Hospitality brand Stella Stays has launched operations in Bahrain ahead of a major expansion in the region. The firm’s expansion plans seek to take advantage of Bahrain’s booming real estate sector, with $12 billion worth of real estate projects in the pipeline.
Stella Stays operates a portfolio of managed properties scattered around UAE, Bahrain and Canada. Positioned to rival traditional hotel chains, the company is targeting tourists and residents who want short, medium, and long-term stays in well designed, furnished, regulated apartments, townhouses, and villas. Each of Stella Stays’ units is designed by its in-house interior design team and features stylish modern furniture, pre-loaded Netflix accounts, PlayStations, espresso machines and 100+ on demand services in addition to standard hotel like facilities.
The start-up launched in late 2019, and has grown to manage nearly 300 properties as of August 2021. “We have an aggressive growth plan and the new properties being built in Bahrain will play a crucial role in our strategy.” said Mohannad Zikra, CEO and Co-founder at Stella Stays. “Our expansion into Bahrain coincides with the Kingdom’s major real estate developments. Our model is the perfect fit for the Bahrain market and will be an excellent stepping stone in rolling the concept out to key locations in the region and eventually expanding to Europe and North America.”
Despite the onset of the pandemic, Stella Stays was able to pivot from targeting tourists to offering residents and inbound travellers places to work remotely and undergo quarantine. The company has already secured one round of initial funding. Now the business aims to achieve a comparable level of success to a similar firm in the US; Sonder, which announced earlier this year that it would be going public at a value of USD 2.2 billion.
Bahrain’s market is well suited for Stella Stays’ expansion. The Kingdom’s economy has fueled solid growth in residential construction with developers progressing a healthy number of freehold apartment projects. The Kingdom also offers some of the best value set-up costs in the real estate sector in the region.
Ali Al Mudaifa, Executive Director – investment Origination at Bahrain’s Economic Development Board, said: “The Kingdom’s hospitality sector is evolving rapidly amid ambitious real estate developments across the island. Major global hotel brands and small hospitality innovators alike view Bahrain as an attractive place to expand in the wake of the pandemic, which has catalysed innovation.
“We are seeing disruptive business models attracted to Bahrain’s dynamic real estate market in part because of the Real Estate Regulatory Authority’s (RERA) forward looking, effective regulation. The Kingdom’s 100% foreign ownership regulation also makes Bahrain an attractive place to set up. We look forward to supporting Stella Stays and many other hospitality companies from around the region and beyond in their growth plans in the coming months.”