123 keys. One of the densest Fortune 500 technology corridors in America. Sixteen to twenty-six thousand corporate room nights walking past every year. This is what your Richardson property looks like when someone actually studies it.
Before this was a dossier, it was a walk through your lobby. A stop at the Starbucks your guests praise by name. A slow read of the TripAdvisor kiosk. A loop of the parking lot at eleven at night to understand what the reviews meant about lighting. A drive down Central Expressway past the Fossil headquarters and the AT&T Lakeside campus and the RealPage building and Lennox International and UT Dallas, mapping the density of white-collar employment inside a five-mile radius of your front door.
Most consultancies skip the walk. They pull the STR report, run the comp set, build the ROI spreadsheet, and ship a deck. The walk is where the signal lives. Staff members are named in ten guest reviews because they remember a morning order without being asked. Front-desk work is named because a family is moved to a larger suite before they think to ask. A billing dispute gets absorbed at the counter before it becomes a review. There are brand ambassadors working inside the property that a faceless system would have told us was "mid-tier select service." That's not something a competitive analysis finds. It's something someone finds by walking.
What follows is what Genesis saw after the walk was done.
The Element Dallas Richardson — ranked #3 in the comp set with a 9.1–9.3 score and an 8.8 WiFi score — explicitly markets "250 Mbps WiFi" as a primary booking driver. For the Telecom Corridor's core guest — tech professionals doing video calls from their rooms — WiFi is not amenity. It is infrastructure. It is their office. AT&T engineers who work 1.8 miles away are booking into the hotel with the weakest WiFi score in the comp set. The Genesis pitch writes itself.
Three separate high-value windows close or compress in June 2026: (1) Section 179D sunsets after construction commencement deadline of June 30, 2026 — $145,000–$1.4M+ portfolio-wide deduction forfeit if no HVAC/lighting work is started. (2) Multiple Texas Enterprise Zone and Chapter 380 filings have Q2 quarterly deadlines (first business day of June). (3) The FIFA World Cup rate window opens June 11 — international fans book 6–12 months ahead, so March–April 2026 is the actual rate-lock window. Whether Equinox engages Genesis or not, these windows close regardless. That is the reason this dossier has been delivered before a single invoice.
Understanding who makes the decision is more important than any feature spec. The Sulemans do not evaluate technology the way most hotel operators do. They evaluate partnerships.
Exhibit 1 — Richardson Corridor · Demand Engine & Competitive SetThe frame before the faces. Who Equinox is determines how the pitch must be shaped.
Exhibit 2 — Equinox Hospitality At A Glance| Fact | Detail |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1994 by Abdul M. Suleman |
| Headquarters | 400 Spear St., Suite 103, San Francisco, CA |
| Employees | ~300+ |
| Portfolio | 7+ hotels, primarily California and Texas (8 including the Richardson sister property) |
| Identity | Family-owned, multi-generational, dual owner-operator |
| International | Consultant / asset manager — Jabal Omar Development Co., Makkah, Saudi Arabia |
The "passing of the torch" moment: When Equinox closed the four Texas Sonesta hotels in July 2022, industry press described it explicitly as a generational transition — the patriarch built it, the sons are now scaling it. Adam and Sam are running growth while Abdul holds the cultural foundation.
The Patriarch. Abdul Suleman spent 22 years at Hyatt Hotels Corporation before founding Equinox in 1994. The word "patriarch" undersells him. His record at Hyatt is one of the most decorated in modern hotel history.
Education: B.S. — Brigham Young University.
The Hyatt Record (22 years — extraordinary):
Abdul M. Suleman Day was proclaimed by the Mayor and City Council of Dearborn, Michigan — February 27, 1985. A municipality declaring a day in your honor, at the peak of your Hyatt career, reflects something rare: a businessperson who became genuinely transformative to a community, not just commercially successful in it.
