The following appeared in yesterday's Inquirer. It projects 1500 new  hotel 
rooms in Philadelphia by 2010, and two new hotels in University City (see  
boldface emphasis added). Whether the two University City projects  includes or 
are in addition to the hotel to be built by Drexel and the  hotel portion of 
Cira2 Walnut Street Tower, I don't know. With all this, at an  economy of 
scale, 
ability to handle traffic and parking, and amenities suited to  a large hotel, 
it's likely that they will be able to offer accommodations for  less than the 
Campus Inn. And... the locations are better for the hospitals and  for public 
transportation.
 
Luissenhop's folly is looking like even more of a loser (for the community  
... not for Luissenhop & David Adelman, who stand to grab a quick buck from  
it, backstopped by the 800-lb gorilla, at the community's expense) than it did  
before.
 
At your service and ready for a diatribe,
Al Krigman   
____________________________________


Hotels to bloom in the city, By Tom Belden, Inquirer Staff Writer, 1/14/08

A  long-expected building boom in Center City hotels spurred by expansion of 
the  Convention Center is about to begin. Unless the real estate credit crunch 
slows  it down.

Details have been revealed about four new hotels  totaling 800 rooms, but 
developers are well along in planning construction of at  least 1,500 more 
rooms, 
according to hoteliers, consultants and convention  officials. The supply of 
rooms would grow by more than 20 percent if all the  developers' plans come to 
fruition. 

But consultants who  monitor the market cautioned that developers and hotel 
operators are making  their plans at a time when lenders have cut back sharply 
on commercial real  estate loans.

"The big 'what if' right now is whether anything is going  to get done with 
the current credit markets," said Warren Marr, a director in  the Philadelphia 
office of the PricewaterhouseCoopers L.L.P. consulting firm.  "There are so 
many creditors now that are not making loans."

The tight  credit market could affect the large, costly projects that don't 
have financing  locked up yet. But for some developers of smaller projects, 
financing is not  expected to be a problem.

"Before the Convention Center [expansion]  opens, I don't think it's prudent 
to do a big one," said Jay Shah, chief  executive officer of 
Philadelphia-based Hersha Group, which is firming up plans  for midsize hotels. 

Several of the lodgings would be north and west of  City Hall and within a 
few blocks of the planned Broad Street entrance of the  enlarged Convention 
Center, which is scheduled for completion in late 2010.  

"There could be 2,300 rooms entering the market around  2010," said Peter R. 
Tyson, vice president in PKF Consulting's Philadelphia  office.

The construction is planned as existing hotels are  coming off their two best 
years in almost a decade, with demand driving up the  average rate charged to 
a record $169 a day in 2007, according to PKF  Consulting. 

Center City hotels, which have one-quarter of the region's  40,000 rooms, 
enjoyed an occupancy rate of more than 74 percent last year, the  best 
performance since 1998, Tyson said. 

In addition to demand from  conventions and business travelers, hotels sold 
an estimated 100,000 room nights  to visitors drawn by the King Tut exhibition 
at the Franklin Institute, said  Bill Fitzgerald, president of the Greater 
Philadelphia Hotel Association. He was  citing statistics kept by the Greater 
Philadelphia Tourism Marketing  Corp.

"Getting a room in a hotel right now is tough," said Jack Ferguson,  
executive vice president and chief salesmen at the Philadelphia Convention and  
Visitors Bureau. The healthy revenue produced by high occupancy also has  
prompted 
Center City hotel owners to budget $230 million in 2007 and 2008 for  
renovations and improvements designed to keep them competitive when new 
lodgings  open, 
Ferguson said. 

The high occupancy levels are expected to take a  big dip - into the 
mid-60-percent range - once 2,300 more rooms are open, the  lodging consultants 
said. 
"It's been two very good years in part because there  haven't been any 
additions to the supply" since 2001, Tyson said.

The  hotel projects for which developers have publicly identified the lodging 
chain  involved are:

A 202-room Le Meridien hotel in the historic former YMCA  building at 1421 
Arch St, scheduled to open in early 2009.

The Hotel  Palomar, a project of Kimpton Hotel Group, with 235 rooms, in the 
Architects  Building on the northeast corner of 17th and Sansom Streets. The 
boutique hotel  is to be ready in fall 2009.

A 92-room limited-service Four Points by  Sheraton hotel on the Northwest 
corner of 12th and Race Streets, which should  open this summer.

A luxury W Hotel, one of the Starwood chain's brands,  with 275 rooms, on the 
southwest corner of 12th and Arch Streets, facing the  Convention Center's 
existing entrance.

No hotel operators or brand names  have been identified yet for the largest 
projects on the drawing boards, 900  rooms in two properties on the southwest 
corner of Broad and Race  Streets.

The Broad and Race location, across from the second entrance to  the 
Convention Center once it's expanded, is now the headquarters of Parkway  
Corp., the 
city's largest parking garage operator and one of the developers of  the W 
Hotel. 

Consultants and other officials said the hotels planned at  Broad and Race 
won't be operated by Renaissance, the Marriott division that last  year was 
widely expected to run it.

The Vine Street hotel is to be part  of condominium and retail development 
that will include a new Whole Foods  supermarket.

Shah, whose Hersha Group includes separate hotel  real estate and operating 
companies, is working on two hotels in Center City and  two in University City. 
He said he wasn't ready to identify the brand names of  the hotels, which all 
will have 200 or fewer rooms.

Shah  said Hersha, which owns 75 hotels, including more than a dozen in the  
Philadelphia region, plans developments that will be "driven less by demand 
from  the Convention Center but what we think are market conditions for hotels 
of the  right size."

Because of the tight credit market, he added, "pulling off a  large 
group-hotel project is a lot more challenging that it was just six months  ago."

Kimpton, the San Francisco-based operator of 41 stylish boutique  hotels, is 
thinking along the same lines about Center City's market prospects.  Its Hotel 
Palomar will appeal to business travelers and well-to-do vacationers  who 
like upscale surroundings, but it won't be heavily dependent on convention  
business, said Joe Long, Kimpton's executive vice president, acquisitions.  

At the same time, expansion of the Convention Center "was certainly a  factor 
in our planning," Long said. "It has a ripple effect for all the hotels.  . . 
. The high end of the convention market will also be looking for high-end  hot
els."

But for another hotel operator, HEI Hotels & Resorts of  Norwalk, Conn., 
proximity to the Convention Center was key to its decision to  acquire the Le 
Meridien hotel once it's completed next year, said Steve Mendell,  executive 
vice 
president, acquisitions and development. Le Meridien is a luxury  brand of 
Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc., which also operates the  Sheraton and 
Westin chains.

HEI already runs the Westin and Embassy  Suites hotels in Center City, so "we 
know the market very well," Mendell said.  "But neither of those is really 
close to the Convention Center. We thought it  made sense for us to be really 
close by the center, and the expansion is a very  important part of our 
strategy."



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