Financial News

  • 17 August 2012, 11:48

Ikea Branches Out Into 'Budget Design' Hotels

Homeware and furnishings retailer Ikea is planning to build a budget hotel chain across Europe.

The Swedish company, best known for its flat-pack furniture, aims to create a range of "budget design" hotels at affordable prices.

It follows a trend for cheap-but-funky boutique accommodation such as Base2Stay in London, driven by low air fares and increasingly price-conscious business travellers.

Others include Germany's Motel One, citizenM in London, Amsterdam and Glasgow, and the Chic & Basic chain in Barcelona and Madrid.

Demand for stylish yet affordable rooms from austerity-hit business guests and leisure travellers is high and growing, according to Harald Muller, senior executive in the property division of Inter Ikea - the company that owns the Ikea brand and concept.

"Budget designer hotels is today the fastest developing hotel segment," he said.

Inter Ikea already owns a few hotels and has more in the works, but the new project will be its first chain and top its 26-acre home, office and hotel scheme around the Olympic Park in London.

The chain of 100 hotels, which is set to be launched across Europe including in Britain, Belgium, Austria, Germany, Holland and Poland, will not feature Ikea flat-pack furniture nor its brand name.

Mr Muller said: "It is not an Ikea hotel. It's a continuation of our normal investment activities in real estate."

what do you think?

4 comments

Michael Hawkins

4:33pm on 16/8/2012

Will the hotel room come flat packed?

Stuart Harley

4:45pm on 16/8/2012

...YOU WILL NEED A SCREWDRIVER TO STAY THERE.........

Score: 1

Adrian Wagstaff

5:06pm on 16/8/2012

I like the idea. Why don't they try building houses, too? Sometimes, cheap furniture tends to not be so good. I've never been to Ikea. I did get a catalogue from somewhere. My dad bought a cheap bed. Not from Ikea. It's as hard as a rock. The drawers underneath have thin wood for a base, one drawer of which just collapsed under the weight of a few sheets. Obviously, if you buy cheap things, some have to be made using cheap materials. I did wonder, during an earthquake, is it a good idea to have really heavy, solid, antique furniture in buildings or is it better to have compressed wood shaving, chipboard furniture due to it would cause less damage? The cost of hotels, these days, from what I read 'bout the Olympics, I think this article is a good idea.

1 reply

Louisa Gieldon

8:08pm on 16/8/2012

Have they not pioneered kit houses in scandanavia?

Dawson Wilkins

9:46am on 17/8/2012

If you want to stay in a cheap hotel try Formula 1. That's about as basic as I want to stay in, thank you very much.

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