Steve Rushmore's May 2010 article for Lodging Hospitality.
Steve Rushmore's May 2010 article for Lodging Hospitality CapEx in Crisis, reprinted in the Canadian Lodging Outlook.
The Emerald City, in recent years thought to be recession-proof, has lost a bit of luster in the national economic downturn.
HVS has applied a methodology for gauging the transformation of emerging lodging markets into self-contained markets in Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean.
The luxury hotel market in Mexico has been somewhat overshadowed by other market segments. Here we shed light on its potential.
A mix of cultural and commercial projects continues to steer businesspeople, tourists, and conventioneers toward Cincinnati, giving area hoteliers some hope in the tough economy.
As both the capital of Texas and the “Live Music Capital of the World,” Austin has businesses and hotels singing a lively tune despite the current economic dirge.
Mexico’s tourism industry has been at the forefront of international lodging trends, and the country is once again reinventing its coastlines and interior colonial towns with the proliferation of master-planned resort-residential communities.
Real estate developments, biotech firms, billion-dollar investments, and big conventions are cropping up in Downtown Phoenix, helping to secure demand for area hotels.
Enhancements in technology and telecommunications have transformed the global hospitality landscape. In this article we evaluate how these transformations are acting as able catalysts in a world where geography is rapidly becoming history.