Courtesy of Sonder
A living room in a Sonder property
As short-term rentals have gained acceptance from multifamily
developers, the hotel industry might be staring down another cataclysm
like Airbnb.
Startups like Sonder, Stay Alfred and Domio have progressed from
renting floors of apartment buildings to doing deals for full buildings,
either as redevelopments or new construction. The increased confidence
in such products comes from the expectation that their professional
management and amenity packages will increasingly appeal to business
travelers, The Wall Street Journal reports.
As Airbnb spent the past decade sucking away tourists and
value-conscious travelers, the hospitality industry kept delivering
luxury hotels, largely driven by the frequent travel and spending power
of business clients.
But professionally managed short-term rentals are increasingly able
to provide the consistency, location and amenities that class of hotel
customer demands. Hotels are already feeling the effects, with national
revenue per available room slowing its year-to-year growth from 3.5% in
the first eight months of last year to 1.2% over the same period this
year, according to STR data reported by the WSJ.
A historical building fully leased to Sonder is months away from
opening in Philadelphia, and the WSJ reports that competitor Domio is
underway in the city with a project of its own.
Without any full-time residents, a building can be managed even
more like a hotel while still providing residential amenities like a
washer and dryer and full kitchen.
Sonder, which became a unicorn after a July funding round pushed
its valuation past $1B, claims it can undercut hotel prices by 20-30%,
and its competitors say the same, WSJ reports.
Sonder has also partnered with Rastegar Property Co. for a new
construction project in Dallas by agreeing to a 10-year lease for the
whole building, which the developer said made it easier to get
financing. As more buildings devoted to short-term rentals come online,
investors will be eager to snap them up, according to a recent Cushman
& Wakefield report.
https://www.bisnow.com/national/news/hotel/short-term-rental-buildings-just-as-bad-hotels-airbnb-sonder-domio-101309
No comments:
Post a Comment