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HOMEOWNERS EMBRACE A
UNIQUE ARRANGEMENT
Condo Hotels and Second Homes
By JANET MORRISSEY
Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
Reprinted From The Wall Street Journal Online
NEW YORK -- Vacation-hungry Americans,
disillusioned by the time-share experience but desperate
to escape to a second home, have begun turning toward
luxury condominium-hotels for refuge.
And
a growing number of big-name hotel companies, such
as Hilton Hotels Corp., Marriott International's Ritz
Carlton, FelCor Lodging Trust and Four Seasons Hotels
Inc., are eager to accommodate them.
"This
is the most affluent generation to approach retirement,
and these people are well-educated, well-traveled
and demand comfort," said Aubrey Ferrao, president
of Gulf Bay Group of Cos., which is developing a luxury
hotel-condo at Marco Island near Naples, Fla.
Condo-hotel
units are sold as condominiums, but managed by the
hotel. Different from time-shares, owners can turn
the units over to the hotel operator to rent out when
they're not there and receive rent. Generally they
would share the rent revenue on a 50-50 basis with
the hotel - a feature that can help them pay off a
mortgage sooner.
The
rental option also allows owners to take in extra
bucks rather than boarding up their apartments for
six or more months a year and gives them access to
many hotel perks - ranging from room service to saunas
- while they're living in their units.
But
condo-hotel owners also face certain restrictions:
Forget any personal touches or outrageous furnishings
as owners must comply with hotel guidelines when installing
furniture or other decor. And owners cannot fly off
to their vacation home on a whim because most must
sign contracts with the hotel operator stating precisely
when the apartment will be available for rent each
year.
Then
there's the risk that a Motley Crue-like rock band
or partying teenagers on Spring Break could wind up
renting and subsequently trashing that cherished room.
Appealing To
The Homeowner in Us All
Still,
for many buyers, the idea of owning rather than renting
or buying an ownership share was the clincher.
"I
like to own and you can't control it if you don't
own," said Jim Creech, who owns two condo-hotel units
at Myrtle Beach and has no interest
in timeshare, leasing or rentals. (The Myrtle Beach development is a joint
venture project between FelCor and Hilton Hotels Corp.
(HLT)).
Creech,
who lives in Benson, N.C., and recently retired
at the age of 50, said tax breaks associated with
mortgages and depreciation, as well as the cash flow
from renting out the unit have made condo-hotel units
a profitable venture. Also, he said, the units have
appreciated, offering him even bigger returns when
he sells. A hotel-condo unit he purchased for $192,000
in 1994 is now selling for $300,000, said Creech.
And
demand appears to be growing.
Creech
said he wound up having to buy special lottery tickets
at $5000 a pop just to get the chance to make a pre-construction
bid for a condo-hotel unit being built in the newest
development at Myrtle Beach. "There were 370 lottery
tickets for 200 units," with the units being sold
about two years before construction would wrap up,
he said. "I paid $262,000 for a 3-bedroom unit, and
at closing, similar units were selling for $400,000,
he said.
Steven
Perricone, a restaurant owner in Miami, purchased a junior
one bedroom at the Ritz Carlton, Key Biscayne in 1998
- more than two years before the development is slated
to open. The idea of owning a vacation property that
has all the chi-chi services of a high-quality hotel
was too good to pass up, he said.
Condo
Hotels Go Global
Smaller,
less lush, condo-hotels cropped up in South Florida in the 1980s, but demand
waned when the Tax Reform Act, which snatched away
many of the lucrative tax breaks that had attracted
buyers, was passed in 1986.
Louise
Sunshine, president and chief executive of the Sunshine
Group Inc., a marketing group, brags she was the first
to begin peddling a five-star luxury condo-hotel with
the rollout of Trump International Hotel & Tower
at 1 Central Park West in Manhattan in January 1997.
Since
then, Sunshine has been selling units in a Ritz Carlton
condo-hotel in Key Biscayne, Fla., and "we have three
or four others on the drawing boards all on a five-star
luxury level." Details on the latest developments,
to be located in Palm Beach, Fla., Las Vegas, Los Angeles, London and New York, will be unveiled in
the next six months, she said.
