Iranian hotels fill up as rapprochement yields tourism dividend

Foreign visitors to Iran are the most visible effect of President Hassan Rouhani’s drive to mend relations with the U.S. and Europe, an influx that one his deputies said generated as much as $5 billion for the sanctions-hit economy over the past year. For the first time since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, international hotel chains are now plotting a return, while European airlines are adding or restoring links with Tehran.

Between March 21 and April 20, the first month of the Iranian year, 4,594 foreign tour groups visited Iran, more than double the number that arrived in same period last year, said Morteza Rahmani-Movahed deputy of the government’s Tourism and Heritage Organization.

More rooms

Saudi Arabia’s Rotana Group plans to open five-star hotels in Tehran and the Shiite pilgrimage city of Mashhad.

Austrian Airlines AG resumed direct flights to Tehran from Vienna in March. Iranian officials have been in talks with the Italian government and Alitalia SpA to increase the frequency on routes, the official Fars News Agency reported on April 30, citing the deputy head of Iran’s Civil Aviation Organization.

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“The stability of the political situation will have an important impact on the economy,” Rahmani-Movahed said. “There has to be a relationship with the rest of the world.”

Representatives from Italy, Germany, the Netherlands and several Arab countries, including Oman and Kuwait, have also visited Iran on “fact-finding” trips aimed at seeking future opportunities to invest in Iranian tourism, he said.

A moderate cleric, Rouhani, 65, promised a rapprochement with the western powers that tightened economic sanctions on Iran under predecessor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad over the country’s nuclear program. Among his first pledges after taking office in August last year, Rouhani said he planned to improve the quality of the tourism industry and draw more foreign travelers.

Tourist wave

Travel and tourism accounted for 6.3 percent of Iran’s $482 billion economy in 2012, according to an estimate by the World Economic Forum in a report last year.

Vice President Masoud Soltanifar, who also heads the heritage organization, referred to a “tsunami of foreign tourists” currently hitting Iran.

When taking into account Shiite pilgrims and visitors from neighboring countries such as Azerbaijan, he said more than 4 million overseas visitors toured Iran from March 2013 to March 2014, each accounting for an estimated $1,200 of revenue, according to a report by the official Islamic Republic News Agency. In 2012, there were 3.8 million international tourist arrivals, according to the World Bank.

Lonely Planet said appetite for information about Iran has prompted the publisher to dedicate a chapter on the country in the update to its Middle East travel guide due next year.

European retirees

In the courtyard of the Abbasi Hotel in Esfahan, a central city directly south of Tehran, packs of retirement-age Europeans sit among quince trees and date palms. Well-heeled Iranian teenagers take selfies against the stunning backdrop of a restored 350-year-old caravanserai, once an inn for merchants passing along the Silk Road.

“This time last year, about 40 percent of our guests were foreigners,” said Bakhtiar Haddadi, general manager of the Abbasi said from his office overlooking the courtyard. This year, “80 percent of them are from overseas,” he said.

Haddadi, who has managed the hotel for 14 years, would not disclose earnings, though said all its 225 rooms were fully booked until June, with the exception of a few large suites kept empty for high-ranking guests. The hotel’s most expensive room, which features bullet-proof windows and reproductions of Safavid-era Persian floral motifs and was once for the exclusive use of the deposed Shah of Iran, costs about $266 a night.

To accommodate the growing demand from overseas guests, the Abbasi, which is owned by Iran’s largest state insurer, Bimeh Iran, plans to build a new wing on a nearby parking lot, providing an additional 150 rooms, according to Haddadi.

“Thankfully with the election and the changes that have taken place, we’ve seen a thawing of the ice,” he said. “Negative perceptions of Iran are changing.”

While diplomats negotiating over Iran’s atomic program ended the latest talks in Vienna this month without advancing their bid to reach a deal by July, more meetings are planned for June and Iranian officials say they are confident of success.

Most tourists arrive as part of package tours, according to officials. They visit during two peak seasons: April to early June, and September to October.

Many follow a route that takes them from Esfahan to the ancient Zoroastrian center of Yazd and then on to the southern city of Shiraz, close to the 1,500-year-old ruins of the Achaemenid Empire. Here, the entrance to the city is flanked by two imposing craggy cliffs, and the granite-clad facade of a five-star hotel looms out from one of these vast rocks.

Grand opening

The Shiraz Grand Hotel took almost 17 years to build, according to its owners, and opened six months ago to reap the rewards of what they say is a surge of foreigners into the city.

In the hotel’s lobby, 61-year-old Austrian tourist Edith Howorka, who has just returned from a tour of the 520 BC relics of the palace of Darius the Great, said her experience of Iran had so far been “absolutely positive.”

“I like to visit countries with a very interesting culture and history,” said Howorka. “But during Ahmadinejad’s time it would never have struck me to come here. I would have felt like an enemy of the country.”

Shiraz’s tourism and heritage organization said that between March and April it sold 6,193 tickets to foreign visitors to the ruins of Persepolis, compared with 1,651 tickets sold in the same period last year.

With foreigners paying a premium of 150,000 rials, about $5, per ticket, the influx represents a 275 percent increase in the city’s revenue from the relics of Iran’s ancient past.

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