, the founder of the National Association of Condo Hotel Owners.
Condo buyers investing in true hotel-condos buy the unit and allow the hotel management to rent it out when they're not using it, sharing the revenue. This arrangement makes the most sense in cities that get more traffic from travelers. In certain smaller cities, developers instead build hotels with residential units.
Projects of both types are in development in 31 states throughout the U.S., Jan Freitag of Smith Travel Research said. This is almost certainly a rise, although industry watchers say it's difficult to estimate by how much since little historical data exists.
"That's been a concept that's worked in places like New York, San Francisco, Chicago, for a long time and that's now filtered into other areas," the director of the Milstein Center for Real Estate at Columbia University, Chris Mayer, said.
Construction in Las Vegas puts Nevada second only to Florida in terms of the number of hotel-condos being built, according to Smith Travel Research.
Proponents of smart growth — characterized by greater density and development that more closely integrates work and home life — say the popularity of hotel-condos validates the idea that more Americans want an urban lifestyle.
"We're at a time right now of a great deal of change. ... I would say the traditional urban subdivision paradigm is breaking down," said Adam Gordon, editor in chief of the magazine The Next American City. "We have much more complicated patterns of where people are moving."
Hotel-condos are part of that changing landscape, and they are multiplying because they make market sense, said John Norquist, president of the Congress for New Urbanism and a smart growth advocate.
"We're kind of moving from an era where cities were building huge convention centers and now they're actually doing something that the market wants, blended with a hotel," Norquist said. "These are all things that are healthy. It shows common sense. Cities and consumers and developers are all getting something without having to subsidize each other."