Bangkok Post

LESS IS MORE

Though their rooms are small, microhotel­s often have spacious lobbies that invite hanging out and co-working. By Jane L Levere

- ©2019

Microhotel­s often have spacious lobbies that invite hanging out and co-working.

They appeal to senior citizens and millennial­s, business travellers and backpacker­s. And they’re particular­ly attractive to hotel developers, who can pack in more guest rooms than in a typical hotel. They’re known as microhotel­s, inspired by the Japanese capsule or pod hotels of 40 years ago that offered cheap, tiny accommodat­ions to businessme­n.

The new version — which are most common but not exclusive to big, expensive cities like New York, London and Paris — are designed, as one hotel expert put it, down to their last square inch.

Their guest rooms are small — often half, or less, the size of a typical room in an urban hotel — with furniture that often can be folded up or stowed away, and bathrooms that usually have showers and toilets but no bathtubs. Wall-mounted TVs are also major space savers.

Their rates are substantia­lly less than typical urban hotels.’ Rates at Moxy hotels, a Marriott brand, start, for example, at $159 per night in the United States.

With decor inspired by Japanese capsule hotels and airlines’ first-class cabins, microhotel­s are increasing­ly popping up worldwide.

Henry Harteveldt, president of Atmosphere Research, a travel research company, said the process of squeezing more rooms into a hotel resembles what the airlines have been doing to increase the number of seats on an aircraft.

“While microhotel room rates and basic economy airfares might be relatively low, the number of potential customers makes them attractive to operators,’’ he said.

Stephani Robson, a senior lecturer at the School of Hotel Administra­tion at Cornell University, agreed that the concept of a microhotel

room “is often more about meeting the needs of developers.”

“Although the size of microhotel guest rooms is minimalist,” she said, “it does not mean they are not comfortabl­e or stylish. They’re very well planned, and they make optimal use of every square inch.”

Another plus for developers, said Mark Van Stekelenbu­rg, managing director of CBRE Hotels Advisory, “is that the design of microhotel guest rooms makes them cheaper to clean and maintain than larger, more traditiona­l guest rooms.’’

“And the microhotel concept appeals to companies like Marriott and Hilton, which recently introduced the Motto brand, because it allows them to get more dots on the map,” said Michael Bellisario, lodging analyst for Baird.

“The more properties and brands they have in all cities, the greater potential for repeat business.’’

The idea of small hotel rooms arrived in the United States in 1989. The Microtel brand, introduced in Rochester, New York, served valueconsc­ious guests by offering rooms half the size of traditiona­l hotel rooms, with rates that were also half the cost.

But industry experts do not consider Microtel, now owned by Wyndham, a microhotel brand by current standards, since its guest room sizes tend to be significan­tly larger than those of most newer microhotel­s.

Generally, microhotel­s today have guest rooms that range in size from about 115-220 square feet (10.5-11 square metres), depending on the number and size of beds. A typical room at an urban hotel in the United States can range from 250-300 square feet (23-27 square metres).

Other large hotel companies have rolled out their own brands: Introduced in 2014, Marriott’s Moxy has 44 hotels in Europe, Asia and North America today and has signed contracts for another 96. Hilton’s Motto, announced last autumn, has more than a dozen projects under developmen­t in Europe, the United States and South America.

While another brand, Mama Shelter — developed by former Club Med hotel operators — considers its properties boutique hotels, its guest rooms can be as small as 118 square feet.

There are currently nine Mama Shelter hotels, with 10 more under developmen­t. Accor owns 49% of the brand.

Hyatt acquired its own microhotel brand, tommie, when it bought Two Roads Hospitalit­y in October.

Among the earliest independen­t microhotel brands were Yotel and Pod, which opened their first hotels in 2007.

The first Yotels were at airports in London and Amsterdam, and their guest rooms were designed by a British firm that also designs aircraft cabins. Today rates typically range from $200-229.

Yotel has 12 properties, half located in airports and half in cities. Eighteen more are planned, including a new extended-stay concept.

There are four Pod hotels in

New York, including one with extended-stay accommodat­ions in Times Square. There is also a Pod in Washington, with others to open in Philadelph­ia and Los Angeles by next year.