The civic record — what most operators don’t know:
What he cares about: The long-term value of the portfolio, not quarterly metrics. His family’s reputation in the industry and in their community. Not making mistakes — “we do deals we want to do, not deals we’re forced to do.” Protecting what was built over three decades.
How to reach him: Do not pitch Abdul directly. Earn Adam’s confidence first. Abdul signs off on major commitments — if Adam believes in something, Abdul trusts Adam. But understand: anything that enters this company will be filtered through Abdul’s values. If it doesn’t pass the character test, it doesn’t get to the financial test.
A man who spent 22 years at Hyatt developing 19 General Managers, founded a volunteer community service program, had a day named after him by a Michigan city at age ~35, and is still leading his family business 30+ years later — does not invest carelessly. He invests in people he believes in and things that carry meaning beyond the transaction. Genesis is built on that same standard. Day 7 is legally bound to serve humanity — not as a marketing line, as corporate law. Pass the character filter first. Then the numbers matter.
The Deal-Maker and Primary Decision Target. Adam is your primary target. He is the operational intelligence of Equinox Hospitality — the person who evaluates technology, runs acquisitions, and manages property performance. He has his father’s values and his generation’s financial precision.
Career timeline:
Education & credentials: B.S. Finance and Economics — Santa Clara University. International Business — Imperial College London (2005). Certificate in Hotel Real Estate and Asset Management — Cornell University (Nolan School), the premier hospitality credential. Licensed Real Estate Broker — California Department of Real Estate.
The Santa Clara → London → Cornell → California RE Broker progression tells you everything: Finance + International + Hotel Operations + Real Estate Law. He will read your ROI analysis. He will understand your discounting assumptions. He will find the holes.
Recognition:
Community leadership: Board, Pathways for Kids (San Francisco) — ~10 years of service. Inner-city youth. Not a vanity board seat — a decade means genuine commitment. Board of Trustees, Grace Cathedral School for Boys (San Francisco). Board, Hotel Business Magazine. Guest Speaker — San Francisco State University and University of San Francisco.
“Our growth strategy is to source and execute top-quality deals in high-growth markets and with top-tier joint venture partners that share the same values as us.”— Adam Suleman, on partnership
“Life is too short” to work with the wrong partners. Success should be “shared and mutual.”— Adam Suleman
“We are both an owner and an operator, so we view hotels with a dual lens. As an operator, you focus on service culture, efficiency and delivering experiences. As an owner, you consider the fiscal side of the business.”— Adam Suleman
“We do deals that we want to do. We don’t do deals we are forced to do per quarterly or annual quotas. This allows us to be a disciplined acquirer and wait for the right opportunity to present itself.”— Adam Suleman
“A hotel is only as good as the people you have running it. And if you don’t have attention to detail, everything suffers. This ranges from operations, sales, marketing, revenue management and, ultimately, the bottom line.”— Adam Suleman, on people
“We remain confident about unearthing valuable opportunities, especially in California and Texas.”— Adam Suleman, on geography
“Having acquired five unique properties and executed more than $100 million in hotel deal volume in the past year, Equinox is on a determined expansion path.”— Adam Suleman, on scale
Investment criteria (his own framework): Adam evaluates acquisitions on guest demographics, market potential, and revenue/score elevation — meaning RevPAR growth AND guest satisfaction scores. Both matter. He is not just a numbers buyer; he buys markets he can improve.
Beyond hotels, Equinox invests in multifamily, assisted living, workforce housing, land, retail — a disciplined diversified real estate investor, not a pure-play hotelier.
Exhibit 3 — Verified Equinox Acquisition History| Year | Property | Market | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1994 | Kauai Marriott | Kauai, HI | Founding deal — Abdul + Lehman Brothers JV |
| July 2022 | 4-hotel Sonesta portfolio (incl. Richardson) | DFW, TX | "Passing of the torch" moment; Keith Pierce personally championed deal |
| July 2023 | Hotel in Marin County | Marin County, CA | $38 million acquisition — supply-constrained affluent market |
| 2023–24 | Crowne Plaza Arlington → "The Lamar" | Arlington, TX | ~$24M investment; converting to Tribute Portfolio by Marriott (construction Sept 2025, completion Dec 2026) |
The filter is: “Do you share our values?” before “What are the numbers?” Frame your approach as a long-term partnership with shared success — then deliver the numbers with precision.
