Budget brands will be next growth market, say hotel chiefs

Published March 19th, 2006 - 08:01 GMT
Al Bawaba
Al Bawaba

Both regional and global hotel groups are targeting budget travellers with the launch of economy brands throughout the Middle East, and leading hoteliers are predicting the new sector will spur intra-regional and inbound travel.

According to Chris Moloney, regional chief operating officer for InterContinental Hotels Group, there is a huge gap in the market for branded budget hotels that, he believes, are essential to maintain visitor growth during the next 10 years in the Gulf.

“At InterContinental, we have traced the rise and profile of inbound tourists and noted the growth in the mid-scale segment in the GCC as well as a boom in pan-Arab tourism – this made us realise that it was viable for us to introduce Express by Holiday Inn to the Middle East to provide quality service with value for money.”

The first Express by Holiday Inn will open at Knowledge Village in Dubai next year with 240 rooms, and the group has plans for up to 20 properties in the Gulf, as well as a further 20 in Lebanon and Syria, an expansion plan mirrored by that of Centro by Rotana, the UAE hotel group’s new economy brand.

Chief operating officer, Imad Elias, said the group had a target of 25 Centro properties across the region within two years, starting with two hotels in Dubai and one in Abu Dhabi opening in 2007.

“The average room rates across the region and specifically in key markets have been rising steadily  but there are no branded three-star economy hotel chains operating across the Middle East,” he said.  “Travellers have to pay a high rate and stay at a full-service four/five star hotel, or pay the ‘economy’ price and stay at a sub-standard hotel.”

Both operators agree, however, that budget hotels in the region will adhere to different standards to those elsewhere.

“Express by Holiday Inn will be adapted according to market needs in the GCC, with properties including larger sized rooms, additional cupboard space, larger bathrooms, laundry service and high speed Internet connections,” said Moloney.  “There will be a reception, bar lounge, all-day dining along with meeting rooms, plus mini-gym, business centre, connecting rooms and shuttle bus to the airport.”

Meanwhile, the Centro formula features rooms of 22 sq metres, all-day restaurant, bar, deli take-away shop, gym and pool, plus business and meeting facilities including wireless Internet connectivity.

But, while the full service but low cost model is the route taken by some of the leading hotel operators – Accor has announced plans to add 200,000 new rooms over the next four years, of which half will be in the budget sector – several mavericks may revolutionise the low-cost hotel sector with radically different products.

Chairman of the Easy Group, Stelios Haji-Ioannou has announced he will launch his budget hotel concept in the Middle East, starting in Dubai in a bid to slash the cost of accommodation in the emirate.

When negotiations are finalised, the low-cost franchise is expected to operate offering rooms as low as US$20 a night.

Meanwhile, the Kuwait-based IFA Hotels & Resorts has made a major investment in the small-capsule room style hotel brand, YOTEL, with launch properties scheduled to open at Heathrow and Gatwick airports in the UK this summer – raising the spectre of the concept moving in to the Middle East.

The market for such facilities and potential for expansion is on the agenda at the second Arabian Hotel Investment Conference, taking place in Dubai this May, where the industry will be reviewing current developments, future trends, sustainable tourism policies, timeshare regulation and other issues affecting the industry in the region.

Speaking at the session on economy lodging will be Easy Group’s Stelios Haji-Ioannou; Imad Elias from Rotana; Chris Moloney of InterContinental Hotels Group; Christophe Landais, regional managing director for Accor and Thierry Loue, managing partner of the RSP group.

The Arabian Hotel Investment Conference will run from April 29 - May 1, 2006 at Dubai’s Madinat Jumeirah conference centre. The conference is organised by Jonathan Worsley, Managing Director of International Hospitality Services and MEED Conferences.  Details of AHIC can be found on www.arabianconference.com.

Platinum sponsors at the 2006 event are: GuestInvest; Kingdom Hotel Investments; Nakheel Hotels & Resorts and Rezidor SAS Hospitality.

Gold sponsors are: Accor; ALDhiyafa Holdings Company; Arabian Travel Market; Armani Hotels & Resorts; Cendant Vacation Network Group; Deloitte; Emirates; Euro RSCG Furness; Fairmont Hotels & Resorts; Government of Tanzania; Gulf Air; Hamilton Hotel Partners; Hilton International; HVS International; IFA Hotels & Resorts; Integra TV; InterContinental Hotels & Resorts; Interval International; Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels; Jumeirah; Kempinski; Marriott International; Morgan Stanley; Mövenpick Hotels & Resorts; Port Ghalib Egypt; Rotana Hotels; RSP Group; Shaza Hotels; Sidley Austin; Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide; TRI Hospitality Consulting Middle East and Turks & Caicos.

Media sponsors are: AME Info, CNBC Arabia, Global Hospitality Resources, Hotelier Middle East; HOTELS, Sleeper and TTN.

Supporters are: Dubai Convention Bureau, Emirates Academy of Hospitality; International Hotel & Restaurant Association; International Business Leaders Forum, Villeroy & Boch; the World Travel & Tourism Council and WOW Travels.

The Arabian Hotel Investment Conference will run from April 29 - May 1, 2006 on the eve of Arabian Travel Market. The conference is organised by Jonathan Worsley, Managing Director of International Hospitality Services and MEED, the Middle East business information group.  Details of AHIC can be found on www.arabianconference.com.


International Hospitality Services

Jonathan Worsley, Managing Director of International Hospitality Services, is a consultant to CB Richard Ellis Hotels and one of the organisers and founders of the International Hotel Investment Forum held each year in Berlin.  In 2005, he was responsible for launching the successful Arabian Hotel Investment Conference with MEED Conferences.  Worsley sits as an advisor to the World Travel & Tourism Council which represents many of the leading companies operating world-wide in the travel &  tourism industry.  He is also a partner and board member of The Bench (www.thebench.com) which provides online real time daily benchmarking data for the hotel industry in over 96 destinations worldwide.  His view is that there is a need for more transparency in the industry to allow for greater liquidity in the marketplace.
MEED

MEED (Middle East Economic Digest) is internationally recognised as providing essential information for anyone doing business in, or with, the Middle East and North Africa. MEED now attracts over 70,000 individual readers each week, across 70 countries world-wide.
MEED Conferences is part of the leading information brand in the Middle East working to provide delegates with the very latest business sensitive information.  Over the past 10 years, MEED Conferences has organised events attended by senior government officials and thousands of international business people.  The conference series is aimed at companies active or seeking business in the markets of the Middle East. MEED is well established as the source of strategic and accurate regional information placing it in a unique position to bring together high-calibre speakers.


 

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