Invest: Tampa Bay 2021

Page 174

TOURISM, ARTS & CULTURE OVERVIEW

Perspectives: Growth outlook Aaron Hoefen General Manager – AC Hotel Marriott Tampa Bay Those that are the quickest in safely getting back to the experience that feels like the past, an authentic hotel and dining experience, will be the ones that recover the fastest. At this point, guests are back out and traveling again. Those who are out are doing so on a consistent, weekly basis. If they go to a location that still feels closed off, they are unlikely to go back there. They are looking for a return of the experience.

Pablo Molinari General Manager – The Hotel Haya Sometimes I see this like a house of cards. It takes an hour to build a house of cards; it only takes a second and everything falls down to the ground. To rebuild, you have to dedicate that time you spent before. There’s no question that we are starting to turn the corner, but I think 2021 is going to be a year of transition.

Brian Schneider General Manager – The Westin Tampa Waterside It’s hard for us to pinpoint where there will be growth first. We are starting to see some uptick in group business and business travelers returning. When COVID first hit, many businesses put corporate-wide holds on all business travel. Now some executives are able to visit client sites as long as social distancing is being followed. Rate recovery may not happen anytime soon. From what I see, we are looking at Q3 2021 for the real rebound, but it could be as late as 2022.

( ) canceled or pushed back. The Sunset Music Festival saw its 2020 edition canceled, with the next event scheduled for Memorial Day 2021. But as vaccines become more accessible, Tampa Bay hopes to capitalize on pent-up demand for live events and entertainment. Already, schedules are filling up for 2021 with the likes of WrestleMania, a variety of Pride festivities in June and the 2021 Franchise Show in September. The annual Tampa Gasparilla Pirate Festival was canceled in February 2021, but two alternative events went ahead in Hillsborough Bay instead in April. According to experts, one of the last sectors that will recover is business travel as companies cautiously eye liability when sending employees on trips. At the outset of the pandemic, convention centers were predicted to suffer greatly, but, thanks to a great deal of ingenuity, this scenario has not played out as expected in the Tampa region. Early on in the pandemic, virtual events began springing up. Break Tampa Bay was one of the first such events, hosted by startup platform Lunchpool, and the platform went on to host a variety of other events across Florida, including Startup Week Tampa Bay. The attraction of virtual events is that they fill the craving for engagement and can handle a high capacity compared with in-person events, which have tight restrictions. The platform’s demand skyrocketed by 600% last year. But the question hinges on if and when in-person conferences will be back or whether the future of the conference relies on Zoom. In Tampa, there is no question that conventions will be back given the huge demand seen at the beginning of the year. Tampa Bay is already planning to host at least 25 events between April and December 2021 with an economic impact of $75 million to the area. Visit Tampa Bay is promoting ( )


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Market voices: Tampa Bay hotels

3min
pages 176-177

Interview: Joe Collier, President

3min
pages 178-180

Perspectives: Growth outlook

2min
page 174

Interview: Steve Hayes

2min
page 175

Interview: Benjamin Tran

9min
pages 171-173

Interview: Jackie Mangar

7min
pages 168-170

Interview: Santiago Corrada

2min
page 167

Eye on the future: Tampa Bay

2min
page 166

Interview: Frank Ghannadian

3min
page 159

Interview: Angela Falconetti

4min
pages 160-161

Perspective: Lessons learned

2min
page 156

Perspective: Teacher burnout

2min
page 157

Roundtable: The future of

5min
pages 154-155

Perspective: Growth strategy

3min
page 153

Interview: Anne Kerr, President

5min
pages 150-152

Interview: Shane Donaldson

5min
pages 144-147

Interview: Steven Currall

2min
page 149

Altered landscape: Education in

1min
page 148

Interview: Nathan Walcker

5min
pages 141-143

Interview: Al Hernandez, Public

5min
pages 139-140

Perspectives: Innovation

5min
pages 137-138

Interview: John Couris

2min
page 136

Interview: Ravi Chari

3min
page 134

Interview: Dr. Patrick Hwu

2min
page 133

Perspectives: Wealth

8min
pages 127-131

Interview: Sean Simpson

2min
page 126

Interview: Brooke Mirenda

5min
pages 122-124

Market voices: Banking outlook

2min
page 125

Market voices: Financial

4min
pages 120-121

Interview: Bill Habermeyer

6min
pages 116-118

Interview: Paul Anderson

7min
pages 105-109

Interview: Rita Lowman

2min
page 119

Interview: Jim Daly, Regional

2min
page 111

Roundtable: Community banks

6min
pages 114-115

Interview: Karl Kaliebe

4min
pages 103-104

Interview: Damon Moorer

4min
pages 112-113

Financial magnet: Strong

1min
page 110

Interview: Brad Miller, CEO

2min
page 98

Interview: Thomas Jewsbury

9min
pages 99-102

Interview: Joe Lopano, CEO

2min
page 97

Interview: Tyler Kovarik, Vice

8min
pages 90-93

Interview: T. J. Szelistowski

2min
pages 94-95

Conundrum: Mass transit

1min
page 96

Interview: Fred Lay, President

2min
page 89

Roundtable: Powering the

5min
pages 86-88

Interview: Mark Metheny

3min
pages 84-85

Interview: James Fox,President

3min
page 82

Roundtable: An atypical year

9min
pages 78-81

Perspectives: Outlook

2min
page 77

Interview: Brian Diehl, Regional

3min
pages 75-76

Keeping up: Residential and

2min
page 74

Roundtable: Commercial real

9min
pages 70-73

Interview: Brian Andrus, Broker

2min
page 69

Market voices: Developing for

7min
pages 66-68

Interview: Bowen Arnold

10min
pages 63-65

Interview: John Carey

6min
pages 60-62

Resilient: Tampa Bay’s live, work

2min
page 58

Interview: Andrew Wright, CEO

2min
page 59

Market voices: Adapting

5min
pages 54-55

Interview: V. Raymond Ferrara

4min
pages 56-57

Interview: Natalie King, Vice

4min
pages 52-53

Interview: Joel Stevens, Senior

2min
page 49

Roundtable: Legal landscape

6min
pages 50-51

Perspectives: Professional

2min
page 48

Interview: David Simmons

3min
page 44

Interview: Hala Sandridge

2min
page 41

Market voices: Legal focus

8min
pages 45-47

Pivotal role: The region’s

2min
page 40

Interview: Greg Kadet

4min
pages 42-43

Interview: Denise Sanderson

5min
pages 36-39

Market voices: Economic

3min
pages 34-35

Roundtable: County officials

5min
pages 32-33

Interview: Jerome Ryans

2min
page 31

Interview: Sean Malott

3min
pages 24-25

Market voices: City growth

6min
pages 28-30

Interview: Carole Post

4min
pages 15-16

Roundtable: Future of the Bay

5min
pages 22-23

Interview: J. P. DuBuque

2min
page 17

Interview: Chuck Sykes

5min
pages 26-27

Interview: Ana Cruz, Managing

7min
pages 18-21

Diverse landscape: Tourism

2min
page 14
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