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Kempinski Hotels Chief Operating Officer Duncan O'Rourke addressed journalists at the Kempinski Ambience Hotel in Delhi on May 21 |
This story first appeared in Mail Today in the edition dated May 23, 2014. Copyright: Mail Today Newspapers
By Sourish
Bhattacharyya
THE world's oldest operator of luxury hotels, Kempinski, is
in talks with potential partners for opening a property each in Mumbai and
Kolkata, and a resort in Kerala.
Sharing this information with the hospitality industry media
at the 117-year-old international chain's first address in India, Delhi's
Kempinski Ambience Hotel, Chief Operating Officer Duncan O'Rourke said the new
hotels and the resort should be up and running within two to four years of the
partnership agreements being signed.
Kempinski's President for the Middle East and Africa, Ulrich
Eckhardt, clarified that the chain (or "collection", as they would
like to call it) would not have more than four or five addresses in India, in
sync with its "luxury is limited" corporate philosophy. O'Rourke
added: "London has four Four Seasons hotels, so which one is the luxury
hotel? Ours is the only international hotel company that caps its growth."
At present, Kempinski manages and/or owns 73 hotels; the number will go up to
"88 in 12 months and 112 in the near future".
O'Rourke pointed out that Kempinski (2012 revenue: 1.1
billion euros), whose portfolio includes some of the world's landmark
addresses, such as the Atlantic in Hamburg and the Villa Rothschild restaurant,
is neither a "cookie cutter company", nor a "supermarket of
different brands". He was alluding to the practice of hotel companies to
enter a market with a bouquet of brands catering to different market segments.
Kempinski operates only in the luxury market.
Originally a German brand, Kempinski is owned by the Thai
royal family and its corporate headquarters is in Geneva. For a long time, it
operated in India in partnership with The Leela group and, expectedly, O'Rourke
was asked why did the marriage come to an end. "India is very important
for us, therefore we wanted to come in on our own once our contract with The
Leela came to an end," he said.
The question became doubly relevant because of the presence
of real estate and mall developer Raj Singh Gehlot, Chairman, Ambience Group,
who has two hotels in Delhi-NCR, one in partnership with Kempinski and the
other with The Leela in Gurgaon. He assured the journalists present that
neither of the two former partners prevented him from entering into an alliance
with the other.
Gehlot added that he had two plots to offer -- one at
Gurgaon's Sector 82 and the other, a 150-acre stretch of land earmarked for a
resort, in Udaipur. "I would be happy to offer the plots to both Kempinski
and The Leela," he said. The Kempinski growth story in India, it appears,
has only just begun to unfold.