"We
think this is a very good product type and one that
has an unlimited future and broad market appeal,"
said Sunshine. "There is a huge demand," she said.
For
hotel owners and operators, the benefits are three-fold:
- It's often easier to
get financing for condo-hotels than pure-play hotels;
- Marketing costs are
significantly lower than for time-share units;
- Condo-hotel units offer
additional hotel room inventory.
Ritz-Carlton
Hotel Co., a unit of Marriott International Inc. (MAR),
is taking part in a condo-hotel development in Key
Biscayne, Fla., which is slated to
open in March 2001. Although Ritz-Carlton already
runs several hotels that include a residential condominium
component, the Key Biscayne resort will be the first
that gives residents an option to turn over their
units to Ritz Carlton to rent when they're not there.
The
resort will include 188 condominium units and 302
regular hotel rooms, with condo prices ranging from
the low-$100,000s to more than $800,000. All units
were sold by March 2000 - a year before the project's
official open.
The
project's developer, GB Hotel Partners, found financing
easier for a condo-hotel than a traditional hotel
because many lenders were worried about overbuilding
hotels.
Also,
said Doug Weiser, GB Hotel's president, by including
a residential component within the hotel, the company
was able to sell the units and use the proceeds to
lower the debt on the overall.
Weiser
preferred a condo-hotel over a timeshare project.
"The Key Biscayne market is so strong that we thought
it would be easier just to sell the units once and
be done with it than to sell them 40 or 50 times through
time-share," he said. '
Weiser
estimates advertising and marketing costs eat away
anywhere from 35% to 50% of the sale price of a time-share
unit compared with only 10% to 13% of the price of
a hotel-condo unit.
Foreign Owners
Know the Concept
The
condo-hotel concept has been a popular fixture in
Europe and Latin America for many years, said
Weiser. About 60% of the buyers in the Key Biscayne
project are from outside the U.S., he noted.
Among
the big hotel operators, Phil Kab, vice president
of development at Ritz Carlton, doesn't rule out further
condo-hotels developments, although none are currently
on the books. He said the company will likely monitor
the Key Biscayne project to determine if the concept
should be expanded.
Hilton
Hotels (HLT) inherited its partnership with FelCor
on the project in Myrtle Beach when it acquired Promus
Hotels Corp. in 1999, and the company is not seeking
other condo-hotels.
"We're
not in the real estate game," said David A. Sherf,
senior vice president of real estate and investment
analysis at Hilton, "We'd rather own the project ourselves
than sell it."
By
contrast, FelCor Chief Executive Thomas Corcoran is
bullish on the condo-hotel concept and has little
interest in time-share.
"We
like dealing with one owner," he said.
Bill
Stuckeman, who heads up development for FelCor, said
demographics are working in FelCor's favor as aging
babyboomers begin inheriting their parents' wealth
and more start seeking out a "high-end" second home.
At
Myrtle Beach, all 200 units in the
latest tower that opened in July were sold out by
the Spring of 1999, noted Corcoran. Plans are in the
works to begin selling units in a new 267-unit tower,
which will open in the Fall of 2002.
Aside
from the Myrtle Beach project, which includes
an Embassy Suites hotel and more than 1,100 condo-hotel
units located in high-rise towers, low-rise buildings
and villas scattered across a 145-acre site, Corcoran
is already scouting his next condo-hotel site.
Gulf Bay's Ferrao, who has built
14 condominiums in the Naples, Fla., area, had originally
planned to only construct a small 250-seat restaurant
and beach club at Marco Island that residents from
his nearby Fiddlers Creek development could access.
But a nasty community fight that delayed the groundbreaking
invoked Ferrao's wrath, and when he won the legal
battle, he decided to build not only restaurants,
but a full-blown hotel-condominium and 350-car parking
structure.
About
75% of the 103 units at the Marco Beach Ocean resort complex have
been sold since marketing began in the fall of 1998,
with prices ranging from $260,000 to $575,000. The
project is expected to be complete next August.
Donald
Trump describes his lone condo-hotel venture at Trump
International "a great success" and said he'd consider
similar developments if the "right opportunity in
the right location" came along.
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