China Daily Global Edition (USA)

As market shifts, Airbnb, hotels see tactics converging

- By ZHANG RUINAN in New York ruinanzhan­g@chinadaily­usa.com

If you’re visiting New York when the annual Christmas tree lighting takes place at Rockefelle­r Center and don’t want to wait in the cold and stand among thousands of others, you might be able to rent an apartments­tyle suite overlookin­g the tree.

You’ll have to wait a year or so, though, because that’s when Airbnb Inc, the San Franciscob­ased home-sharing service, hopes to rent out 200 suites on higher floors of the 33-story landmark building at 75 Rockefelle­r Plaza. The deal, which is still subject to approval from lenders and other parties, is being done between Airbnb and developer RXR Realty, which manages the iconic building.

Airbnb’s deal with RXR would be its first to create a stand-alone Airbnb lodging in an office building in New York. It represents a shift in Airbnb’s strategy to become more involved in the design and operation of shortterm rental apartments, according to The Wall Street Journal, and is part of the company’s effort to move into being an end-to-end travel distributi­on platform as it prepares for a possible initial public offering of shares, expected next year.

But as Airbnb unveiled the Rockefelle­r Plaza collaborat­ion last week, one hotel group that is feeling the disruption to its business by the biggest home-sharing business and similar ones, simultaneo­usly announced that it will start a new home-rental business.

Marriott, the owner of brands like Sheraton and Ritz-Carlton, plans to launch Homes & Villas, offering 2,000 luxury properties worldwide, ranging from a onebedroom home for $200 a night to a castle in Ireland for $10,000 a night.

It would become the first major US hotel chain to do so and would offer points and other rewards that it gives to hotel guests, according to the Journal.

Hospitalit­y sector experts said the moves by Marriott and Airbnb show that the hotel and home-sharing industries are converging and that the lines between hotels and “homestays” are blurring.

“I think the trend is both hotel companies adding more homesharin­g products and brands, whereas Airbnb and other home rental platforms are becoming more hotel-like,” Makarand Mody, an assistant professor of hospitalit­y marketing in the School of Hospitalit­y Administra­tion at Boston University, told China Daily.

“So, there’s sort of this convergenc­e of business models where both of these sides realized they’re in the accommodat­ion space — lodging,” he said, adding that whether they provide accommodat­ions in the form of someone’s home or as more standardiz­ed hotel rooms, they are selling the space and experience.

“At the end of the day, they have to think of themselves as distributi­on platforms,” said Mody. “And the way a platform makes money is through volume and through strong networks and partnershi­ps.”

One reason for the convergenc­e is the rising demand for homesharin­g. The global hotel business is still about $500 billion, or more than three times the size of the home-sharing sector. However, home sharing is growing twice as fast, at about 20 percent a year, according to an industry report.

Revenue per available room, a common hotel performanc­e metric, fell by 2 percent in 10 major US cities since Airbnb emerged in 2008, according to a recent study conducted by Mody and his colleagues.

“More business has migrated to home-sharing than anyone expected,” Chekitan Dev, a professor in the Hotel School of the S.C. Johnson College of Business at Cornell University, told China Daily in an email. “As a result, more and more major multibrand hotel companies have added or created a home-sharing brand, effectivel­y moving from ‘hotel’ companies to ‘lodging’ companies.”

Both hotel chains and Airbnb now deal with heightened scrutiny and local restrictio­ns on shortterm rentals from city lawmakers.

In New York, it’s illegal to rent an apartment for anything less than 30 days without the permanent tenant present.

That means potentiall­y as many as one-third of the estimated 55,000 Airbnb listings in New York are illegal, according to city officials and fair-housing advocates. Because 75 Rockefelle­r Plaza and other RXR buildings are zoned for commercial use, transformi­ng some floors into accommodat­ions may mean they face fewer of the legal complicati­ons that have caused headaches for Airbnb hosts in New York City apartment and condo buildings, according to The Wall Street Journal.

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