Updated 7/13/22
Click on hotel name for wiki article.
Numbers indicate rooms built, under construction and proposed.* closed from 1988-2007
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Updated 7/13/22
Click on hotel name for wiki article.
Numbers indicate rooms built, under construction and proposed.* closed from 1988-2007
Very interesting point...
Before MAPS, there was ONE downtown hotel, the Sheraton (the Skirvin was long shuttered).
There are now 12 either finished or under construction with seven more on the drawing boards.
From a 9/26/13 study released by Smith Travel Research:
OKC has 22,902 rooms in 239 properties which through 8 months of 2013 were 68% occupied at an average daily rate of $78.57.
Tulsa has 14,404 rooms in 148 properties which through 8 months of 2013 were 58% occupied at an average daily rate of $75.19.
The entire state has 62,205 rooms in 818 properties which through 8 months of 2013 were 63% occupied.
From the downtown hotel summary in the article above, there are 580 rooms under construction in the central core with another 1,340 proposed.
There is also the 9-story Hilton ready for construction at I-40 and Meridian and two more 125+ room hotels under construction at Meridian & the Oklahoma River.
It appears OKC's total room inventory is going to increase by more than 10% within the next two years.
http://naisullivangroup.com/OKNews/T...strygrowth.pdf
Here is more interesting statistical information regarding OKC area hotels...
In the 1992 Census of Service Industries, it showed the OKC MSA with only 9,509 rooms in 110 hotels/motels.
The first MAPS passed in 1993 and now we have 22,902 rooms in 239 properties -- that is a 141% increase in rooms in just 20 years, with lots more on the way.
During that same 20-year period, the OKC MSA population grew about 29%.
Updated the summary in the article above to include the just-announced 21c Museum Hotel.
This is probably unrelated to this growth in hotel rooms but who knows in the future. As the central core of OKC reurbanizes one of the things that gets cut from the housing equation is the extra bedroom. The idea of down sizing from 4 bedrooms to 3 bedrooms has been a subject in our house and I finally convinced my wife the monthly mortgage different between a 3 bedroom house and 4 bedroom house is big enough that we would could pay for the hotel room for visiting friends and family instead of mortgaging the extra room. It doesn't make sense to pay for a spare bedroom for 30 years when we only need it a few days a year at most.
This is exactly what we do. I've got 2.5 bedrooms (one is so tiny that it has a love seat sleeper sofa in it) and more guests than my house can hold this weekend. So I'll spend $500 on a hotel room for my daughter. I spend about $1,000 a year or so, a lot less than we'd pay for more square feet.
When we go visit people we stay in a hotel regardless if our host has room for us or not. It's just easier, even if it does cost us more.
JTF, ... I think you are on to something here. From a civic POV, we should ALL downsize by 1/2. Make our older kids "get their own place after graduation of college". And have all Holidays at the new hotels downtown. We could all save money, less stress, and we don't have to cook or clean up the mess. I'm in.
Updated the article to reflect the openings of the Ambassador and the Hilton Garden Inn.
Updated the article with a narrative update which will be done on a quarterly basis.
Interesting stats on downtown occupancy rates from this article in OKC.biz:
okcBIZ: Downtown adds two new hotelsQuote:
In the first two months of 2014, Carrier said Oklahoma City bested the national average for hotel occupancy in a traditionally sluggish time. Hotel occupancy around the nation was at 56 percent. Oklahoma City as a whole was at 58.4 occupancy during that period. In downtown alone, occupancy was in excess of 72 percent during January and February.
I updated the summary at the top of the page to reflect the addition of Canopy.
That brings the downtown hotel total to 19; 11 finished, 2 under construction, and 6 more proposed. There is also a very good chance First National Center will include a hotel as well.
Quite a change from the late 80's when there was only ONE downtown hotel: the Sheraton. The Renaissance opened in 1999 but there wasn't another new hotel in the area until the Courtyard by Marriott in 2003.
Impressive as the construction continues on the 194 room Embassy Suites in the OU Medical Center zone. There are several construction projects in at area.
Yesterday, I noticed some kind of construction activity atop the VA Hospital.
Updated the summary at the top to move 21c in the the Under Construction category.
Hope to soon add First National Center when more details are revealed (number of rooms, flag, etc.).
I updated the article at the top of the page to reflect the opening of the Embassy Suites.
We now have 2,389 rooms in 13 hotels in the urban core, with many more planned.
Interesting to note: 21c is the only hotel currently under construction, with lots more planned.
I've updated the summary article to include the room count for the proposed Fairfield Inn in the Core to Shore area.
4,276 rooms now built, under construction or planned.
Pardon my ignorance on this, but where is the AC by Marriott going?
5000 is the magic mark for downtown IMO, with a total of 6500 as the magic mark for the core. About half way there!
The more reputable hotels Oklahoma City can acquire in its downtown-Bricktown portfolio; more events we will be able to attact to make for a viable convention center & conference hotel that functions.
Six thousand (6,000-plus) hotel rooms in the area of the Chesapeake Energy Arena will make us eligible for the NBA All Star Game Classic & week attractions. We will need to continue with upgrades to the Chesapeake Energy Arena. Adam Silver says Cavs? arena needs upgrades before Cleveland can host All-Star Weekend | ProBasketballTalk
NBA All Star Game Classic is accepting bids for the 2017 & 2018 years; Charlotte, Portland, Cleveland & Memphis are among hopefuls.
At the rate we add new hotels & rooms to the CBD area, Oklahoma City could be ready after 2020.
Updated the article at the top of the page to reflect:
2 proposed Core to Shore hotels now dead due to new location of convention center.
Shifted Canopy to the Brickworks site and added new hotel (flag TBD) at Oklahoma & Sheridan.
Several other downtown hotel deals currently in the works but too early to list.
I undated the article in the first post of this thread to show that there are now 2,770 built hotel rooms in 16 hotels in the downtown area, with 563 under construction, 1,184 proposed for a total of 4,517 rooms in 25 hotels.
Reminder that until 1999 we only had one hotel in all of downtown, the Sheraton.
What are the boundaries you're using? Strictly downtown or are you including for example the 4 on the other side of 235 from Bricktown?