Navigation

Condo-hotels offer amenities to developers, owners

Article Snippets

Home

Second tower at The Setai once again will be a hotel

Condominium hotel projects worth potential legal hurdles

New Mountain Creek Ski Hotel Prepares to Open Doors

Trump waterfront condo plan not tall on specifics

Hot List of the newest hottest sexiest hotels

Marcus joins developer to build Vegas condo hotel

Hotel residences scale down the hassles

Manhattan's sizzling residential sales market has fueled a surge in a form of real estate ownership that had not previously taken hold in the city.
The "condo hotel" combines condominium residential living with a hotel or hotel services. It enables individual investors to buy into a condo hotel project, acquiring a room, apartment or suite that can be placed in a rental program run by property management when the owner is not occupying it.
Condo hotels take two basic forms--a condo project that includes a rental program or a hotel that offers rooms or suites for sale as condo units.
Most condo hotel projects also offer hotel-like services to unit owners. Condo hotels that lean more toward the condo end of the spectrum may or may not offer full hotel amenities and service offerings but only include limited perks.
Condo hotels that take after the hotel end of the business are more service oriented since there is a fully staffed hotel on the premises.
Those who invest in condo hotels gain the everyday comforts of apartment life with the added benefit of room service, maid service, access to a concierge and other aspects of luxury living.
Typically, investors are buying into a high-end property with long-term value since most condo hotel projects are developed at destination locations such as Manhattan or Florida.
The owners of condo hotel units can place their room, apartment or suite in a voluntary rental program in which the units are rented out in the same manner as hotel rooms. Securities and Exchange Commission regulations prevent developers from forcing participation in a rental program unless a formal filing is made with the SEC.
The rental revenue generated allows the investors to defray the various expenses associated with owning property. Rental income, minus a roughly 10 percent fee for the agent or agency that rented the unit, is divided between the unit owner and the condo hotel property owner, usually on a 50/50 or 60/40 basis. There is no pooling of revenue between owners.
While part of the rental program, the units are cleaned and maintained by the condo hotel staff in the same manner as a hotel room.
Rooms are rented to guests on a rotating basis to ensure that rental revenue is shared by all owners on an equal basis. Guests, of course, may still request specific units. Some condo hotel developers require that owners that join the rental program must also participate in a furniture, fixtures and equipment package to ensure the owned units match the rest of the property.
Developers have turned to condo hotels for a number of reasons. They can lower the cost of financing the construction of the property through the sale of individual units. Although private investors may own some of the rooms, apartments or suites, the developer has access to additional units to rent out without incurring the expense of actually owning the units and it can generate management fees for renting out the owned units.
Some real estate companies and hoteliers are converting existing hotels to condo hotels. They are taking hotel properties with a substantial number of unused rooms and converting the vacant rooms, apartments and suites into condo units.
This allows the owner to sell a portion of the asset to invest in other deals while still maintaining the money-generating sections of the hotel.
In addition, condos sold in a property owned or managed by brand-name hoteliers--i.e., The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Co., LLC, Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc. and Hilton Hotels Corp., among others--enable the developer to reap a significant premium on the sale of the condo units.
Hotel condo projects also allow real estate companies to develop residential real estate in areas that are not zoned for pure residential property. The rooms, apartments and suites available in a number of condo hotels typically do not have cooking facilities because the areas are not zoned for residential purposes.
Zoning regulations may also limit the number of days any one person can occupy a residence. In New York, long-term residents in property zoned for hotels may not reside in that unit more than 182 days out of the year.
Other real estate entrepreneurs are building condo hotels that have no rental component at all. The projects are located in areas of Manhattan that are zoned for mixed-use, which allows the developers to construct residential units that include kitchens.
The units in these condo hotels have no restrictions in terms of how many consecutive days they may be occupied by the owners. Each project includes a hotel component and the owners of the individual units may, for a fee, obtain hotel services.
The market for condo hotels, however, depends upon a hot residential market to drive buyers to invest in such property. In Manhattan, where apartment prices have skyrocketed, residential developers are looking to take advantage of the market.
FindArticles > Real Estate Weekly > Dec 7, 2005 > Article > Print friendly
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m3601/is_17_52/ai_n15978889/print

Written by: No Author

Condo hotels: a comprehensive listing of the best South Florida has to offer in condominium hotels
Condo hotels: a comprehensive listing of the best South Florida has to offer in condominium hotels The boom in high-end condominium construction...read more

Deal for former hotel property still in works
La Crosse County officials remain confident they can close a deal with developers on the former Yacht Club Resorts hotel property. Board Chairman...read more

Lake Lawn Resort $390 Million Renovation, Expansion Approved
DELAVAN, WI- Lake Lawn Resort has received final approval for a $390 million multi-phase redevelopment. Construction on the condominium/hotel...read more

Las Vegas a rough ride for Miami builder
BY MATTHEW HAGGMAN mhaggman@MiamiHerald.com Leaving Las Vegas? Two years ago Miami developer Jorge Perez said the Las Vegas market was ripe for...read more

Three Expert Firms Join Forces to Serve Developers of Condo Hotels
real estate industry players in response to the continuing explosive demand for condo hotels in the United States. Condo Hotel Advisory Services...read more

CondoHotels.com | 1550 Larimer Street #661 | Denver, Colorado 80202
Steven Roszell, Licensed Real Estate Broker, Colorado and Florida
E-mail: info@condohotels.com

Today is:- Friday Jul 04, 2008
Disclaimer