The Ritzy Route to Condo Ownership
By Julie Bennett
Reprinted from The
Wall Street Journal, February 1, 2006
On Sunday evening, Jan. 22, a contingent
of 50 celebrities and champion poker players attending
the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, gathered
in a tent to play poker. At the end of a game that
lasted until 3 a.m., winner Phil Hellmuth was handed
the grand prize: a fully furnished $700,000 studio
in the W Las Vegas, a condo hotel that hasn't been
built yet.
Most baby boomers can't play cards
like Mr. Hellmuth -- who has won the World Series
of Poker 10 times -- but they do aspire to a similar
prize. Condo hotel units, or condotels -- suites in
high-end hotels and resorts you buy and rent out when
you're not using them -- are the hottest segment of
the vacation home market.
Joel Greene, president of Condo Hotel
Center in Miami, a real estate brokerage firm, says,
"Condo hotels began in Miami in the 1980s, went
dormant, then resurfaced about six years ago. Since
Miami's built up, condo hotels are moving into Fort
Lauderdale, Orlando, Tampa and other Florida towns,
resort areas around the country and even into U.S.
cities."
Lodging Econometrics, a lodging industry
research firm in Portsmouth, N.H., reports there are
105 condo hotel projects under development in the
U.S., with 32 due to open this year and 27 to be completed
in 2007.
Of these, 75% are new construction;
the other 25% are conversions of traditional hotels
into condo suites. Destination Development Co. of
Los Angeles, an affiliate of the Lowe Hospitality
Group, for example, recently converted the 404-room
Resort at Squaw Creek in Lake Tahoe, Calif., into
236 condo hotel units.
For developers, condo hotels are a
financing vehicle. Conventional financing for large
hotel projects dried up during the industry's post
9/11 slump. By preselling their rooms to individual
investors, developers can again afford to build upscale
resorts. And because individuals can obtain mortgages
for condo apartments, and not hotel rooms, all new
condo hotel units have kitchens and dining areas.
For baby boomers, like Sherri and
Erin O'Boyle of Henderson, Nev., condo hotels are
both vacation homes and investments, whose rental
income may defray part of the cost.
In 2001, Mrs. O'Boyle says, she and
her husband paid $235,000 for a studio unit in Viera,
a condo hotel in Lake Las Vegas Resort, a community
built around a 320-acre lake just 17 miles east of
the Las Vegas strip.
Their unit was completed in 2003 and
they've been enjoying it for weekend getaways ever
since. Comparable units now sell for $400,000, Mrs.
O'Boyle says. So far, revenue from renting out their
unit hasn't generated enough money to cover their
expenses, such as homeowner association dues, taxes
and insurance, but Mrs. O'Boyle says, "If our
unit were rented out more, we wouldn't be able to
use it as much."
Another appeal of condo hotels is
the ease of ownership. Rob Lowe, president of Destination
Development, says: "The baby boomer generation
is at an age when building a custom vacation home
is very complex, time-consuming and frustrating, especially
if it's in a remote location. They'd rather buy a
turnkey unit, and let someone else take care of it."
Condo hotel projects are so popular
that many sell out long before they're built. Chicago's
Trump International Hotel and Tower won't be finished
until 2008, but sales director Tere Proctor says that
72% of the project's 286 condo hotel units are already
sold, at prices that range from $815,000 for a studio
with a small kitchen and bathroom to $3 million for
a 2,200-square-foot two-bedroom unit with a large
living room, dining room and two and a half bathrooms.
Buyers must also pay $45,000 to $90,000
for upscale furniture, plasma televisions, linens
and china. This cost is contingent, however, on whether
you want the hotel to rent the unit for you. If it's
just for your own occupancy, you can furnish it anyway
you please.
A spokesman for Intrawest, a Vancouver,
Canada-based developer of resorts in Canada and the
U.S., says his company sold 170 preconstruction condo
hotel units in Luna di Lusso, a Tuscany-inspired village
in the Lake Las Vegas Resort, in just four hours.
Mr. Greene of the Condo Hotel Center says his Web
site listing condo hotel projects gets 50,000 visits
each month. "I hear from more buyers than I can
respond to," he says.
Steve Taggart, vice president of sales
and marketing for Red Leaves Resort in Muskoka, Ontario,
says units are selling quickly in The Rousseau, a
JW Marriott resort hotel that will open in the spring
of 2008. Roman Talkowski, a Burlington, Ontario-based
sales executive, says he purchased a unit because
"Muskoka is only two hours north of Toronto and
the area is beautiful. I'd love a cottage there, but
I only get three weeks of vacation, so I may as well
own a unit that can be rented out the rest of the
year."
Denver attorney Richard Robinson says
he bought two preconstruction units in Paraiso del
Mar, a residential resort community in La Paz, Baja
California, Mexico. "My wife and I will use one,"
he says, "and when our adult daughters can't
use the other one, I'll put it into the rental pool.
My goal is not to make a profit, but to cover the
carrying costs on that unit."
One downside of condo hotels is that
no one can tell Mr. Robinson and other buyers if they'll
ever hit their financial goals. Jim Butler, a hospitality
attorney with Jeffer, Mangels, Butler and Marmaro
LLP in Los Angeles, says if developers sell units
as income generating investments, the Securities and
Exchange Commission could classify condo hotels as
securities and subject them to stringent regulations.
Condo hotel salespeople, therefore, can only mention
that you "may have the opportunity to place your
unit into a rental arrangement," Mr. Butler says.
Since condo hotels are so new, that
rental arrangement is not standardized, says Kim Richards,
president of the Athens Group, a developer of luxury
hotels and resorts in Phoenix.
Condo hotel unit owners, for example,
receive anywhere from 30% to 60% of the proceeds whenever
their unit is rented, depending on each resort's policy
and operating budget. And the allocation of rooms
-- deciding which unit will be rented out whenever
a hotel guest arrives "could lead to problems
down the road," Mr. Richards warns.
Grant Sabroff, senior vice president
of Boykin Management Company of Cleveland, manager
of the Pink Shell Beach Resort & Spa in Ft. Meyers
Beach and two other condo hotels in Florida, says
Boykin uses a computer system "to make sure there's
an equal and fair rotation in how units are rented
throughout each resort."
If you're thinking of becoming a condo
hotel owner, industry insiders and unit owners suggest
you consider the following:
- Buy a unit in a good franchise,
with name recognition and a world-wide reservation
system, says Mr. Greene of Condo Hotel Center. "The
more bodies the hotel operator can bring in, the
greater the likelihood that their rental dollars
will cover the resort's expenses."
- If you're buying in a beach area,
buy an oceanfront unit, not a cheaper one a few
blocks from the water, advises Mr. Greene.
- Your turnkey unit must look like
all the other units in the hotel, which means you'll
have to vacation surrounded by impersonal hotel
furnishings, says Mrs. O'Boyle, the Henderson, Nev.,
buyer.
- Units rented to hotel guests suffer
wear and tear. Expect special assessments to replace
the carpet, drapes, bedspreads and even the furniture
every few years.
- If you buy a condotel in a popular
resort area, be prepared for celebrity neighbors.
While visiting the W Las Vegas tent at the Sundance
Festival, Paris Hilton reserved a penthouse unit
and the rapper Jadakiss was one of several musicians
thinking about buying one, too, according to a spokeswoman.
|