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  1. #1

    Default "It's Detroit that will emerge the biggest winner" Hotel Occupancy to Boom

    Hotel industry expects check-ins to rise in 2012

    Link

    It's Detroit, however, that TravelClick predicts will emerge the biggest winner during this period, with an expected 22% increase in occupancy.

    "We're well ahead of the curve from a national improvement standpoint," says Thomas Conran, principal of Greenwood Hospitality Group, owner of The Henry hotel in Dearborn, Mich., a Detroit suburb.

    Conran credits Detroit's recent recovery to the state's efforts to lure more leisure travelers via its Michigan.org website, as well as the success of Detroit's resurgent sports teams, which has helped lure weekend visitors.

    Finally, Conran says, the Detroit area is seeing "significant" year-over-year gains in business travel thanks to the recovering auto industry.

    "We can't underestimate the fact that the health of the auto industry has improved dramatically," Conran says.

  2. #2

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    Awesome. Occupancy rates up, AND we have more hotel rooms than 10 years ago.

  3. #3

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    Yeah, that way, speculation can drive us to the next bust, where we have redundant occupancy and a flagging economy. Yay! A minimum of momentary prosperity translates into a MAXIMUM OF THE OLD WAY OF DOING THINGS! YAY!

  4. #4

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    AND we have more hotel rooms than 10 years ago


    Where? Haven't they closed the Westin, the Ponch and a few others?

  5. #5

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    Quote Originally Posted by Meddle View Post
    AND we have more hotel rooms than 10 years ago


    Where? Haven't they closed the Westin, the Ponch and a few others?
    No.
    Yes.
    No.

  6. #6

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    Quote Originally Posted by Meddle View Post
    AND we have more hotel rooms than 10 years ago


    Where? Haven't they closed the Westin, the Ponch and a few others?
    3 casino hotels. Book Cadillac. Hilton Garden Inn. I am only aware of losing the Potch, in terms of hotels that were actively operating. The Westin became a Marriott, of course, and got a substantial upgrade. And that was like about 1996, if I recall correctly.

    And I am not worried too much about the future. Downtown Detroit, for all the problems we have, is fundamentally differnt than recent decades: its growing, and people are visiting. More people are working here and living here. Visiting, working, and living all lead to more demand for hotel rooms, beyond the auto show. I am decidedly optimistic about what downtown will look like in the future. Before I moved back, visits I would pay during the 2000's were pathetic: I would pass NO ONE on the street. It was like my own private Motor City. That doesn't really happen now. I see people out all the time.

  7. #7

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    Fort Shelby Hotel has come online since then too.

    The Omni has dropped out. Too bad. It has a great setting.

  8. #8

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    Isn't there also rumors of the W hotel chain redeveloping some building or looking to build something in Detroit?

    Seems like there's more hotels than anything...

  9. #9

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    Quote Originally Posted by Lowell View Post
    The Omni has dropped out. Too bad. It has a great setting.
    Last I heard however it's still operating as an independent hotel.

  10. #10

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    Quote Originally Posted by Lowell View Post
    Fort Shelby Hotel has come online since then too.The Omni has dropped out. Too bad. It has a great setting.
    Omni Hotel is now called Roberts Riverfront Hotel & Residence. I work there. Its doing great and this summer was overwhelm with events. Frequent visitor Allen Iverson, Mayor Bing, Jesse Jackson, John Conyers..many more. Plenty of Weddings and Private parties. Beautiful Hotel and location, especially this past summer.

  11. #11

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    Quote Originally Posted by gthomas View Post
    Omni Hotel is now called Roberts Riverfront Hotel & Residence. I work there. Its doing great and this summer was overwhelm with events. Frequent visitor Allen Iverson, Mayor Bing, Jesse Jackson, John Conyers..many more. Plenty of Weddings and Private parties. Beautiful Hotel and location, especially this past summer.
    I stand happily corrected! Thanks. It is a beautiful and peaceful setting.

  12. #12

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    Jazz on the river every wednesday in the summer, right on the riverfront outside the hotel. Beautiful location for outdoor summer dining.

  13. #13

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    Add to that 10-12 years ago the hotel next to the Westin was closed now it is open as a Holiday Inn.

    Now if we can only get classy establishments like Motel 6 or Knights Inn downtown!

  14. #14

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    I think several of us on this board were skeptical of how well the Roberts Riverfront would operate as a hotel, especially since the plan was for half the property to be seniors residences. However the reviews on Tripadvisor, Hotels.com, etc. are much better than the former Omni was receiving.

  15. #15

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    The Westin Hotel is assisting NHL travel team players, too. That would help them stay in business for a many years to come.

  16. #16

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    Quote Originally Posted by animatedmartian View Post
    Isn't there also rumors of the W hotel chain redeveloping some building or looking to build something in Detroit?

    Seems like there's more hotels than anything...
    I heard that too, but it could just be a rumor.

