Four Seasons launched standalone private residences in Washington, DC, and a resort-plus-residences complex in Mina, Ras Al Khaimah, within 48 hours of TYKO Capital closing an $870 million construction loan for the brand's Lake Austin project. The capital event and the dual geographic announcements mark the fastest branded-residences expansion pace Four Seasons has maintained since 2019, when the company operated 47 residential properties globally. It now manages 128 branded-home locations.
The Washington property will be Four Seasons' first residential-only offering in the US capital, located at the intersection of Georgetown and the West End. No unit count or price range disclosed. The Ras Al Khaimah resort will anchor 120 residences on a beachfront site 40 minutes north of Dubai International Airport, with delivery scheduled for Q4 2027. Lincoln Property Company and Austin Capital Partners are developing the Lake Austin project, which will include 179 residences on 37 acres, with construction already underway and TYKO's loan replacing prior mezzanine and senior tranches.
The timing matters because branded-residences debt has tightened since March 2023, when regional-bank stress made construction loans above $500 million scarce for hospitality-adjacent projects. TYKO's willingness to provide $870 million as a single lender suggests that underwriting committees now treat Four Seasons-branded inventory as pension-grade collateral, a shift that benefits developers in secondary US markets and offshore jurisdictions where traditional construction lenders remain cautious. The DC and Ras Al Khaimah launches also confirm Four Seasons' strategy of pairing capital-light management contracts in emerging wealth corridors—Ras Al Khaimah's ultra-high-net-worth population grew 22% year-over-year through 2024—with flagship entries in primary cities where the brand has hotel presence but no residences.
Family offices and hospitality developers should watch whether Four Seasons announces additional US-capital standalone projects before mid-2025, which would indicate the brand is prioritizing residential-only formats over mixed-use properties in mature markets. The Lake Austin loan's $870 million size also sets a new benchmark for single-lender branded-residences construction debt, and comparable deals for Rosewood, Aman, or Edition properties will reveal whether lenders are repricing risk across the category or underwriting Four Seasons as a special case. Ras Al Khaimah's Q4 2027 delivery date positions the project to capture demand from buyers rotating out of Dubai's 2025-2026 condo delivery wave, and pre-sales velocity—likely disclosed by Q2 2025—will show whether secondary Emirates markets can absorb luxury inventory at the pace developers are underwriting.
The $870 million loan closed six weeks after Four Seasons opened its first resort in Cabo del Sol, Baja California, a property that sold 42 of 61 residences before the hotel's first guest checked in.