Four Seasons Hotel in central Seoul
Globally renowned hospitality companies, including Aman, Rosewood and IHG Group, are rushing to South Korea to launch new five-star luxury hotels in Seoul and other major cities to ride on the tourist boom post-pandemic.
According to the hospitality industry on Sunday, Marriott International Inc., the world’s No. 1 hotel chain, will take over the management rights of the InterContinental Hotel Seoul in Samseong-dong, Seoul and open a new hotel under Marriott’s premium brand of Westin in the second half of this year.
Currently, Marriott operates two five-star Westin hotels in Korea in partnership with Shinsegae Group – one in central Seoul and the other in Haeundae, Busan.
Marriott usually doesn’t open two Westin Hotels in a city but has decided to launch another five-star hotel in Seoul to meet growing demand, industry officials said.
IHG Group’s voco hotel room in Myeongdong, Seoul
Aman Group, a Swiss-headquartered multinational hospitality firm, is slated to open a luxury hotel under the Janu brand near Seoul Station by 2027. The Janu Seoul will become Aman’s sixth luxury hotel under the premium brand across the globe.
Rosewood Hotels & Resorts, owned by Hong Kong-based Rosewood Hotel Group, plans to open a 250-room hotel at the Parkside Seoul, a mixed-use neighborhood to be built on the site of the United Nations Command in Itaewon, Seoul.
Singapore’s Banyan Group, globally known for Banyan Tree Club & Spa, is scheduled to open a Homm Hotels & Resorts in Sokcho, Gangwon Province, in July – Banyan’s first in Korea and seventh globally under the Homm brand.
InterContinental Hotels Group, known as IHG Hotels & Resorts, will soon open a luxury hotel under its voco brand in Myeongdong, central Seoul, in addition to its already operating voco Seoul Gangnam – a posh district in the capital city.
The Unbound Collection by Hyatt and European giant Accor’s Grand Mercure Ambassador Hotel in Magok are expected to begin operations by then of this year.
InterContinental Hotel Seoul at COEX
FILL THE VOID LEFT BY THAAD DISPUTE, PANDEMIC
Analysts said Korea’s hotel industry is set to enjoy a boom following rigorous restructuring in the wake of Beijing’s retaliation against Korea’s decision to deploy THAAD, a US air defense system, in Korea – a potential military threat to the mainland, and the global COVID-19 pandemic.
“Hotels mushroomed in Korea from 2014 to 2018 with Chinese tourists flocking to the country. The bubble, however, busted, followed by the pandemic. Now, another boom is looming and hotel operators are moving quickly to seize new growth opportunities post-pandemic,” said an industry official.
A wind of change began blowing last year with foreign tourists resuming their trips to Korea en masse.
According to the Korea Culture and Tourism Institute, foreign travelers to Korea have steadily increased from 970,000 in 2021 to 3.2 million in 2022 and 11 million in 2023.
The institute expects the number of incoming foreigners to reach 20.5 million next year and 22.69 million in 2026.
Gimbap served at a luxury hotel in Seoul
In recent weeks, hotels and casinos in Korea said their rooms are fully booked because of tourists mostly from Japan and China.
Seoul was among the top five Asian travel destinations along with Tokyo, Bangkok, Hong Kong and Taipei during the holidays in early May, according to Trip.com Group, a Singapore-based online travel agency,
KOREAN HOTELS POST RECORD EARNINGS
Korea’s homegrown hotels are already enjoying the return of tourists following years of COVID-19 restrictions.
Lotte Hotels & Resorts, the country’s largest hotel chain operator, posted record sales of 1.3 trillion won ($957 million) on an all-time high operating profit of 71.2 billion won in 2023. Lotte had been in the red for seven straight years from 2015.
Josun Hotels & Resorts, owned by Korea’s retail giant Shinsegae Inc., saw its 2023 operating profit double to 40.3 billion won from the previous year’s 22.2 billion won.
Hotel Shilla Co., affiliated with Samsung Group, posted record sales of 634.7 billion won with an operating profit of 68.7 billion won last year.
A luxury room at Hotel Shilla
Analysts said Seoul lacks top-notch hotels – a magnet for global hotel operators to build new ones.
According to Forbes Travel Guide, dubbed the hotel version of the Michelin Guide, only two hotels in Seoul were graded five-star hotels this year – Four Seasons Hotel and Shilla Hotel.
That compares with 22 in Macau, 20 in London, 12 in Paris and nine in Tokyo.
Data from global market research firm Statista show the sales revenue of Korea’s hotel industry dropped to 4.45 trillion won in 2020 from a high of 9 trillion won seen before the outbreak of the pandemic.
However, Korea’s hotel industry is forecast to reach over 12 trillion won by 2025 after posting 10.2 trillion won in 2023, according to Statista.
By Young Chan Song
0full@hankyung.com
In-Soo Nam edited this article.