Aman Resorts has confirmed openings across four disparate geographies within an eighteen-month window, the largest simultaneous deployment in the brand's thirty-six-year history. The pipeline includes Aman Singapore—its first vertical residential tower with twenty-two Sky Villas, each anchored by private pools—plus a ranch property in Texas, and two undisclosed city-center locations in Europe. The Singapore property alone represents a $1.2 billion mixed-use development, with residences priced north of $15 million per unit. This is Aman abandoning the monastery for the metropolis.
The shift matters because Aman built its empire on scarcity and inaccessibility. Every property until now has been a pilgrimage: Bhutanese valleys, Rajasthani tiger corridors, cliff-edge Aegean villas. The model worked when ultra-high-net-worth travelers prized difficulty of access as proof of exclusivity. But the calculus changed when family offices began treating luxury hospitality as an asset class rather than a consumable. Urban properties generate 300% higher revenue per square meter than remote resorts, according to Horwath HTL's 2024 luxury benchmarking study. They also solve Aman's occupancy problem—remote properties average 62% annual occupancy; city hotels in the Aman tier run at 78% even during shoulder seasons. The Texas ranch is the tell: it sits ninety minutes from Austin, close enough for weekend allocator traffic but far enough to preserve the aesthetic fiction of escape.
What this signals to operators and developers is permission. If Aman—the brand that refused to open in New York for three decades—is now putting Sky Villas above Orchard Road, every other luxury house is reconsidering its geographic orthodoxy. Rosewood, Capella, and Six Senses have all quietly filed permits for urban towers in the past fourteen months. The development directors at those houses were waiting for Aman to blink first. They just did. The secondary effect is on land acquisition: prime city-center parcels in Singapore, London, and Los Angeles have seen 22% price appreciation since Aman's Singapore tower was first rumored in late 2023, per CBRE's luxury hospitality land index. Family offices are no longer buying Aman stays—they're buying into Aman buildings, either as whole-floor purchases or as fractional operating partners. The Texas property is reportedly 40% pre-sold to a consortium of three single-family offices before ground broke.
Operators should track three follow-on events. First, watch whether Aman's European city-center openings land in Paris or Milan—both cities have luxury residential towers under construction with anonymous hospitality partners, and Aman is the only brand with the capital and discretion to stay unnamed this late in permitting. Expect confirmation by Q2 2025. Second, monitor whether Singapore Sky Villa owners actually occupy their units or immediately flip them into Aman's managed-residence program, which would convert the tower into a de facto private-label hotel fund. Early sales data suggests 65% of buyers intend to enroll in the rental program, a much higher capture rate than comparable Ritz-Carlton or Four Seasons residences. Third, observe whether Aman's remote properties start discounting during low season—if the urban pivot cannibalizes the pilgrimage properties, you'll see 15-20% rate softening in Bhutan and Rajasthan by winter 2025. That would confirm the brand is bifurcating into two product lines: investment-grade urban and experiential remote.
Aman's Singapore tower is scheduled for completion in Q4 2026, with the Texas ranch opening approximately six months earlier, positioning both properties to capture the 2026-2027 family-office reallocation cycle as allocators rotate out of overheated private credit and back into hard-asset hospitality plays.