Cape Town drowning in hotel beds

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Cape Town has a surplus of hotel beds, mainly at the 5-star level, and it is expected that there will be a major shake-out in this sector after the completion of the World Cup, and “only the fittest will survive”, reports Travel News Now.

Ten new hotels have opened their doors in Cape Town since last year, and include the newest, the Strand Towers, The Pepper Club, Taj Hotel Cape Town (the international monies have been well-spent on this building) , 15 on Orange (which has had money thrown at it by Protea Hotel’s African Pride Hotels), Crystal Towers Hotel, Coral International Cape Town (the first ‘dry’ hotel in the city), One&Only Cape Town (Sol Kerzner is the owner), Cape Royale Luxury Hotel, Harbour Bridge Hotel and Suites, and the Upper East Side Hotel.  Four further hotels are in the pipeline for the city.

If the new hotels were the only ones in town, other accommodation establishments would not feel the current accommodation demand decline and room oversupply so badly.  But a recent statistic shows that Cape Town currently has 84 hotels with 11 584 rooms in total, compared to the national totals of 596 hotels and 65 872 rooms. 

The oversupply of accommodation has led to price-cutting, as the hotels compete to attract declining numbers of visitors to the city.   On average, it is said that most accommodation establishments in Cape Town are 50 % full for the World Cup.

Chris von Ulmenstein, Whale Cottage Portfolio: www.whalecottage.com

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3 replies on “Cape Town drowning in hotel beds”

  1. Twitter Trackbacks for Cape Town drowning in hotel beds | Whale Cottage Portfolio Blog [whalecottage.com] on Topsy.com says:

    […] Cape Town drowning in hotel beds | Whale Cottage Portfolio Blog whalecottage.com/blog/cape-town/cape-town-drowning-in-hotel-beds/ – view page – cached Cape Town has a surplus of hotel beds, mainly at the 5-star level, and it is expected that there will be a major shake-out in this sector after the completion Tweets about this link Topsy.Data.Twitter.User[‘spitorswallow’] = {“photo”:”http://a1.twimg.com/profile_images/70473368/logo_normal.jpg”,”url”:”http://twitter.com/spitorswallow”,”nick”:”spitorswallow”}; spitorswallowHighly Influential: “RT @WhaleCottage Cape Town drowning in hotel beds http://wyn.cc/9hm3m > @ymartiny didn't u say you guys are choc and block? @WestinGrand ” 21 minutes ago retweet Topsy.Data.Twitter.User[‘allcapetown’] = {“photo”:”http://a3.twimg.com/profile_images/602016975/twitterProfilePhoto_normal.jpg”,”url”:”http://twitter.com/allcapetown”,”nick”:”allcapetown”}; allcapetown: “RT @WhaleCottage: Cape Town drowning in hotel beds: Cape Town has a surplus of hotel beds, mainly at the 5-star le… http://bit.ly/cWTVyA ” 52 minutes ago retweet Filter tweets […]

  2. Very strange statistics. I have manually in Excel counted closer to 16,000 rooms which is on par with the National Accommodation database. The national total are “beds” and include non-hotel accommodation.

    Cape Town has 29865 room across all accommodation type, of this over 16,000 in graded hotel accommodation, within a 50km radius.

    Here is the national accommodation database data.

    http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4021/4388120656_ed52b06c7b_o.jpg

    I fully agree we have an excess of rooms in the wrong categories. Demand will dictate supply, the smart quality establishments will align their prices, and service offering with what customer want.

  3. I have always believed staying in a hotel in your hometown for leisure was silly, until I saw the Whale cottage! unique, quirky, retro, just stunning, would love to overnight here!

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