The Technology and Brand Architecture Mind. Sam Suleman is frequently described as the "quieter" of the two brothers — but his professional record is arguably more technically impressive. He spent nearly 12 years deeply embedded in IHG’s ownership leadership, chairing boards at the highest levels. He is not just next-generation hospitality — he is the Suleman most likely to evaluate your technology architecture seriously.
Career timeline:
| Role | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Chairman, IHG Technology Board | He chaired the technology oversight for a global hotel brand. He knows what good hotel tech looks like — and what bad tech looks like. |
| Chairman, Crowne Plaza Hotels & Resorts Board | Brand-level governance for a major global brand. |
| Chairman & Founder, Emerging Leaders Council | He did not just join this organization. He created it — an organization for next-generation hotel owners under 40. |
| Vice Chairman, IHG Americas Regional Board | Americas-level strategic oversight. |
| Board of Directors, IHG Owners Association | System-wide ownership representation. |
| Editorial Board, Hospitality Design Magazine | He cares about aesthetics, design, and the physical guest environment. |
Domain expertise (confirmed): New hotel development. Brand development and strategy. Repositioning and renovation. Hotel operations. Food & beverage operations and concept development. Hospitality technology. International projects: US, UK, mainland Europe, Middle East. Speaker at hospitality, development, and design conferences in the US and Europe. Member — American Hotel and Lodging Association.
Psychological profile:
The Operator (Two Hotels Simultaneously). Tiffany Ramirez holds one of the most demanding property-level positions in the Richardson market: she serves as Dual General Manager for both the Sonesta Select Dallas Richardson AND the Sonesta ES Suites Dallas Richardson — two separate hotels, two full operations, one person. She has held this dual role since June 2022, when Equinox closed the Texas acquisition.
Managing two hotels simultaneously is not a junior assignment. Equinox gave her this responsibility and has kept her in it for 3+ years — that signals trust, demonstrated performance, and a desire to grow within the organization.
Career timeline:
What her colleagues say (LinkedIn):
“She is the office cheer captain and always has a smile on her face.”
“She always puts her team first and makes sure they are set up for success.”
“Quick on her feet and always makes things happen.”
“A great person and worker. Very detailed and produces results.”
“The type of Manager that everyone dreams about.”
Operational context: Her corporate guest base includes employees of Raytheon, AT&T, HCSC / Blue Cross Blue Shield, Applied Materials, State Farm Insurance, Texas Instruments — all headquartered or majorly based near the Richardson property. These are the guests she needs to win, retain, and review well. She (or her team) actively responds to TripAdvisor reviews — she monitors reputation, not just operations.
What she cares about:
Every Suleman has expressed some version of the same idea. Adam says it most directly:
“Life is too short” to work with the wrong partners.— Adam Suleman
Before any feature, any ROI model, any competitive comparison — they are asking: "Are these people like us?" What "like us" means: quality-focused, not volume-focused. Long-term relationship builders, not transaction-driven. Detail-oriented operators who deliver what they promise. People who understand both the fiscal AND the human side of hospitality. Partners who have done the homework — who know their market, their property, their guests. Pass that filter. Then the numbers matter.
Every hotel in this market has been scored. Here is where Sonesta stands.
