210 New Hotels Currently in the Development pipeline in London
Main Photo: The Londoner by Radisson Edwardian, due to open in Spring 2020 – imagined
Date: November 2019
Location: London, England, UK
Name: Several
No. of Keys: 6,800
Who Said: Boodle Hatfield, a leading private wealth law firm.
What Did They Say: Out of the 210 hotels with planning permission, or already under construction, across the capital, almost a quarter (48) of these are in Westminster, adding over 6,800 new guest rooms. A further 12 are in the Heathrow area.
Boodle Hatfield says that the pipeline of new hotels being planned shows investors remain optimistic about the London market’s potential for growth post-Brexit.
The UK’s hotel market is one of the few sectors of the UK economy to have benefited from the Brexit-related slump in Sterling. The decrease in value of the pound has made it cheaper for international tourists to visit the UK and has also encouraged more “staycations”.
The luxury (four and five stars) hotel segment, often focused in Westminster, has attracted visitors from the US and the Gulf, who are among the highest spending tourists.
Tourism from the Gulf to the UK rose in 2018, with 675,000 visits to the UK from Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE collectively, up 20% from January 1 2014 to the end of 2018. Visits from the US to the UK grew 30% over the same period to 3.88m (VisitBritian).
Attracting US visitors to the capital has been important to the luxury end of the tourism industry. Americans traditionally spend more money per person in the UK than any other nation (Average of £860 per person per trip, VisitBritian), over twice the amount of the next highest country, France in 2018.
Luxury and boutique hotels account for 74% of the planned new hotels in Westminster. The development of luxury hotels in London is also partly driven by flows of foreign capital into the sector. Hotels remain a trophy investment for overseas UHNW individuals and family offices.
As well as attracting tourists, the devaluation of Sterling has also made the cost of investing in the capital’s hotel market cheaper for overseas investors.
Rajeev Joshi, Partner at Boodle Hatfield says: “Investor appetite in the London hotel market is holding up. But investors will want to know that this new supply of hotels can be soaked up by increasing demand.
“For tourism to continue to grow, the UK needs to ensure that post-Brexit, we do not start to be seen as a less convenient destination for tourists from the EU or from further afield. Greater investment in infrastructure will be a key part of this. Accelerating the delivery of projects such as the third runway at Heathrow and the Crossrail would help.”
Some examples of luxury & boutique hotels currently in development in Westminster:
The Former US Embassy – a 137-room, £1bn luxury hotel by a Qatar-based developer in Mayfair, which will have 5 restaurants, 6 retail units and a ballroom accommodating up to 1,000 guests
A 5-star hotel Nobu hotel is being built in Marylebone that is part funded by Hollywood actor, Robert DeNiro
The world’s first ‘Super Boutique’ hotel, The Londoner, will have 350 rooms and two luxury cinemas
THPT Comment: It is astounding that each year, for the past 10 years, London gains between 8,000 and 9,000 new top-end rooms and yet occupancy and ADR remain so buoyant.
First Seen: Boodle Hatfield website
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