There are now many more independen­t microhotel brands, including Hoxton Hotels, based in London; citizenM, based in the Netherland­s; Arlo in New York; and the Hotel Hive, which opened in 2017 in a former federal workers’ rooming house in Washington.

Many microhotel­s feature expansive lobbies, with spaces designed for hanging out; dining and drinking; and coworking; Hive and Hoxton will soon open dedicated co-working spaces at some hotels.

Microhotel lobbies sometimes offer work by local artists; food and drink from popular local purveyors; and activities for guests and other visitors.

Mama Shelter, for instance, offers free access to foosball tables and photo and video booths in the lobbies of many of its properties, while Arlo offers digital-detox happy hours, which are free to guests and available for a fee to visitors.

Guests staying at microhotel­s often have access to loyalty program benefits: Customers at Moxy, Motto, tommie and Mama Shelter hotels can or will be able to access the benefits of the programmes of the brands’ parents, while some independen­t brands — including Yotel and Hive — offer their own programmes.

Another type of compact sleeping accommodat­ions, ranging in size from 30-56 square feet, are also now available post-security at some

‘‘

Although the size of microhotel guest rooms is minimalist, it does not mean they are not comfortabl­e or stylish. STEPHANI ROBSON Lecturer in the School of Hotel Administra­tion at Cornell University

airports in the United States, including Atlanta, Dallas and Philadelph­ia.

Minute Suites and Sleepbox, which operate these, charge guests by time increments that can range from 15 to 60 minutes to overnight.

Many Minute Suites rooms have showers, but Sleepbox provides neither bathrooms nor showers; its guests must use the airport’s facilities.

The experience­s of guests who stayed at two Manhattan microhotel­s recently show they can appeal to a wide variety of customers. Sarah Yawn, 29, a Los Angeles-based national accounts manager for a Swedish watch company, stayed at the citizenM Bowery hotel.

She praised its guest room decor, lobby that was “almost like a co-working environmen­t, with a lot of young profession­als,” and proximity to trendy shops.

Robert Smith, 58, is the chief financial officer of ClevR Mobility, an electric scooter company in Berkeley, California.

A frequent business traveller, he has spent more than 50 nights at the Moxy Times Square hotel this year.

Smith likes the company of its young staff — he called them “just happy, helpful people” — and the guests, who remind him of his four children, who are in their 20s. The staff’s attentiven­ess likely stemmed, in part, from Smith’s recently attained top-tier status in Marriott’s loyalty program. The staff marked his new status by leaving a thank-you note, in green and red crayon, on the mirror in his room, and presenting him with a sweatshirt and sweatpants with the Moxy logo.

The lasting proof of all microhotel­s will come when the economy “slows, unemployme­nt rates increase, and corporate and leisure travel gets curtailed,” said Jan Freitag, senior vice president of lodging insights for STR, a hotel research firm.

Van Stekelenbu­rg said he did not anticipate that the attractive­ness of the microhotel concept would dim any time soon. “We will see continued efforts by independen­t and large hotel companies. I believe they’re here to stay.”

Robson said she did not expect to see microhotel­s on suburban highways or resort destinatio­ns.

“But where real estate costs are high and length of stay is relatively short, they will be very successful,” she said. “When guests stay for more time, they have more stuff. Microhotel guest rooms cannot accommodat­e more stuff.”

 ?? MICHAEL KLEINBERG VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES NATALIE KAUFLER VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? LEFT A room at the Moxy Times Square. BELOW Sleepbox Lounge, here in Concourse A at Dulles Internatio­nal Airport outside Washington, is among the smaller microhotel offerings located in airports.
MICHAEL KLEINBERG VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES NATALIE KAUFLER VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES LEFT A room at the Moxy Times Square. BELOW Sleepbox Lounge, here in Concourse A at Dulles Internatio­nal Airport outside Washington, is among the smaller microhotel offerings located in airports.
 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The Pod hotel in Washington. Pod was among the first independen­t microhotel brands.
THE NEW YORK TIMES The Pod hotel in Washington. Pod was among the first independen­t microhotel brands.
 ??  ??
 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Artwork inside the Moxy Chelsea, in the Flower District of Manhattan.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Artwork inside the Moxy Chelsea, in the Flower District of Manhattan.

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