Circleville Gets a TownePlace Suites, and the Real Story Is What It Says About Where Marriott Is Betting
A groundbreaking in small-town Ohio isn't just a local news story... it's Marriott doubling down on secondary markets with extended-stay product while their own RevPAR forecast says the domestic outlook is cooling. So which is it?
Let me tell you what I love about a groundbreaking ceremony in a town of 14,000 people. Nobody's there for the champagne. The local officials show up because they need the tax base. The developer shows up because they've already committed the capital and they need the photo for their lender. And Marriott shows up because TownePlace Suites is the workhorse brand that nobody writes breathless trend pieces about but that keeps quietly filling gaps in markets where "lifestyle" would be a punchline. Circleville, Ohio, sitting along U.S. Route 23 with manufacturing, construction, and warehouse logistics driving its labor force, is exactly the kind of market TownePlace was built for. And that's precisely what makes this worth talking about.
Here's the thing the press release won't unpack for you. Marriott just told Wall Street that 2026 RevPAR growth in the U.S. and Canada is going to land somewhere between 1.5% and 2.5%, which is... fine. It's fine the way a C+ is fine. They're citing softer spending from low- and middle-income travelers, which is corporate-speak for "the consumer who stays at our select-service and extended-stay brands is tightening up." And yet their global pipeline expanded to nearly 610,000 rooms by the end of 2025, up 6% year-over-year, with extended-stay as one of the loudest growth engines. So Marriott is simultaneously saying "demand is softening" and "we're opening more hotels than ever." If you're the owner who just broke ground in Circleville, you need to sit with that tension for a minute, because both things can be true, and both things will show up on your P&L.
The extended-stay math, in the abstract, still works. The segment is projected to grow from roughly $61 billion to nearly $66 billion globally this year, and North America is the biggest piece of that pie. There are over 2,000 extended-stay properties in the U.S. development pipeline right now, representing more than 212,000 rooms. The demand drivers are real... corporate relocations, project-based labor (hello, Circleville's warehouse and manufacturing corridor), medical stays, insurance displacement. These aren't discretionary travelers deciding between your hotel and a beach vacation. They need a room for three weeks because the job site is 40 miles from home. That's sticky demand. But here's where I start asking the uncomfortable questions. TownePlace typically requires a minimum investment north of $12 million. In a secondary market where your rate ceiling is real and your comp set might be a Hampton Inn and a local independent, your path to breakeven depends heavily on what that Marriott flag actually delivers in terms of loyalty contribution and channel production. And I have a filing cabinet full of franchise disclosure documents that would tell you the projected numbers and the actual numbers are not always in the same zip code. (They're sometimes not in the same area code.)
I sat across from an ownership group once... a small family operation, three partners who'd pooled everything... and they showed me the franchise sales deck they'd been handed for an extended-stay conversion. The projections had loyalty contribution at 38%. I asked them to call three existing franchisees in comparable markets and ask what they were actually seeing. They came back with numbers in the low twenties. The brand wasn't lying, exactly. They were projecting optimistically, which is what franchise sales teams do, because that's how franchise sales teams eat. But the gap between that projection and reality was the difference between a viable investment and a decade of stress. The Circleville developer may have done this homework. I hope they have. But if you're an owner being pitched a similar deal in a similar market right now, you do the homework yourself, because nobody else has as much to lose as you do.
What I'll be watching is whether Marriott's aggressive extended-stay pipeline in secondary and tertiary markets actually gets matched with the operational support and loyalty delivery these properties need to survive. Columbus proper hit 70% occupancy through October 2025 with 5% RevPAR expansion... but Circleville isn't Columbus. It's 30 miles south and a world apart in terms of demand generators. The brand promise has to travel that distance, and "TownePlace Suites by Marriott" on the sign has to translate into heads in beds at a rate that covers a $12-million-plus investment. If it does, this is smart development in an underserved market. If it doesn't, this is another family learning the hard way that a flag is not a guarantee. I've watched that lesson get taught too many times to be casual about it.
If you're an owner or developer being pitched an extended-stay flag in a secondary market right now, do not rely on the franchise sales projections. Call five existing franchisees in markets that look like yours... same ADR range, same demand drivers, same distance from a major metro... and ask them what loyalty contribution actually looks like. Then run your pro forma on the worst number they give you. If the deal still works at 20-22% loyalty contribution instead of the 35-40% in the sales deck, you've got something. If it doesn't, you've got a pretty building and a long road to breakeven.