mondrian

By Nadja Brandt Nov. 24 (Bloomberg) — The world’s largest hotel companies, stung by the industry’s biggest declines since the Great Depression, are trying to do for lodging what Ikea did for furniture: Offer fashionable products at low prices. Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc. , the third- biggest U.S. lodging company, is developing boutique hotels for frugal travelers that cost about $119 a night. That’s a far cry from the $399 to $639 at the company’s upscale W Hotels. InterContinental Hotels Group Plc is following a similar strategy with its boutique chain Hotel Indigo. Both companies are seeking to capitalize on a formula popularized in the 1980s, when small, individual properties with luxury amenities, designer interiors and quirky decor gained in popularity among travelers. This time, the demand for affordable, fashionable lodging was fueled by a global recession that left many people unable or unwilling to spend as much on vacations. “You mix the luxury elements into the lower-priced product and it’s fair to presume that what’s more value-driven is faring much better during the downturn and beyond,” said David Katz , an analyst at Oppenheimer & Co. in New York. The top four U.S. hotel companies reported revenue declines of 16 percent to 22 percent for the first nine months after rising unemployment dented consumer spending. Room rates will probably fall in 2010 for the second straight year as hotel owners offer discounts to lure customers, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. Spending Backlash Hotel operators are also battling a drop in business travel as companies try to save money. There has been a backlash against lavish spending by banks, insurers and carmakers that were given government financial assistance, discouraging them from using expensive hotels for conferences and conventions. The chains are designed for travelers who want a unique hotel experience without spending $500 a night. Starwood’s W Hotels, a boutique chain started in the late 1990s, are equipped with 400-thread count organic cotton Percale duvet covers by Swedish designer Anki Spets. The beds also have feather pillow-topped mattresses and leather headboards. Some lobbies are furnished with Philippe Starck pieces, such as Louis XV-style chairs that sell for $410 at the hotel’s store. At Starwood’s Aloft chain, the company’s limited-service boutique brand, things are more Spartan. In Rancho Cucamonga, California, the Aloft is contemporary without the designer labels. Bedding is 200-thread count and only a handful of managers maintain the property. A dozen or more service W locations, according to Kimberly Ervin, director of sales. Empty Refrigerators Instead of being stocked with expensive wines and spirits, the small refrigerators in each Aloft room are empty. The showers have shampoo and shower gel dispensers attached to the wall. Headboards are made of cork while a cowhide print, rather than the actual hide, graces the wall. The public spaces exude cool. Modern alternative pop echoes through the 3,500 square-foot (325 square-meter) lobby. The music can even be heard under water in the outdoor pool. The Aloft in Rancho Cucamonga offered rooms as low as $99 a night this week, according to the chain’s Web site. “The demand for alternatives to the sameness of chain hotels has been growing and will continue to grow,” said Marc Gordon , president of Morgans Hotel Group Co . “Limited-service boutiques speak to an increasing part of the population that prefer alternative hotels to large chain hotels.” Lobby Swing Those people may prefer to stay in stylish, quirky hotels without paying top prices, Gordon said. The Morgans’s namesake boutique hotel on Madison Avenue boasts an elegant lobby with armchairs and tables by 1930s designer Jean-Michel Frank. The lobby at its Mondrian hotel on Sunset Boulevard in West Hollywood features a swing. A standard room there for a mid-week stay was advertised at $275 a night, according to the Mondrian’s Web site. Average daily room rates at boutique hotels dropped 22 percent in January through September compared with a 9.1 percent decline across all U.S. hotel segments, according to Hendersonville, Tennessee-based Smith Travel Research . “Many of us have gotten used to staying at something more socially oriented, with a hip atmosphere and hip food and drink places,” said Oppenheimer’s Katz . “But what we are in the midst of is a re-pricing of hotel product.” Oversupply A lack of financing forced Starwood to cut its original goal of starting 500 Aloft hotels by 2012. The White Plains, New York-based company still expects to open 40 outlets by the end of this year and another 11 next year, including three in India, according to Brian McGuinness, senior vice president of specialty select brands. At IHG’s budget boutique chain, Hotel Indigo, rooms feature dark hardwood floors and tall beds loaded with decorative pillows. There are currently 34 hotels in operation and as many as 15 will be added in 2010, according to Janis Cannon , vice president of global brand management for Indigo. Prices at some of the properties range from $69 to $204 a night, according to the Hotel Indigo Web site. The increasing number of boutique hotels may swamp the market. Marriott International Inc. is working on its own full- service boutique chain, named Edition, and plans to open the first two in Waikiki, Hawaii, and Istanbul next year, according to Don Semmler, executive vice-president of brand management. More Brands “There’s a huge eruption of boutique brands,” said David Loeb , an analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co. “True luxury boutique hotels with impeccable service will come out as the winners, while those that look like luxury boutique hotels but are staffed with young, hip 20-something year-olds who are dressed in black and are indifferent to customers won’t.” Aloft plans to expand from suburban into urban markets and will open two hotels in New York City in 2010. Some may develop by taking over hotels in financial distress, Starwood’s McGuinness said. IHG aims to increase the number of Indigo hotels to 600, according to Cannon. “We’ve seen a democratization of design with Ikea, Pottery Barn, and Crate & Barrel,” McGuinness said. “Gen Y is the big story. Design is something they have been introduced to early on at relatively lower price points.” To contact the reporter on this story: Nadja Brandt in Los Angeles at nbrandt@bloomberg.net .

