I think post-covid we’ve seen a great reset in hospitality, with the pandemic accelerating trends that had become a little sluggish or stuck in the past. Themes like provenance, personalisation, sustainability and adaptability have really come to the fore in the last few years.
Experiential hospitality is a key focus area, with people looking for an immersive, creative experience as opposed to ‘just a vacation’. Increasingly, hospitality guests want to achieve some form of self-improvement, education or adventure through hospitality environments and offers, often linked to local landscapes or cultures. It’s about people looking for more meaningful experiences, which hospitality design schemes now need to support and enable.
Indeed, the guest value proposition has completely changed. Hyper-personalisation is really important, with guest experiences becoming very precisely shaped around personal behaviours and tastes. More and more, hotels are catering to guests’ preferred activities, sleep patterns and culinary choices, creating a fully personalised environment through specific services and facilities, and through details such as room temperature, lighting and ambiance.
And then there’s the increasing focus on circularity and responsibility. Guests want to know their stay isn’t going to negatively impact local environments or communities. Sustainable design and building practices, the longevity of materiality, will continue to be critically important. And so too the sense that hotels and guests are actually giving something back – socially, ecologically. In fact, I think we’re likely to see a shift from sustainable travel to regenerative travel and hospitality, with more proactive engagement with these issues in the years ahead.