    I love the way W goes into old, old skyscrapers and turns them into super-high-end hotels. For years, the old Guardian Life building sat at the northeast corner of Union Square in New York. Nobody wanted that outdated building, with a sloping top with 19th century dormers in it. Then they did a great job with it; it's now very swanky.

    The Book Tower would be, perhaps, a good candidate for them.

    Of course, our local lights know that nobody will every want anything but brand-new Class A space, so they'll probably knock down the Book Tower before any redevelopers can get at it.

  17. #17

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    Quote Originally Posted by animatedmartian View Post
    Isn't there also rumors of the W hotel chain redeveloping some building or looking to build something in Detroit?
    You're thinking of the David Whitney Building. Some people have speculated it may become a W, but there's been no formal announcement as far as I know.


    New hotel plan emerges for the David Whitney building
    By Daniel Duggan

    A new downtown hotel is planned as part of a mixed-use development for the historic David Whitney building.

    The 19-story building will be split between apartments and hotel rooms.

    It was purchased in March by Whitney Partners LLC, an evenly-split joint venture between Detroit-based developer The Roxbury Group and Farmington Hills-based hotel investment firm Trans Inns Management Inc.

    full story
    Last edited by downtownguy; November-01-11 at 12:55 PM. Reason: stupid typo

  18. #18

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    Quote Originally Posted by DetroitPlanner View Post
    Add to that 10-12 years ago the hotel next to the Westin was closed now it is open as a Holiday Inn.

    Now if we can only get classy establishments like Motel 6 or Knights Inn downtown!
    Hey, I have stayed at many a motel over the years! They serve a purpose, and should constitute a "second wave" of hotels outside of downtown, by interstate exits, and by destinations [[like colleges, for example) where the average traveller is looking for a "clean, comfortable room" at a much lower rate than the big boys downtown. It is largely a different crowd that is using a motel outside of downtown than is using a class-A hotel downtown, so there is not too much cannibalism. And service sector jobs at hotels [[and restaurants) are perfect for unskilled workers to enter the workforce, with a good shot for talent and hard work to advance [[most higher paid hospitality positions are filled by people who worked their way up). That's how I started [[disherwasher, age 14), The more motels in Detroit, the merrier.

  19. #19

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    I can't agree with the people that think increased hotel occupancy is a bad thing. On the contrary, I have been impressed that the Detroit area has more or less seen a stable number of hotels operating in the metro area during the Great Recession. And Downtown has only lost the Pontchartrain. If the metro area and Downtown can maintain stability in the hotel industry during bad times, there may be room for further growth if/when the economy improves.

    Maybe it's no surprise - Downtown Detroit offers a lot of events including sports, theater, concerts and other events. Midtown offers a share of events and attractions such as the museums and the DIA. These tourist attractions are likely creating a critical mass of destinations that are helping sustain the hotel industry downtown even though business travel must have dropped off in the last ten years or so.
    Last edited by kryptonite; November-01-11 at 02:53 PM.

  20. #20

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    I wonder how much the film credit contributed to hotel occupancy? Does anybody have any figures?

  21. #21

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    Quote Originally Posted by 401don View Post
    I think several of us on this board were skeptical of how well the Roberts Riverfront would operate as a hotel, especially since the plan was for half the property to be seniors residences. However the reviews on Tripadvisor, Hotels.com, etc. are much better than the former Omni was receiving.
    Yes, I suggest everybody to check it out. Great friendly staff [[including me) and very reasonable rates for the location and amenities. Mr. Robert's is a great guy and love talking with visitors..very welcoming. He has about 8 chains throughout the nation. Great investment going on in Detroit.

  22. #22

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    Occupancy rates in office, residential, and hotels are soon to be all up in the Downtown\Midtown area. All on board or in planning by 2012-3. W Hotel and Residence [[David Whitney Building), Broderick Tower Apartment, Cornerstone Estates near Motor City Casino, Quicken Loans Woodward block" Residential/Retail Coming Soon and other building accuisation for office. The Auburn Apartments in Midtown on Cass and Canfield, Book building ?? Apartments? ...many more in planning I'm sure.

  23. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by animatedmartian View Post
    Isn't there also rumors of the W hotel chain redeveloping some building or looking to build something in Detroit?
    The W hotel division [[part of Starwood) doesn't develop anything. They have management contracts with developers.

  24. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by Detroitnerd View Post
    I love the way W goes into old, old skyscrapers and turns them into super-high-end hotels. For years, the old Guardian Life building sat at the northeast corner of Union Square in New York. Nobody wanted that outdated building, with a sloping top with 19th century dormers in it. Then they did a great job with it; it's now very swanky.
    That project was developed by Related Cos., one of the largest developers in the U.S.

    The building was hardly unwanted. It was the World HQ of Guardian Life. They moved to more cost-effective digs, and Related planned a condo-hotel development, which eventually became the W.

  25. #25

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    hopefully more empty buildings, former apartment structures, can be rehabbed to be hotels and such.. what about that creepy place next to bob maxey ford on Jefferson?

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