Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Hotel boom sprouts amid lodging sector’s coronaviru­s recovery

- By George Avalos

BERKELEY >> A hotel boom has sprouted in the Bay Area, raising hopes that the battered lodging sector has begun to recover from economic woes and business losses unleashed by the coronaviru­s, a new report shows.

The Bay Area during 2021 added more than twice as many hotel rooms as the nine-county region added during 2020, according to a new report that Irvine-based Atlas Hospitalit­y Group provided to this news organizati­on.

Hotel developers added 2,863 lodging rooms in the Bay Area during 2021, which was an increase of 127% — more than double — the 1,262 rooms they added in the region in 2020, this news organizati­on’s analysis of brand-new and previous reports issued by Atlas Hospitalit­y, which tracks the California lodging market.

The economic uncertaint­ies triggered by the coronaviru­s chased away travelers and hotel guests and caused business travel to dry up.

“We saw many hotel constructi­on projects slow down and in some cases halted altogether,” the Atlas Hospitalit­y report stated. “Projects that were close to completion delayed opening due to all of the negative impacts of COVID-19.”

Some signs have emerged that the hotel sector in the Bay Area and California overall has begun to rebound from the coronaviru­s-linked economic battering, according to the report by Atlas Hospitalit­y Group.

In all of California, including Northern California and Southern California, an upswing, measured by new hotel openings, is well underway, the Atlas Hospitalit­y report stated.

California set a new record for the number of new hotel rooms opened during 2021, with 12,027 new lodging rooms. The state also achieved its second-highest total for the number of hotels opened with 88.

“2021 is the year that California hotel developmen­t jumped back into high gear,” Atlas Hospitalit­y stated in its report.

The upswing is expected to extend for a considerab­le period, opined Alan Reay, president of Atlas Hospitalit­y Group.

“We are definitely seeing signs that point to a big and rapid rebound for hotel openings and hotel constructi­on,” Reay said. “That will occur in 2022 and continue

into 2023.”

The robust prediction­s for hotel constructi­on have emerged despite a surge in building expenses that have driven up the cost of an array of commercial real estate and residentia­l projects.

“The interest in building new hotels is amazing when you consider how high constructi­on costs have jumped, maybe 25% to 35% higher than what they were before COVID began,” Reay said. “This says a lot about what lenders think about the California hotel market. Without lenders, these hotels aren’t going to be built.”

Lenders are particular­ly interested in funding developmen­t

projects for hotels with one of the Marriott or Hilton brands, according to Reay.

Reay believes the Bay Area is poised to share in the ongoing upswing for new hotel projects.

“The interest in the Bay Area is strong, especially in San Jose and Santa Clara County,” Reay said.

In contrast to the South Bay, the San Francisco hotel market still looks weak.

The most closely watched barometer for, revenue per available room, is rose everywhere in the Bay Area and the rest of California last year — except in San Francisco, where hotel room revenue tumbled during 2021, Reay said.

 ?? THE AMESWELL HOTEL ?? Gathering areas and entryway at The Ameswell Hotel, a 255-room hotel at 800Moffett Blvd. in Mountain View.
THE AMESWELL HOTEL Gathering areas and entryway at The Ameswell Hotel, a 255-room hotel at 800Moffett Blvd. in Mountain View.

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