The light-filled, timber-framed rental cabin Simone and Andrew Strand helped build themselves on the North Shore of Lake Superior has been a boon to the family budget over the past couple years.
When COVID-19 struck this spring they shut down for two months, but now they're back. And so are the road-trippers. "People are just trying to get away from the cities," said Simone Strand. "As I'm sitting here looking at Lake Superior and a ton of land around me, I can't blame them."
With summer sports canceled and flying vacations on hold, Minnesotans are taking to the road this summer, boosting demand for resorts, vacation rentals and campgrounds in places where social distancing happens naturally.
For Twin Cities hotel operators, it's another story. Downtown hotels have become vertical ghost towns, and general managers and staff are scrambling to lure guests by implementing rigid cleaning protocols and installing high-tech equipment that eliminates the need to touch surfaces outside guest rooms.
April was the worst ever for Twin Cities hotels, where the occupancy rate fell to 4%. While bookings are increasing, demand isn't expected to rebound for three to five years, the operators and trade groups said.
"All hotels are losing money right now," said Rick Bertram, general manager of the Marriott Hotel City Center in downtown Minneapolis.
This comes after a 10-year construction boom fueled by the new U.S. Bank Stadium, the expansion of the Minneapolis Convention Center and a string of major sports events that added thousands of hotel rooms. Bertram said all but three downtown hotels, including the Marriott, are now open after two-thirds of them shut down during April. Midweek occupancy rates are now 13 to 14% in the city, he said.
"In downtown, there are not a lot of demand generators that are open yet," said Bertram. "There's no baseball, concerts or anything else to draw people to downtown in the summer."