Room at the inn

The Chinese hotel industry experiences a building boom, prompting fears of oversupply

China is witnessing an unprecedented boom in hotel construction that is changing the face of the global hospitality industry. The country will have the highest number of hotels under construction and room openings in the world for each of the next two years, according to figures released last week by Lodging Econometrics, the US-based hotel retail estate market analysts. It has some 1,182-hotel projects under construction, compared to just 754 in Europe as a whole.
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InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG), based in Denham, Buckinghamshire in the UK, has also revealed it wants to increase the number of its rooms in China eightfold over the next 20 years.
The buoyant mood of the China hotels sector was reflected last week at the Asia Hotel Investment Conference, held in the splendor of The Venetian Hotel in Macao, itself the largest hotel building in Asia.
Keith Humphreys, executive director of CBRE Hotels, Asia, part of the global commercial property and real estate services advisory company, says it is impossible to quantify the size of China's hotels market.
"I don't think anyone could do it. There are cities that even I have never heard of. The domestic travel market is so huge and (hotel) developers do not reveal their plans until the last minute," he says.
"We are very bullish about the sector as a whole. Just the sheer size of China means you are going to get a lot of activity in the hospitality sector."
One of the big drivers of hotel development in China has been major international events such as the Beijing Olympics, the Shanghai Expo and the 16th Asian Games in Guangzhou last year.
This has led to significant overcapacity in the high-end five-star hotels market, which has led to low room occupancy rates and has driven down room tariffs to a quarter of the level commanded by similar properties in Europe (see inside cover story).
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