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Kenya enlists Africa Development Bank support to refurbish old hotels

Kenya enlists Africa Development Bank support to refurbish old hotels

The Kenyan government is looking at raising $100 million to establish a fund that will go into refurbishing old hotels as soaring tourism numbers put a strain on available facilities.

To this end it is enlisting the support of African Development Bank with the fund allowing investors access to credit to give their establishments a makeover.

According to Tourism cabinet secretary Najib Balala, the fund will specifically be meant for old hotels in need of a facelift and will be accessed as credit with a six per cent interest on repayment.

 “In the next few weeks, we will make the announcement, the older you are, the more you are entitled to approach this fund, so that it can be able to help you… we are not going to fund new hotels with this fund,” he said.

This is part of the transformation of the tourism sector in a bid get it back on a recovery path that will include new product development.

“The hotels at the coast region they have been built and planned well and the beaches are appropriate but now they are old and tired. I appreciate the investors and the people who own hotels here because of volatility of the sector, you are scared to invest or whenever you invest the returns are not appropriate,” he added.

He highlighted infrastructure as the major contributor to better tourism performance.

Other infrastructure plans for the tourism sector include the construction of a convention centre at the 80 acre piece of land at the Bomas of Kenya through Private-Public Partnership.

The Kenyatta International Convention Centre (KICC) is also set for refurbishment with an extension of another Tsavo Room to be built near COMESA grounds so as there are more meeting rooms to be held at the KICC.

“We want to create opportunities of restaurants, cafes and bars so as to make the Central Business Districts to be more active and not a dead CBD,” he added.

In the latest economic report from the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics the tourism sector appears to be recovering as it was the most improved sector growing by 12.1 percent in the first quarter of 2016.

In the period under review the number of tourist arrivals at major airports increased from 231,038 in the first quarter of 2015 to 261,404 in the quarter under review attributable to mitigation measures that were instituted to boost tourist arrivals. 

www.tourism.go.ke

 

 

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