Re: More hotels needed downtown???
Correct.
The 2000 Census had OKC Metropolitan Statistical Area at 1.15 million residents. Since then, the rules changed - allowing OKC Metro to absorb El Reno, Guthrie, Newcastle and Noble County and Lincoln County into its metro area. That alone pushed us near 1.2 mil.
The 2003 estimate for OKC is 523,200 while the metro area is 1.25 mil. That is a reasonable increase and more than takes into account the increase in city pop as well as the "newly defined" metro area. So, OKC Metro is assumed to have over 1.2 million residents given the old one had 1.15 mil during 2000 census (and the city and metro has grown and the defined area has also grown).
Back to the thread
Yes, I do hope OKC will continue to attract downtown hotels and the professional and collegiate offerings they bring. I was sort-of worried when I used to read articles city leaders would say about our downtown hotel situation "becoming major league" with 1500 hotel rooms. I would say, PLEASE! Major downtowns have at least 3500 hotel rooms of many different varieties - Upscale, luxury, economy, business, extended stay, no frills, all suites, family, so on.
I think OKC needs to shoot at least for 3000 downtown hotel rooms of every variety, not just all upscale like the Renaissance, not just business like the Courtyard by Marriott, and not just professional and family like Westin/Sheraton is vying for. We need luxury hotels, more upscale, more business, some extended stay, so on . . downtown as well.
If the average hotel has roughly 240 rooms and we already have 1400 available + in the works, then we would need to build at least 6 more hotels. Honestly, I would say these six should be upscale and business 3 and 4 star, like Marriott signature, Hilton signature, Holiday Inn, Sheraton or Westin in addition to the one on Broadway.
Courtyard will probably be rated as a 4 star in the next announcement (currently they have no ranking due to being so new). Renaissance is a 4 star. Westin is rated at 3. Hilton Skirvin will be a 4 star, although I hoped they would reconstruct the Hilton Skirvin as a 5 star luxury. Embassy Suites would probably be a 3 star hotel given it is in Bricktown on the canal (more family oriented than business).
So we need a few 5 star hotels downtown (currently Oklahoma has NONE), more 4 star luxury, business, convention, upscale boutique, and trendy, more 3 star family, economy. Even some 2 and 1 stars to accomodate everyone's taste and budget.
I really think in addition to the 3000 regular type hotels (six more hotels there), we should also get in some executive, upscale extended, and executive extended stay hotels downtown. Under the holiday inn chain they are Staybridge Suites [executive], under Hilton chain they are Homewood Suites [exec extended] and Hilton Garden [executive and business], under Marriott they are Townplace Suites [executive extended] and SpringHill Suites [executive upscale], under Starwood they are W [executive upscale] and 4 points [executive]. We need these hotels downtown to add to the diversity of downtown transient housing in addition to serving our business traveling community.
If we added some of these, in addition to a few motel 6 types (but we restrict them to being multiple floor downtown hotel types - not those sprawling highway motel designs) then that may give us close to 5000 downtown hotel rooms of every type. Then, OKC would definitely be major league and could accomodate anything, including multiple conventions/sport events/concerts AND business travel. To me, that is the key and I hope OKC does not even think of stopping the downtown hotel boom until we have at least 3500 hotel rooms downtown.
And yes, I agree with you all that we need more high-rise hotels downtown. We should definitely require through zoning, that hotels within the CBD be no lower than 20 storeys tall if they have 300 rooms, no lower than 15 storeys if they have 200 rooms. They may not want to put high rise hotels on the Btown canal, though. But I think the 8 storey Courtyard is too short and it should have been 15 like the Renaissance. This is DOWNTOWN! (and the CBD!!!)
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
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