Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Hostel firm shares plans to reopen

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LONDON-LISTED hostel owner Safestay has said it plans to reopen over the course of the year but with major changes to the experience for customers, the company said.

The business, which has nearly 5,000 beds at 20 hostels in the UK and across Europe, said it has been closed since April 1 with the majority of staff furloughed or receiving support from government­s in the countries it operates.

Safestay said: “Check-in will be completed via WhatsApp, hand sanitiser gel, masks and gloves will be made available, common rooms including the restaurant areas will be closed, breakfasts will instead be served in boxes.

“A substantia­lly increased cleaning rota will be introduced and no shared rooms will be sold, and instead rooms will be sold to individual­s or groups who are known to each other.”

Bosses also revealed they have agreed an extra £5 million overdraft with HSBC and the business is positive it has enough cash to get through the coronaviru­s crisis.

Rents have also been suspended or reduced after negotiatio­ns with landlords helped to reduce the monthly costs to £600,000-a-month, of which half is deferred, Safestay added.

The company said: “With this as a starting point, the hostels will adapt their operating structures according to market conditions over the course of 2020 with the emphasis on matching operationa­l costs with income. It will require flexibilit­y and careful monitoring across all our markets.

“We believe that Safestay has the infrastruc­ture in place to manage the re-engagement and that ultimately, we will find the route to returning our portfolio of hostels to pre-Covid-19 levels.”

Bosses also said the destructio­n of the hospitalit­y sector from the lockdown could prove beneficial to Safestay, with opportunit­ies to buy distressed independen­t hostels that could eventually go bust.

The details come as the company revealed revenues for the year to December 31 rose 26 per cent to £18.4 million, with like-for-like sales up seven per cent.

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