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HOME
SWEET TIME SHARE
Private
Residence Clubs Offer Five-Star
Service & Luxurious Quarters
(Reprinted from Business Week)
Here's
the latest twist in the vacation industry: the swanky
time-share. High-end hotel chains such as the Ritz-Carlton
and Four Seasons (FS ) are selling fractional ownership
in so-called private residence clubs that offer five-star
service along with luxurious quarters at such desirable
destinations as Aspen, Colo.; Jackson Hole, Wyo.;
and New York.
The cost, if you must ask, can be steep. For $80,000,
you can buy the right to use a two-bedroom villa by
a golf course at a Four Seasons club in Scottsdale,
Ariz. Or for $338,000, plus annual fees that can run
well into the thousands, you can buy a one-eighth
share of a three-bedroom apartment at the 84-unit
Phillips Club in Manhattan's Lincoln Center neighborhood
(table). That will give you the ability to use it
for an average of six weeks a year, or more if it's
available.
Clearly, these clubs target a different market from
conventional time-shares: They're for people who want
the comfort and convenience of a luxurious second
home without the hassle of maintaining and staffing
one.
Indeed, the operators take pains to add personal touches
that make you feel you're returning to your very own
place. They'll put family photos on the coffee table
and stock the unit with your favorite food and wine.
Between visits, they will store your clothes in rolling
wardrobes and make sure your duds are freshly laundered
and arranged in closets before your arrival. At fishing
and ski resorts, they keep equipment and prep it for
your return.
Although these upscale vacation homes are much more
exclusive than a regular time-share, the way they
work is very similar: The owner buys a piece of real
estate and receives a deed, which can be sold, transferred,
or even willed away.
Depending on your tax status, there could be a mortgage
interest deduction as well. As with standard time-shares,
the resale market is spotty, so the only reason to
buy into one of these clubs is if you want to use
it.
Private residence clubs are the fastest-growing segment
of the time-share industry. Sales grew 115% in 2000
and 24% in 2001, according to Ragatz Associates, a
real estate resort market-research company in Eugene,
Ore. The rest of the industry grew 15% in 2000 and
8% in 2001.
As with regular time-shares, there are organizations
that enable owners to swap the use of their units.
The deluxe tour operator Abercrombie & Kent, for
instance, has affiliations with several residence
clubs, and for an extra $1,000 a year, you can trade
your home for another vacation destination, the use
of a private jet or yacht, or even tickets to a marquee
sporting event.
Joe Aaron, a 52-year-old hedge fund investor from
San Francisco, is sold on the residence-club concept.
Frustrated with long check-in lines and elevator waiting
times at the Plaza Hotel, his usual haunt in New York
City, he bought a piece of Phillips Club unit three
years ago. There, the woman at the front desk greets
him by name, and his favorite brand of French roast
coffee awaits him in his room. Best of all, he doesn't
have to pack; his clothes are stored and readied for
him. "The service is impeccable," says Aaron. It's
as if everybody there works for you." Time-shares
have certainly come a long way.
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