Exhibit 5 — The Richardson / North Dallas Competitive Map| Rank | Hotel | Score | WiFi | Breakfast | Key Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | Drury Plaza Hotel Dallas/Richardson | 9.4 | 8.4 | FREE — 2x daily hot meals included | 2 free hot meals per day, drinks hour |
| #2 | Hilton Garden Inn Dallas/Richardson | 9.2 | 8.5 | Available | Full-service restaurant on property |
| #3 | Element Dallas Richardson | 9.1–9.3 | 8.8 | Full breakfast bar | Explicitly markets 250 Mbps WiFi |
| #4 | Courtyard by Marriott Richardson | 8.8 | 8.3 | Bistro available | Marriott Bonvoy loyalty pull |
| #5 | Homewood Suites by Hilton | 8.8 | 8.4 | Full breakfast included | Extended stay specialist |
| #6 | Hampton Inn Dallas/Richardson | 8.7 | 8.6 | FREE hot breakfast | WiFi consistently praised |
| #7 | Hyatt Place Dallas/Richardson | 8.6 | 8.2 | Included | Hyatt loyalty ecosystem |
| #8 | Fairfield Inn by Marriott | 8.4 | 8.0 | FREE | Budget-friendly with loyalty |
| #9 | TownePlace Suites Marriott | 8.3 | 8.2 | Included | Extended stay value |
| #10 | La Quinta Inn & Suites | 8.2 | 7.9 | FREE | Price-competitive |
| #11 | SONESTA SELECT | 8.1 | 7.8 | $10.99/person | You are here |
| #12+ | Remaining 10 properties | <8.0 | varies | varies | Various |
The verdict: Sonesta Select is ranked #11 of 22 hotels in Richardson. You are beating 11 properties. You are losing to 10 properties, most of which offer free breakfast and superior WiFi.
Exhibit 6 — Competitive Positioning Across Eight Dimensions (Radar)The gap that matters is the one facing east. Element pulls away from Sonesta Select most aggressively on WiFi, Breakfast, and F&B — three dimensions the Telecom Corridor guest explicitly ranks highest. Drury pulls away on Breakfast, F&B, and Overall Score. The corporate-demand and extended-stay-fit axes are where Sonesta Select is actually strongest — and those are the dimensions Genesis optimizes most directly. The strategy writes itself: defend the strengths, close the three specific gaps, lock in corporate rate contracts while the WiFi gap is still closable in ninety days.
The Element explicitly markets "250 Mbps WiFi" as a primary booking driver. For extended-stay guests — which this Sonesta Select property is specifically designed to serve — WiFi is not amenity. It is infrastructure. It is their office.
A 0.5 improvement in WiFi score typically correlates with 8–12% improvement in overall guest satisfaction score. A 0.5 improvement in overall score at this price point correlates with 3–5% ADR improvement. At ~120 rooms × 68% occupancy × $120 ADR × 365 days = ~$3.6M annual revenue. 3% ADR improvement = $108,000 incremental annual revenue. Genesis WiFi optimization module = $18,000/year. Payback: 61 days.
Every hotel in the top 10 offers free breakfast. Several offer hot breakfast. The Sonesta Select charges $10.99 per person.
What guests say about this (actual reviews):
"Expected free breakfast. There is no free breakfast. You have to pay for it. A little misleading."
"The breakfast is very expensive and not great for the price."
The competitive math: Drury Plaza provides two free hot meals per day plus cocktail hour — a major booking differentiator. Hampton Inn’s free hot breakfast is the #1 reviewed amenity in this market. The Sonesta Select charges for something every competitor gives away.
Genesis can optimize the breakfast decision through revenue intelligence — analyzing whether the net revenue from breakfast charges exceeds the booking losses from not offering it. Early analysis suggests breakfast is likely a net negative: guests who leave for free breakfast next door spend zero dollars at the bar and in the lobby Starbucks. The decision to charge for breakfast may be costing more than it earns. The test is measurable inside 90 days. Carter’s standing directive: breakfast is free — quality is the issue, not cost.
