More hotel rooms on the way as foreign investors pile in

22 November 2014 - 22:35 By Adele Shevel
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BRIGHT SIDE: Joop Demes, CEO of Pam Golding Hospitality
BRIGHT SIDE: Joop Demes, CEO of Pam Golding Hospitality

The oversupply of Cape Town hotels that has depressed the industry since the 2010 World Cup appears to have ended. At least 11 hotel projects are now being planned with an estimated 2102 rooms in total.

Joop Demes, CEO of Pam Golding Hospitality, said eight of the 11 hotel projects were well advanced and three were at a feasibility stage. The hotels are scheduled to open within the next four years and if they all proceed, it will create a collective investment in excess of R3.5-billion and will create more than 2000 jobs, said Demes.

Of the new rooms, 1312 are expected to be three-star or mid-market, 340 rooms four-star or upscale and 450 rooms to be luxury or five-star.

"These 11 hotels are expected to open between now and the end of 2018. We expect seven to open within a radius of less than 10km of the Cape Town International Convention Centre," said Demes. The centre is set to double its size within the next two to three years.

The Western Cape has been outperforming every other province and recorded phenomenal revenue growth of 19.2% per available room for the first nine months of this year compared to the same period last year.

The mid-market hotels in Cape Town have enjoyed in excess of 25% revenue growth per available room at the end of September this year compared with the same period a year ago. At the end of 2013, midmarket hotel rooms made up about 25% of hotel rooms in Cape Town.

"There is without doubt currently an undersupply of midmarket rooms in Cape Town," said Demes.

He said the acquisition of the Protea Hotel Group by Marriott earlier this year had sparked foreign direct hotel investment focused on the Western Cape and Johannesburg with the US, China and the Middle East leading the surge. "There is strong interest and demand for existing underperforming hotels as well as for green-field opportunities."

International demand is increasing due to a favourable exchange rate, with Europe and the US as the key markets, coupled with a sharp increase in inquiries and investment from China. The hospitality side of Pam Golding Lodges and Guesthouses has facilitated 56 foreign direct investment transactions, worth almost half a billion rand.

The recent opening of the new Park Inn in Newlands will add 122 rooms in the mid-market sector in the last quarter of this year. Next year, Hotel Le Vendome re-opens as Radisson Blu with a further 143 rooms. There is the delayed Bloubergstrand Hotel with 144 rooms and another 67 rooms in De Waterkant. Demes forecasts one further hotel opening in 2016 with 120 rooms, 1060 rooms in 2017 while 2018 will see a further 450 rooms.

Demes said most of the new rooms expected to become operational in 2017 and beyond were strategically well balanced and thought-through. The strong double-digit growth in room demand in Cape Town for the past two years has started to find traction in the Winelands and the Garden Route.

In Johannesburg and Durban the market was very different. Growth of 6.8% in the overall revenue per available room for Gauteng in the nine months ending September, compared with the same period last year, has further entrenched the gap between Cape Town and Sandton luxury hotels.

The overall revenue per available room in Durban for the nine months ending September this year declined 5.7%, while Umhlanga has increased 7.2% in the same period. Wayne Godwin, senior consultant with Pam Golding Tourism & Hospitality Consulting, said of the three major cities, they were most cautious about the merits of new hotel development in and around Durban.

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