100 Rooms of Extended Stay Between Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti. The Corridor Math Gets Interesting.
Someone wants to drop a 100-room extended stay hotel in the gap between Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti, a corridor already absorbing new supply from a fresh Autograph Collection property. The question isn't whether the demand exists... it's whether the existing operators are ready for what happens to their midweek base.
There's a stretch of road between Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti that every hotel person in Washtenaw County knows. It's the corridor. University traffic flows one direction, hospital and corporate traffic flows the other, and in between sits a collection of select-service and limited-service properties that have quietly printed money for years because the demand generators on both ends are essentially recession-resistant. A university. A health system. Government. You could do worse.
Now somebody wants to plant 100 rooms of extended stay right in the middle of it. And I'll be honest... on the surface, it makes sense. Extended stay in a university market with consistent relocation traffic, visiting researchers, medical rotations, families in town for extended hospital stays... that's a demand profile that practically writes the pro forma for you. The segment has been one of the few bright spots in new development because the operating model is lean. Lower staffing ratios. Fewer F&B headaches. Housekeeping on a reduced schedule. If you're going to build right now with construction costs running $150K-$250K per key depending on how ambitious you get, extended stay is where the risk-adjusted returns still pencil.
But here's what I'd want to know if I were an owner in that comp set. Washtenaw County added roughly 14% to its room inventory between 2015 and 2020. That was before the 188-room Autograph Collection property opened downtown last year. Now you're looking at another 100 keys. At some point, supply absorption in a market this size isn't theoretical... it's Tuesday night at 62% occupancy instead of 71%, and the revenue manager starts getting creative with rate to fill the gap. That's the moment where discipline matters. Extended stay doesn't compete head-to-head with your transient business on weekends, but it absolutely competes for your corporate midweek base. The consultant doing the relocation. The traveling nurse. The professor on a semester appointment who's been staying at your property for three weeks. That guest now has a purpose-built option with a kitchen and a weekly rate, and your select-service room with a microwave and a mini-fridge is suddenly a harder sell.
I've seen this exact dynamic play out in markets with similar demand profiles. A mid-sized university town, two or three strong demand generators, a comp set that's been stable for years... and then one new entrant shifts the equilibrium just enough that everybody feels it. Not catastrophically. Not overnight. But the GM who was running 74% occupancy with a $149 ADR finds herself at 69% trying to hold $144, and the flow-through math gets ugly in a hurry. The properties that win in this scenario are the ones that know their guest mix cold... who's staying with you because they chose you versus who's staying because you were the only option. Because extended stay absorbs the "only option" guests first.
The developer hasn't tipped their hand on a flag yet (at least not publicly), and that matters. An extended stay property under a major loyalty umbrella changes the competitive math differently than an independent or a smaller brand. If this thing opens with a Marriott or Hilton flag, the loyalty engine alone redirects bookings from every other branded property in the corridor. If it opens independent, the impact is more localized and more manageable. Either way, if you're operating between Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti right now, the time to stress-test your corporate accounts isn't when the new property opens. It's right now, while the plans are still going through zoning.
If you're running a property in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti corridor, pull your segmentation report this week. Specifically, look at stays of five nights or longer over the past 12 months. That's your exposure. Every one of those reservations is a guest who might have a purpose-built extended stay option by next year. This is what I call the Three-Mile Radius... your revenue ceiling isn't set by your room count, it's set by what's happening in the three miles around you. Know which accounts are loyal to your property and which are loyal to your rate. Then go have a conversation with your top five corporate contacts before a sales rep from the new place does it for you. Don't wait for the flag announcement. Don't wait for the construction fence. The operators who protect their base before the supply shows up are the ones who don't have to chase rate to recover it later.