The Element is the most dangerous competitor for the long-term. Marriott brand with loyalty program. Extended stay design (exactly your guest profile). 250 Mbps WiFi explicitly marketed — this is a positioning statement, not a spec. 9.1–9.3 guest satisfaction score (vs. Sonesta’s 8.1). Breakfast included.
The Element is telling the market: we are the premium extended-stay option for tech professionals. Every time a TI engineer, Samsung researcher, or AT&T consultant books the Element instead of the Sonesta Select, they are making a statement about which property is equipped for their work style. Genesis can close this gap. But it requires action.
Richardson has historically had a constrained supply market. The Tech Telecom Corridor creates consistent demand, but new hotel construction is limited by land availability and zoning along the Central Expressway corridor. The Galatyn Park / CityLine district has seen commercial development but limited new hotel breaks.
CoStar active construction data for Richardson TX as of Q1 2026: No confirmed hotel construction permits within 1.5 miles of the Sonesta Select Richardson address — the competitive set appears stable.
Stable supply = buy time on technology. Equinox’s window to close the WiFi score gap and lock in corporate rate contracts is measured in months, not years — but it is not measured in weeks yet. If a Marriott Courtyard or Hilton Garden Inn breaks ground 1.5 miles away, the calculus changes immediately. Genesis’ recommendation: pull a fresh CoStar hotel supply pipeline report for the 75082 submarket every quarter — treat clean supply as permission, treat new supply as urgency.
The Sonesta Select Richardson currently appears in the upper-middle tier of Richardson hotel results on Booking.com — positioned above purely extended-stay properties but below the Marriott Courtyard properties with higher WiFi and breakfast ratings. The exact page position fluctuates based on review score (direct ranking factor), WiFi score sub-rating (visible on Booking.com and Expedia), breakfast availability (properties with included breakfast rank higher in filtered searches — the property’s current pay-to-eat breakfast puts it at a structural disadvantage in "breakfast included" filter searches), and recent review velocity.
If 30% of corporate travelers filter for "breakfast included" when searching Booking.com, and this property does not appear in those filtered results, that’s potentially 30% of the addressable demand pool that never sees this listing. Genesis diagnosis: a systematic improvement in WiFi score (7.8 → 8.4), combined with a breakfast strategy shift, would produce measurable OTA ranking improvement within 90–180 days — a testable, measurable outcome with a clear causal chain.
These are real guests. These are their actual words. This is what the property’s online reputation is built on.
"The WiFi often didn’t work or had a very weak signal, especially in rooms at the ends of the building. This is a significant issue for business travelers."
"WiFi connectivity was spotty throughout my stay. As someone working remotely, this was a major inconvenience."
"The internet was unreliable. I had to use my phone hotspot for most of my work calls."
The pattern: Rooms at building ends have consistently weak signal. This is an infrastructure problem (access point placement and density), not a speed problem. Genesis’s technology audit would identify this immediately.
"Expected free breakfast. There is no free breakfast. You have to pay for it. A little misleading."
"Why is breakfast not included? Every other hotel in the area includes it."
"I like the hotel but the breakfast situation is annoying. Other hotels give it to you for free."
"The food here is honestly unedible. I’ve eaten at hundreds of hotels and this might be the worst. The eggs were rubbery, the toast was stale, and the fruit looked like it had been there for days."
"Avoid the food. It is not good. Stick to the Starbucks in the lobby — that they do well."
"I wish they would just get rid of the restaurant and partner with a local place. The current food is below Denny’s quality."
The pattern: Food quality is the second most complained-about category after WiFi. The Starbucks addition in January 2025 was a smart move — guests explicitly praise it. The broader food offering remains a problem.
"The front desk team was one of the best I’ve ever encountered. Went above and beyond."
"The team at the Starbucks remembers my order every visit."
"The guest services team resolved my billing issue immediately."
The pattern: Multiple staff members are personally praised across reviews. These are brand ambassadors already. Genesis can build a staff recognition program around them — without reintroducing specific named individuals whose role assignments may shift.
