B5 THE ASTORIAN • SATuRdAy, AuguST 7, 2021 Tourists start to return to Portland By JAMIE GOLDBERG The Oregonian With only a handful of its rooms booked at the start of the coronavirus pandemic, managers decided to contract with Mult- nomah County to convert the Jupiter Hotel into a temporary homeless shelter. Its newer sibling hotel across the street, the Jupiter Next, sat mostly empty. Even in the sum- mer, it struggled to fill even a third of its rooms. A year later, the 67-room Jupiter Next is packed on weekends and booking up those rooms several weeks in advance. The southeast Portland hotel is even charging slightly more for those nights than before the pandemic. “It’s kind of been a slow climb,” said Nick Pearson, the hotel’s general manager. “June is really where we saw a big shift. Now, the whole market is at a point where weekends are filling up.” Tourism in Portland and across the United States plummeted last year as would-be travelers instead stayed in iso- lation at home. Average hotel occupancy in Portland dropped below 37% in 2020, according to hotel market research com- pany STR, down from almost 74% the year prior. But tourism has slowly picked up in Port- land over the last two months as coronavi- rus restrictions have eased and more people have been vaccinated. Portland hotels recorded an aver- age occupancy of more than 56% in June, which remains down 30 percentage points from June 2019 but is by far the highest monthly occupancy rate since the start of the pandemic. Occupancy spikes over 70% on weekends, but remains way down on weekdays. Even more tourists are opting to stay in vacation rentals through sites like Airbnb. Those properties had an average occupancy rate of more than 82% in June, exceeding the average occupancy of about 76% in June 2019. Full month data from July is not yet available. Many hotels and short-term rentals that shuttered last year have since reopened, but occupancy numbers may be inflated because some remain closed. The Jupiter Hotel, still housing people experiencing homelessness, won’t reopen to the public again until next summer. Still, operators say they’ve seen a notice- able pickup in business. Susan Moray began offering summer bookings for the two vacation rental units she owns in Ladd’s Addition in February after renting the units to longer-term renters last year as tourism plummeted. She said bookings were slow at first, but Mark Graves/The Oregonian Bars, clubs and food carts in downtown Portland were packed with people late last month. ‘I dIdN’T EXPECT THINgS TO COME BACK LIKE THIS. A LOT OF PEOPLE WHO HAVE RENTALS IN THIS AREA ARE BOOKEd. IT FEELS LIKE IT’S BACK TO NORMAL.’ Susan Moray | owner of two vacation rental units as vaccines became more widespread in March and April, interest quickly picked up. The properties are now booked out through September. “I didn’t expect things to come back like this,” Moray said. “A lot of people who have rentals in this area are booked. It feels like it’s back to normal.” Lasse Christiansen, who rents two South- east Division Street houses on Airbnb, said he has noticed a significant spike in demand as well. Last year, he said many of the people who stayed at his properties were Portland- ers looking for a couple’s getaway. Now, he said he is mostly getting visitors on road trips from Seattle or California, or even extended road trips from the East Coast. With the resurgence in demand, he has been able to charge more per night than he did before the pandemic. “People still want to come here,” Chris- tiansen said. “We have the natural beauty that’s a big force for attracting folks, along with the breweries and restaurants — and now the restaurants are coming back. And the particular neighborhood I’m in on Divi- sion has a lot to offer for folks coming in from out of town.” On average, Portland’s short-term rentals are charging more now than before the pan- demic. Steve Halasz, research director for the city’s tourism bureau, Travel Portland, said the price of hotel rooms in the city has rebounded faster than anticipated as well, with average nightly rates sitting at $152 in late July, down from $175 in July 2019. Weekly data from STR shows that occu- pancy rates have held steady in July even as the delta variant has led to a concerning spike in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations. “Tourism is coming back,” Halasz said. “People are fairly confident traveling right and have been for the past few months. The state has done a great job with vaccination rates. For the time being, people feel pretty confident traveling, and I think we’re seeing it with the numbers.” Even so, the upswing in COVID-19 cases could threaten the comeback. The number of newly reported cases in Oregon nearly doubled this week as compared to a week prior and forecasts predict the state has yet to reach the top of its current wave. And while tourists are returning, many are still avoiding hotels in downtown Portland. Even as average occupancy rates at hotels on Portland’s east side, where there are smaller hotels and more extended-stay properties, have outpaced pre-pandemic levels this year, occupancy rates in down- town have continued to lag. Approximately 56% of downtown hotel rooms were filled on average in June, down from about 87% pre-pandemic. (The recent rebound, though, is still a vast improvement from last June, when less than 1 in 5 hotel rooms were booked.) Visitors have been slow to return to downtown hotels in other markets as well. Average occupancy rates in June were 64% in downtown Denver, 53% in downtown Seattle and 30% in downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. Shannon Overholser, a spokesperson for Provenance Hotels, which operates six properties in downtown Portland, said occupancy on weekends at the hotels has exceeded 70%, a number boosted by leisure travelers. One of the company’s six down- town Portland hotels, the Dossier, remains closed due to staffing shortages, but Over- holser said the company hopes to reopen it in September. Business travel, however, remains down substantially, with conferences and conven- tions still postponed. That has had an out- sized impact on hotels in the city center. International travel hasn’t rebounded, either, with pandemic travel restrictions still in place. Hotel operators downtown say the state of the city center still remains a significant concern as well, and they’ve heard from tourists who don’t feel safe walking around downtown Portland. Last month, an out-of-town guest staying at The Hoxton Hotel in Old Town/China- town was stabbed in what police described as an unprovoked attack by a stranger. The woman was taken to a hospital and treated for a possible liver laceration. George Schweitzer, managing director at The Benson, said he is continuing to hear from guests who say they enjoyed the hotel but were concerned about the surrounding area. On TripAdvisor, the hotel and attraction review site, recent guests have complained about visible homelessness, boarded up businesses, people suffering mental health crises and open drug or alcohol abuse. “I didn’t feel very safe walking after dinner,” one wrote. “We wondered if we had stum- bled onto the set of the Walking Dead,” another said. Specialty care, close to home At Providence Seaside, your health is our priority. That’s why we’re adding new specialists to care for you and your family. You now have more choices for experts in: • Cardiology • Oncology • General surgery • Orthopedic surgery • Obstetrics and gynecology • Urology CARDIOLOGY Whether we see you in person or in a virtual visit, our team of compassionate experts is committed to providing safe and convenient care for people throughout the North Coast. Gary Greenberg, M.D. (new provider) OBSTETRICS / GYNECOLOGY GENERAL SURGERY Michael Adler, M.D. Eric Friedman, M.D. (new provider) Dominique Greco, M.D. (family medicine with obstetrics) Manfred Ritter, M.D. Robert Morse, D.O. Zachary Caverley, PA-C ONCOLOGY Jennifer Lycette, M.D. (new provider) Karren Warren, A-GNP ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY Providence.org/northcoast Steven Dailey, M.D. (new provider) Hans Moller, M.D. (new provider) Dan Sitkowski, PA-C