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West beats east for hotels as business fuels booming trade

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Published Date: 02 May 2007
GLASGOW'S booming hotel trade is growing faster than its rival Edinburgh.
Statistics published today show room bookings in Scotland's biggest city grew by 13.4 per cent during the first quarter of 2007, while the capital recorded an increase of only 5.6 per cent.

The accountancy firm Deloitte in Scotland says hotels in
Glasgow are filling more rooms than ever before and the figures suggest the city could soon eclipse Edinburgh.

Fiona Salzen, travel and leisure partner for Deloitte in Scotland, said: "The strong start reflects the confidence in the city from both the business community and tourists from around the globe.

"The ability to successfully host major events stands Glasgow in good stead ahead of the Commonwealth Games bid announcement later this year. Overall, it's good news for Scotland, with significant growth in Aberdeen and the continuing positive results in Edinburgh an indication of Scotland's growing reputation as a great place to visit or do business.

"Within this, Glasgow has established itself as a vibrant city which has so much to offer and hopefully the city's hotels will continue to enjoy growth."

Deloitte reported Glasgow's rapid growth is linked to high-profile conferences which continue to lure business people.

Scott Taylor, the chief executive of Glasgow City Marketing Bureau, said: "These figures match what we have been witnessing. And our forecasts suggest that growth will double because Glasgow's market is growing at such a rate. Glasgow continues to grow while other cities around Europe are experiencing a fall in demand."

Glasgow has about 9,000 hotel rooms within a ten-mile radius of the city centre and there is a similar number in and around Edinburgh.

A string of new hotels is also planned for Glasgow. It emerged last weekend that plans for the biggest hotel complex in Scotland have taken a major step forward.

The former Albany Hotel in Bothwell Street is to be demolished and two new ones will be built in a £100 million deal.

The study also showed a night in a Glasgow hotel is still much cheaper than spending a night in the capital. The average cost of a Glasgow hotel room is £62, compared to £74 in Edinburgh and £112 in London.

The growth in Glasgow's hotel market comes at a time when the UK industry is flourishing.

Marvin Rust, hospitality managing partner for Deloitte, said: "The outlook for UK hotels in 2007 is very positive. A number of UK cities have experienced a strong start to the year, building on the growth achieved in 2006."



Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 01 May 2007 10:27 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Glasgow and Edinburgh
 
1

eric,

Lothian 02/05/2007 05:29:04

Well done Glasgow

2

Dave Prentice,

Govan 02/05/2007 07:50:14

Once again Labour brings new triumphs to the wonderful west.

3

Iain's,

London, today 02/05/2007 08:15:15

Only 13.4%!

Deloittes should point out that tourism in Darfur would grow 100% if there was one tourist!

I also note that the figures are only for the first quarter. What about REVPAR? Down, I suppose.

Glasgow still has a bad reputation abroad but New year breaks must have helped bookings.

4

Alannah,

Edinburgh 02/05/2007 09:16:22

Dave (2) the SNP wouldn't have it any other way either, as their 'policies' on Edinburgh show. They're in favour of scrapping everything here and have refused to stop the decay of Edinburgh's economy and will continue to shove jobs through to Glasgow - they need the votes there, whereas they know they don't stand a chance here in the capital.

I welcome Glasgow's economic success, but both Labour and the Nats need to stop being so pompous about Edinburgh and the east of Scotland's right to pursue the same economic success and stop the politically correct nonsense of jobs dispersal.

5

Moody,

02/05/2007 10:58:56

yeah yeah, they also said this about glasgow house prices 2 or 3 years ago and now they are a poor third to Edinburgh and Aberdeen

6

Declan,

Glasgow 02/05/2007 12:09:11

#5 - Moody, you can't see a single positive thing said about Glasgow can you?! Stop acting like a child!

Well done our City! The reputation across the globe is improving by the month. Bring it on!

7

TSG,

02/05/2007 12:10:34

Can we stop putting Edinburgh and Glasgow in competition, they should be partners.

8

Media 1,

cape town and stockbridge 02/05/2007 18:26:57

Thats the problem with us Scots. We hate England so " VOTE SNP" is the cry.

But the sad reality is that we even hate eachother. The sad and pathetic rivalry between Glasgow and Edinburgh is evidence that we are not fit to govern ourselves. We NEED adult supervision

9

rpb,

02/05/2007 20:13:03

8, Media 1 has hit the preverbial nail on the head.

Mind you the headline in this now parochial regional rag doesn't help. At least under Barclay brother rule there was a broader picture.

Take the third last paragraph about the cheapness of the Glasgow rack rate; another way of putting would be Glasgow has a lot of catching up to do. Therefore naturally the rises are greater...
But that would be a negative slant on where the biggest market is to buy newspapers.

Sadly, like the politics of nationalism the way 'forward' seems to be full of blame and hate.

If nationalists get their way soon they'll blame Brussels instead of London! Never EVER themselves..


 

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