The St. Regis London, originally scheduled for 2023, is now accepting reservations for October 2026—a 36-month delay that mirrors the capital deployment slowdown across European gateway conversions. The property joins a suddenly crowded 2026 pipeline that includes Florence's four palace-to-hotel conversions valued collectively near €2 billion and Aspen's first new boutique inventory since 2018.
The London delay reflects familiar frictions: listed-building approvals, FF&E inflation running 22% above 2021 budgets, and labor scarcity in heritage-grade finishes. St. Regis parent Marriott International has not disclosed revised capex figures, but comparable Mayfair projects now carry per-key costs above £1.2 million. The October timing positions the property for shoulder-season soft openings before the critical December-January booking window. Reservations opened this month with introductory rates starting at £850 per night, roughly 15% below initial 2023 projections adjusted for inflation—a sign of competitive pressure from the Raffles and Peninsula openings already operational.
Florence's pipeline tells a different story. Four conversions—two Renaissance palaces, one former bank headquarters, one monastery—are moving through final approvals with expected openings clustered between May and November 2026. Combined room inventory: 387 keys. Local development sources peg total investment near €2 billion, with per-key development costs averaging €5.2 million once land acquisition and multi-year restoration are factored. The monastery conversion alone required 18 months of fresco stabilization before construction permits cleared. This wave follows the 2024 openings of Portrait Firenze (37 keys) and the Il Tornabuoni (62 keys), which reported average daily rates above €1,400 in their first six months.
Aspen's boutique—48 keys, June 2026, name undisclosed—marks the first new hotel construction to break ground in the core since The Little Nell's expansion in 2018. The project is entirely equity-financed by a single-family office with legacy mining holdings in Colorado, avoiding the construction-debt markets that have frozen similar projects in Vail and Deer Valley. Rates are expected to open above $2,200 per night in peak season, targeting the family-office and private-aviation set that now comprises 38% of Aspen's winter lodging demand, up from 22% in 2019.
Aman's 2026 slate—three properties confirmed, two more in advanced negotiation—extends the brand's pivot toward shorter development cycles and partnership structures. The confirmed openings include a 63-key Kyoto machiya conversion, a 41-suite Venetian canal property, and a 55-villa Caribbean island takeover. Aman has shifted 70% of new projects to existing-structure conversions since 2022, compressing timelines from six years to under four while reducing per-key capex by roughly 30%. The brand now operates 38 properties globally, with 12 more scheduled through 2028.
Allocators should watch three specific pressure points. First, whether Florence's absorption can support 387 new keys without destabilizing the €1,200+ ADR tier that emerged post-pandemic; early forward-booking data for May-June 2026 will clarify demand depth by February. Second, if the St. Regis delay triggers penalty clauses in its management agreement—Marriott's standard franchise contracts include milestone-based fees that reset on delays beyond 18 months. Third, Aspen's June opening will test whether the private-aviation surge proves durable or cyclical; if occupancy tracks below 65% in the first summer season, it signals that the $2,200 rate ceiling may require recalibration.
The 2026 calendar now holds 14 ultra-luxury openings across six primary markets, the densest concentration since 2008. None are debt-financed through traditional hospitality lenders.
The takeaway
**14** ultra-luxury hotels open in 2026 across six markets, all equity-financed, testing **€1,200+** ADR absorption in Florence and **$2,200** rate ceilings in Aspen.
hotel openingsultra-luxuryst regisflorenceaspenaman
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