Kimpton Hotel coming to downtown Reno - CAI confirms boutique brand for Court Street project
Kimpton Hotel, a pioneering brand in the boutique hotel segment, is coming to downtown Reno.

The San Francisco-based hotel franchise is building its first property in the Biggest Little City in partnership with developer CAI Investments. 



CEO Chris Beavor of CAI Investments confirmed its deal with Kimpton Hotel. There is a loan agreement for $100 million between Kimpton Hotel and CAI with Las Vegas-based Pinnacle Lending Group.

"We are excited about partnering with Kimpton," Beavor said. "This is a much-needed project to show off Reno.
Kimpton Hotel was founded in 1981 by the late Bill Kimpton, who was considered a pioneer in the boutique hotel business. 

Artist Laura Kimpton, who created the Believe sculpture with Jeff Schomberg that was displayed at Burning Man in 2013 and purchased by the city of Reno in 2016, is the Kimpton Hotel founder's daughter.


The hotel and restaurant chain was eventually acquired in December 2014 by IHG for $430 million in cash as part of efforts to strengthen its position in the "fastest-growing segment in the industry." IHG touted Kimpton Hotel as the largest independent boutique hotel operator in the world at the time.

"Kimpton is a well-established and highly successful business that has built an industry leading position in the U.S.," said then-IHG CEO Richard Solomons. "Adding Kimpton to our portfolio of preferred brands creates the world's largest boutique hotel business."

Today, the Kimpton Hotel brand operates about 67 boutique and upper-upscale hotels worldwide. In addition to the United States, Kimpton also operates hotels in Paris, Tokyo, Mexico City, Barcelona, Bali and the Cayman Islands.

The Kimpton Hotel in Reno will be a mixed-use project with around 270 rooms, 50 private Kimpton condominium residences, 60,000 square feet of office space and 20,000 square feet of meeting space, Beavor said.


Beavor, meanwhile, stressed that the experience that Kimpton Hotel provides is just what Reno needs to attract a key slice of the leisure and business travel segment as well as workers who value a certain urban lifestyle.

"International business needs these facilities and accommodations to continue to attract business to Northern Nevada, and more importantly Reno," Beavor said.

"It fills the tax base, it fills jobs and it fills one of the voids in the market," Beavor added.

CAI is also acquiring the Harrah's Reno building from Caesars Entertainment and plans to turn it into a mixed-used development known as the Reno City Center.


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