Germany's hotel market expansion will not stop. In the next five years, 179 first-class hotels and 49 luxury hotels with more than 37 000 rooms will be opened in Germany.
According to tophotelprojects.com, one of the leading on-line databases for international hotel projects, most of the top hotel projects are planned for the major cities of Germany.
In the capital city of Berlin 49 first-class and luxury hotels with over 4,200 rooms are under construction and will be opened until 2013. In Hamburg 14 top hotels ( with more than 2,500 rooms ) are planned and in Munich 9 top hotels ( with 1,700 rooms ) are under construction.
In Frankfurt the hotel market will welcome 12 new top hotels with more than 2,800 rooms.
A large number of planned top hotels will be managed by international hotel chains and operators, e.g. Hilton, Kempinski, Mandarin Oriental, Marriott and Rezidor. One of the most important top hotel projects this year will be The Charles hotel in Munich, No 3 of the Rocco Forte Collection in Germany ( opening is scheduled for end of October 2007 ).
About the German hotel marketIn Germany more than 12,000 hotels ( from business to wellness hotels and boarding houses ) and over 33,000 other accommodation facilities are currently under operation. 2,800 hotels are four star rated ( first class ), 224 are luxury hotels ( five star rated ).
In total, over 4,480 hotels are focused on business travelers. Over 5,900 houses are conference hotels and more than 4,600 hotels are dedicated to leisure guests.
About tophotelprojects.com Your next customer is only one click awayWhere are the new four and five star hotels around the world? For FF&E and market researches all important construction and renovation projects of the leading hotel industry are listed on
www.tophotelprojects.com. Over 1,480 projects worldwide ( and about 520 projects in Europe and more than 350 hotel projects in Germany ) are currently part of the online database. All data is updated monthly by CHD Expert Group, which started this service two years ago.