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Condo-Hotels
Expanding
the Options for Lodging Development
By Anwar Elgonemy
Vice President, Jones Lang LaSalle, San Francisco
How
do Condo-Hotels Work?
By no means a novelty, the
condo-hotel model is showing resurgence due to rising
condo prices and the current "Midas Touch"
perception of residential real estate.
The most successful condo-hotels are
those built as hotels first and then as condominiums
second, as public space is needed to sell hotel rooms,
while unit owners share in the popularity and success
of the lodging operation. Alternatively, many deals
have floundered where the developer built the tower
as a condominium, and later sought to create a rental
program and piece together the public space and amenities.
For a hotel to operate smoothly when
a different person owns each unit, it is imperative
for a management company to have a contract with the
owners. The management company can be either the developer
of the property, or a group directly related to the
developer.
However, more increasingly the management
company is a third party hotel operator, such as Hilton,
Hyatt or Four Seasons, among others, that the developer
and unit owners agree should manage the guest rooms
for the unit owners, and the facilities (such as food
& beverage outlets, recreational amenities and
meeting space).
The industry is currently shifting
its strategy toward the outright sale of the hotel
management opportunity to nationally affiliated hotel
companies, operating these properties similarly to
that of a conventional hotel operation. This has been
achieved by separately deeding all of the hotel-like
features mentioned earlier as individual condominium
units; these commercial condos are then sold to a
hotel operating company. Along with rental agreements
from the individual condo buyers, this allows the
hotel operator to effectively manage the property
as a hotel.
In order to place a unit in a rental
program, a management and rental agreement is first
signed between the unit owner and the hotel management
company. This agreement provides for a number of variables,
primarily:
- A portion of the revenues received
from the nightly sales of rental units flows through
to the condo owners, usually a 50-50 split, after
a 10% Service Fee.
- The hotel management company/operator
retains the remaining portion of the rental revenue
stream.
- A Usage Agreement is implemented
between condo owners and the operator, providing
for the implementation of an FF&E reserve that
is maintained by the hotel company.
- The FF&E furnishing packages
within rental condos need to conform to certain
standards. Failure to comply with such standards
may either require immediate refurbishment at the
unit owners expense, or the expulsion of non-conforming
condos from the rental program.
Responsibility for the maintenance
and repairs of common space is allocated among condominium
unit owners, based on their pro-rata shares. A Homeowners
Association (HOA) is usually set up to retain ownership
of such areas and oversee the collection of dues from
unit owners. These dues typically cover reserves,
common area maintenance, and property insurance and
utilities expenses.
Property taxes are usually paid for
directly by the condo owners, and the hotel manager
pays for its costs of operations, such as salaries
and other direct hotel expenses.
Additional particulars pertaining
to the successful operation of condo-hotels are highlighted
as follows:
- Unit owners should be restricted
to a maximum of eight weeks of personal use during
the year.
- Rental contracts renewable on
an annual basis.
- In order to guarantee availability
for owners, a 60-day notice of intent to occupy
a unit must be given by individual owners.
- Quarterly statements showing a
detailed breakdown of all unit activity and
owner's account activity should be issued to unit
owners.
- To ensure an equal distribution
of bookings of the units in the rental program,
a rotational booking program should be used.
- If there is an unusual or extraordinary
event, the hotel guest should be charged for damage
to the owner's unit. Normal wear and tear is to
be anticipated and should be the responsibility
of the unit owner and replacements should be made
from the unit's reserve account.
Different Perspectives
The Condo
Owner
For the condo buyer, these
types of developments can offer enhanced financial
returns when owners choose to place their units in
a rental pool. Individual owners usually can put their
units in the hotel-room rental pool while they're
not using them and get a portion of the proceeds.
Better yet, they get access to the same amenities
and services as hotel guests.
By capitalizing on a hotels
national affiliation, reservation system, brand recognition
and management expertise, unit owners are more likely
to receive a higher level of rental income through
a rental pool agreement with a recognized professional
operator, despite having to share a portion of their
units revenues.
The Condo
Developer
The condo-hotel structure
offers a number of potential benefits for the developer.
First, it provides a method to help finance the development
of hotels; the sale of units gives the developer an
assured source of revenue to repay a portion of the
construction loan upon the completion of the hotel,
and the closing on the sale of the units. Additionally,
a developer can benefit by marketing the hotel amenities
to a buyer.
Developers of successful projects
generally can obtain construction financing without
reaching the lending threshold of 50% presales for
a planned condominium development (along with a 20%
down payment on the loan amount). Developers of condo-hotel
projects are attracted to this development approach
due to their ability to quickly "monetize"
the management function of the property. That is,
the sale of the hotel management opportunity becomes
similar to another condo unit that can be sold for
immediate profit.
If the hotel management opportunity
is sold upfront during the sell-out phase of the residential
condominiums, the developer may be able to receive
rental revenues from the completed (and sometimes
unsold) units being rented to hotel guests.
In developing this tier of property
in the U.S., it is important to note the potential
for securities law issues to arise out of the sale
of condo-hotel units. The sales of condominiums may
be deemed to be the sales of securities if certain
conditions stipulated by the SEC exist at the time
of sale.
However, in order to avoid coming
under the scrutiny of any securities agencies, or
being obligated to register under the Securities Act
of 1933 (both costly and time consuming), developers
may take several measures while planning condo-hotel
projects. These encompass:
- Refraining from setting rental
revenue expectations for prospective buyers - the
responsibility of generating financial projections
should lie with the interested purchasing parties.