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Frugal U.S. Travelers Skip $500 a Night Hotels for Cheap Boutique Lodging

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By Scott Reyburn Oct. 24 (Bloomberg) — A Piet Mondrian painting priced between $30 million and $40 million and a $24-million Pablo Picasso work were on reserve at France’s biggest art fair as wealthy collectors took time to make decisions. Dealers at the Foire Internationale d’Art Contemporain , or FIAC, in Paris last night said that it took longer to complete sales this year than in 2008 because some billionaires needed convincing that the time is again right to invest in art. Mondrian’s 3-foot-3-inch high abstract, “Composition With Blue, Red and Yellow,” presented by the New York-based gallery PaceWildenstein , was on hold, with the sale yet to be confirmed. Some owners of high-value works of art are looking to make private sales through dealers, rather than risk offering works at public auction, where prices and failures are recorded on databases. The 2-foot-8-inch high Picasso, titled “Femme ecrivant,” had been consigned to FIAC by a U.S.-based collector and was being presented by the Chicago- and New York-based Richard Gray Gallery . “Twenty million-dollar deals don’t happen in a few minutes,” gallery director Paul Gray said. The potential buyer’s reserve on the 1934 canvas of Picasso’s mistress Marie- Therese Walter came during the first few hours of FIAC’s VIP preview on Oct. 21. Gray is one of 10 international dealers exhibiting 24 museum-quality works in the new “Modern Project” section of the fair, held under the cast-iron and glass dome of the Grand Palais. Demand Declines FIAC follows Frieze in the U.K., where dealers last week reported more sales than last year. Demand for art has fallen since Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. collapsed in September 2008. Auction sales of contemporary art have shrunk up to 80 percent, and prices dropped by more than 50 percent in some cases, the London-based research company ArtTactic said in a report last month. Gray’s gallery is also offering at the “Modern Project” a 1929 Alexander Calder wire sculpture, “Portrait of Eduard Penkala,” that has been in another U.S. collection for 20 years. “This work wouldn’t have appeared for sale if it hadn’t been for this exhibition at FIAC,” said Gray in an interview. “It should give the auction houses something to think about.” Mondrian’s painting, dating from 1935 to 1942, is one of the artist’s last ‘transitional’ paintings left in private hands. A 1922 abstract of his sold for a record 21.6 million euros ($32.4 million) at Christie’s International’s Yves Saint Laurent auction at the Grand Palais in February. The FIAC Mondrian was put on hold for a French collector, said Eleonore Malingue, director of the Paris-based dealer Malingue , which originally proposed the “Modern Project.” Bernard Arnault Speaking on behalf of the exhibiting dealers, she said that the work was priced at a similar level to the Yves Saint Laurent painting. When asked to confirm talk that the Mondrian had been reserved by Bernard Arnault , chairman of LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA , Malingue said in an interview, “I heard so too.” When contacted by telephone, PaceWildenstein was not immediately available to confirm this information. Frantisek Kupta’s 1913 painting, “Architecture Philosophique,” presented by Galerie Louis Carre & Cie with a price of 5 million euros, was another work to attract a formal reserve, said Malingue. “‘The Modern Project’ is a very important initiative not just for the participating dealers, but for the profession in general,” said Malingue. “We want to show how strong we can be in the fight against the auction houses.” Among the other works available, Malingue is showing Fernand Leger’s 1921 “Le Grand Dejeuner,” priced between $20 million and $25 million. New York-based L + M Arts is offering Francis Bacon’s 1966 “Portrait of George Dyer Talking,” priced about $40 million. Neither Malingue nor Gray was able to say that any of the 24 works exhibited in the “Modern Project” had attracted a confirmed sale by 5 p.m. on the third day of FIAC. The fair closes on Oct. 25. ( Scott Reyburn writes about the art market for Bloomberg News. Opinions expressed are his own.) To contact the writer on the story: Scott Reyburn in Paris at sreyburn@hotmail.com .

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$40 Million Mondrian Reserved as Collectors Mull Purchases at Paris Fair