The Ritz-Carlton Residences in Houston's Uptown district crossed $203 million in sales contracts four months after announcement, before breaking ground on its 45-story tower. The velocity—roughly $50 million per month in reservations—sets a new pace for branded residential offerings in a market historically skewed toward single-family estates and low-rise luxury.
The project, a 600-foot tower scheduled for completion in late 2028, attracted deposits from family offices rotating out of coastal gateway markets and Houston energy executives seeking brand-certified holdings within the Inner Loop. Developer Radom Capital and Marriott International structured units between $1.8 million and $12 million, with penthouses claiming the upper $8 million to $12 million band. Contracts moved without finished interiors or model units—buyers committed on floor plans, brand heritage, and scarcity assumptions.
The result matters because it confirms a thesis allocators have tested since 2022: branded residences now command pre-construction premiums in secondary gateway cities previously too price-sensitive for hospitality-linked product. Houston's energy wealth, tax structure, and corporate relocations from California create buyer density willing to pay 15% to 20% above comparable non-branded inventory for Ritz-Carlton service infrastructure and resale optionality. Miami and Nashville proved the model; Houston's speed suggests the formula travels to markets with sufficient single-family-office concentration and weak new luxury supply.
The move also exposes a structural shift in how family offices allocate to real assets. Pre-construction velocity at this scale indicates buyers treating branded residences as portable wealth stores with embedded optionality—own, lease furnished at $25,000 to $40,000 per month through the brand's rental program, or exit at a basis protected by scarcity and franchise value. Houston had zero branded-residence towers under construction as of Q4 2025; this project will deliver 120 units into a market where competing luxury product remains fragmented across low-rise buildings in River Oaks and Memorial.
Operators and allocators should watch three follow-on signals. First, whether contracts convert to hard closings when the tower tops out in Q2 2027—pre-construction sales velocity does not always survive construction delays or rate volatility. Second, how quickly Radom and Marriott announce a second Houston tower; the partnership has site control on two additional Uptown parcels, and a second launch within 12 months would confirm repeatable demand. Third, which competing hospitality brands announce Houston-branded-residence entries by year-end 2026—Four Seasons, Waldorf Astoria, and Aman have all quietly toured Uptown and River Oaks sites in recent quarters.
The project's construction financing closed in April 2026 with a $285 million senior loan from JPMorgan and $140 million in mezzanine debt from a family office based in Dubai. Groundbreaking is scheduled for June 2026.