- Instituting a third-party agent
to oversee the sales of condo units and distribute
rental program information, thereby relieving developers
from directly promoting rental programs.
- Permitting condo owners to either
rent their units to third parties, or not rent their
units at all.
- Allowing owners to appoint a rental
management company of choice to manage the rental
of their units. Although selecting a manager other
than the condo-hotels management company would
be counterproductive in attempting to effectively
maximize rental income.
The Condo
Manager/Operator
This type of development also provides an interesting
approach for hotel operators. In some respects, it
is similar to owning a hotel outright, because the
operator does own some real estate (the commercial
condominium units appurtenant to running a hotel);
however, individual condo buyers own the actual guest
rooms. As such, the overall cash investment by the
manager is not as great as that found in typical hotel
deals. To a certain extent, the manager is essentially
granted a long-term management contract, because a
long-term management relationship is expected to exist
with the condo owners.
What Are the Benefits
of Condo-Hotels?
The investment-oriented
condo-hotel concept has numerous advantages such as
greater product consistency, fewer ownership conflicts,
as owners do not live in the units, and a more even
distribution of revenues since units are a regular
part of the hotel room inventory.
The following table highlights the
pros and cons of condo-hotels from the standpoint
of owners, traveling consumers (guests), developers
and manager/operators.
PROS
& CONS
Condo Owners
Pros
- Fewer owner-management conflicts
with respect to unit consistency and revenue distributions
- Defrayed mortgage costs to buyers
- Larger units are more appealing
to buyers
- Vacation-hungry consumers are
turning toward condo-hotels for refuge
- Standardized furniture packages
already incorporated into the price
- The rental option allows owners
to take in extra dollars rather than boarding up
their apartments for six or more months a year,
and gives them access to many hotel perks
- Tax breaks associated with mortgages
and depreciation, as well as the cash flow from
renting-out the units, have made condo-hotel units
a profitable venture
- Owners share the rent revenue
with the hotel, a feature that can help them pay-off
a mortgage sooner
Cons
- Ownership of common areas
- Product homogeneity
- Low returns in highly-priced markets
Traveling
Consumers
Pros
- Offers an experience identical
to that of an upscale resort hotel, in terms of
services and amenities Room availability during
peak periods
- Availability of a wide variety
of services only found in hotels
Project Developers
Pros
- Immediate cash inflows from the
sale of condo-hotel units
- Initial capital investment in
the land and hotel building is recovered rapidly
(with a profit) as the individual units are sold
- Developer may retain the right
to act as the agent and collect a commission should
one unit owner wish to sell to another individual
eventually
- Mixed-use properties like condo-hotels
help solve the riddle of financing: they are attractive
to lenders because a significant portion of the
initial development costs can be recouped up front
from pre-sales
- Way to raise capital without going
to a traditional lender
- It's often easier to get financing
for condo-hotels than pure-play hotels
- Big-name hotel companies such
as Four Seasons, Fairmont and Ritz-Carlton are eager
to accommodate the condo-hotel model
- If the developer has its own management
company, there will be continuing income from the
management fee for room rentals, as well as income
from food & beverage and recreational areas
- Potential for exit strategies
(not yet fully proven in the marketplace)
Cons
- Reluctance of chain-affiliations
to professionally manage smaller-sized projects
- Conflicting development objectives;
there can be reduced control over future expansion
because of the desire of the current individual
owners to prohibit it for aesthetic reasons, or
from a fear that their income might be diluted as
more hotel units are added
- Unless the developer-owner agreement
prohibits it, there could be reduced revenue to
the developer if all owners decide to use their
units only during the peak season
- Complex accounting issues
- Issue of unregistered securities
in the U.S.
- If the units do not sell readily,
the developer must carry the burden of the losses
involved until all the units are sold
Property
Managers/Operators
Pros
- Amenity combinations increase
unit sales prices and hotel operating income as
they spread costs over a larger base
- Hotel company lending management
expertise
- Even when the hotel and condos
are in separate adjacent buildings, the combination
facilitates financing, management, marketing and
amenities
- Condo-hotel units offer additional
room inventory
- Marketing costs are significantly
lower than for time-share units
Cons
- Often excessive start-up and operating
costs
- Any appreciation in the value of
the condo units accrues to the individual owners
- Reduced opportunity to use leverage
- Must split hotel room revenues
with owners
- Possible loss of contract
Conclusion
Although still unknown how units will sell a second
or third time or during periods when hotel operations
are trending the wrong way, condo-hotels currently
offer a means to finance construction of new properties.
There is a large amount of underutilized hotel portfolio
in certain parts of the U.S. and numerous hotel owners
are interested in converting part or all of their
properties to condo-hotels.
There is little doubt that condo-hotels
are an intriguing approach to the development of lodging
properties, and as its use becomes more common in
the market, levels of understanding by both the lodging
industry and the condo-buying arena are projected
to increase.
***
Based in San Francisco, Anwar Elgonemy
draws on over 10 years of lodging investments experience.
Since joining Jones Lang LaSalle in 2001, he has been
involved in hotel advisory, transactions and debt
placement assignments. Elgonemy holds an MBA from
Thunderbird and a Bachelor of Science from The Glion
School in Switzerland.
Contact: Anwar Elgonemy
Vice President Jones Lang LaSalle One Front Street,
3rd Floor San Francisco, CA 94111 tel (415) 456 1709
fax (415) 421 7736 Anwar.Elgonemy@am.jll.com
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