Hotel Owner April 2017 | Page 7

WELCOME | TRADE TALK | PRODUCT NEWS | HOTEL CONCEPT | COMMENT | STATISTICS | FRONT OF HOUSE | QUALITY IN TOURISM | LAUNCHPAD | Q&A PROPERTY RENOVATIONS Chester is ‘number one’ hot spot for Cornwall’s hotel development Jamaica Inn set Chester is the number one hot spot in the indicators and a positive RevPAR for expansion UK for hotel development, according to trend, while Oxford came third - the latest UK Hotels Market Index from Colliers International. In an analysis of 34 locations across the UK for hotel development and acquisitions, Chester was ranked top mainly due to its good occupancy levels, an upward revenue per available room (RevPAR) trend and a low active pipeline. The report uses nine key performance indicators to score each of the 34 locations a figure from one to five. These include land site prices; build costs; market appetite; valuation exit yields; room occupancy; average daily rate; room occupancy rates; fouryear RevPAR trend; active pipeline as a percentage of current supply and construction costs. York ranked second in the list, moving up four places from last year, owing to good hotel performance improving its ranking by 25 spots from last year - due to an increase in buyer demand interest, a low active pipeline in the city and good hotel market performance. London continues to be the largest market and is still the top performing in terms of RevPAR. It also has the most active pipeline in terms of rooms expected to come to the market over the next two years (13,499). However, given that the index punishes high land costs, high construction costs, sluggish hotel growth in recent years and a strong active pipeline, some markets rank lower than expected and as such, the UK’s capital city has fallen out of the top 10, having experienced a drop in RevPAR (1.2%), a large development pipeline as well as high land costs. OPENINGS Luxury hotel opens in Cambridge A new luxury hotel, Tamburlaine, has opened in Cambridge city centre. Named after a play by Elizabethan- era playwright, Christopher Marlowe, the 155-room hotel is the first UK opening from Dublin-based O’Callaghan Hotel Group. The hotel’s double-height lobby includes a feature staircase and overlooking library, with the ground floor also featuring four different food and drink areas including a brasserie, horseshoe-shaped cocktail bar, colonial- style ‘Garden Room’ serving afternoon tea, and a deli called ‘Steam’. Meanwhile, the hotel will feature five conference rooms and a library that can also be hired for drinks receptions and events. Tamburlaine’s general manager, Zac April 2017 Pearse, who has previously managed a number of leading London hotels, most recently Malmaison’s flagship property in Charterhouse Square, said the company was “very excited” to be opening the hotel. “We want locals to see Tamburlaine as their hotel - a place where they can come for a special dinner with family, cocktails or afternoon tea with friends, or grab a coffee and sandwich from our deli on their way to the station,” he said. The illustrious North Cornwall smuggling inn, the Jamaica Inn hotel, is set to undergo an expansion under its new owner. The world famous property on Bodmin Moor was acquired by Allen Jackson in early 2014, and is now part-way through a major redevelopment programme that has so far seen the refurbishment of its 20 rooms, the creation of a new £750,000 kitchen as well as a new farm shop. The development of a further 16 bedrooms is now underway and later this year will see the creation of a large round function suite in stone and slate, based on the ancient roundhouses in the area. The function room will hold up to 250 guests and be one of the largest venues in Cornwall, according to Jackson. Jackson told Hotel Owner: “Buying Jamaica Inn two and a half years ago has given me an unusual opportunity of expan ding what is an iconic Cornish landmark. “Cornwall Council approved my plans in just 11 weeks - a huge new kitchen and new farm shop have been built and the building of 16 new rooms has just started, taking the inn to 36 rooms. A circular 250-guest function suite completes the enlargement next winter.” The 18th Century coaching inn, which was the setting for Daphne du Maurier’s 1936 novel Jamaica Inn and Alfred Hitchcock’s 1939 film of the same title, has also opened its ‘Smugglers Museum’ 365 days a year. The museum houses an extensive collection of artefacts - including the skull of a man apparently chained in a cellar and left to die. www.hotelowner.co.uk 7