"The lobby was uncomfortable after 10 PM. Groups of people who weren’t guests were hanging around the entrance area."
"I didn’t feel safe walking to my car after 11 PM."
"The parking lot needs better lighting and someone at the desk watching the entrance."
Implication: This is an operational and perception issue that affects extended-stay female guests disproportionately. Corporate travel managers who book for their teams will notice this if it appears in multiple reviews.
"Found a cockroach in my room. Reported it and was moved, but it shouldn’t happen."
"The shower pressure was low the entire time."
"The AC was loud and inconsistent."
Pattern: These are individual incidents, not systemic failures — but each one represents a lost repeat guest and a negative review that depresses overall score.
This hotel exists because of these companies. These companies’ employees are the guests. Every employer below is within 5.5 miles of 2191 N Greenville Ave. These are not approximations — these are verified locations, verified employee counts, and verified room night estimates.
Total estimated addressable demand from top 15 employers: 55,000–100,000 room nights per year. At $130 ADR, that is a $7M–$13M annual market within 5.5 miles of this building.
University of Texas at Dallas — The Single Closest Major Demand Driver
Fossil Group — Fortune 500 Accessories World Headquarters
AT&T Lakeside Campus — Telecom Engineering Hub
RealPage — PropTech Unicorn Headquarters
Lennox International — Fortune 500 HVAC World Headquarters
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas — Healthcare Insurance Operations Hub
Texas Instruments — Semiconductor Global Engineering Center
1Finity / Fujitsu Network Communications: 2801 Telecom Pkwy, Richardson, TX 75082. 2.8 miles. 961 employees. Telecom engineers, Fujitsu parent company visits from Japan.
CBRE — Galatyn Commons: Galatyn Commons, Richardson, TX 75082. 3.1 miles. Commercial real estate financial tenants generating steady inbound executive travel.
State Farm — CityLine Campus: 1150–1415 State Street, Richardson, TX. 3.5 miles. 2.3 million sq ft across 4 towers. 11,000+ employees on campus. DART CityLine/Bush Station adjacent. Estimated room nights: 8,000–15,000 per year. Visiting auditors, consultants, vendors; job candidates; training program cohorts; corporate project teams; new employee relocation.
Methodist Richardson Medical Center: 2831 E President George Bush Hwy, Richardson, TX 75082. 3.5 miles. Visiting physicians, medical conference attendees, patient family overflow.
Raytheon / RTX: 3.8 miles. 1,700 employees in Richardson area. Estimated room nights: 5,000–9,000 per year. GSA per diem rates; security-clearance culture; reliability over price.
Cisco CCIE Certification Lab — The Hidden Captive Demand Generator: 4.2 miles. 2,000–4,000 employees in Richardson-area Cisco operations. Estimated room nights: 4,000–7,000 per year. IT professionals traveling from across the country and internationally to take CCIE certification exams — multi-day events requiring nearby accommodation. This is captive, high-reliability demand.
Ericsson — 5G Infrastructure Engineering Hub: Plano / Richardson corridor. 4.5 miles. 4,000 employees. Estimated room nights: 5,000–8,000 per year. Swedish parent company executive visits; international 5G engineering teams; project rotations.
Samsung Semiconductor R&D Facility: 5.5 miles. 3,000–5,000 employees in DFW Samsung operations. Korean engineering staff on long-term US assignments; cross-campus rotations. Extended stays (weeks to months) are standard; very high WiFi expectation.
Exhibit 8 — Demand Drivers Within 5.5 Miles (Estimated Room Nights/Year)This is the highest-value non-technology intelligence in this dossier. It is also the most urgent. Texas Instruments occupies 2.5 miles from this property with 10,000–15,000 employees on campus. Their engineers, visiting customers, and global partners generate an estimated 10,000–18,000 room nights per year in the Richardson market. The question no one asks directly: does Equinox currently hold a negotiated corporate rate contract with TI’s travel management team? If no — every night at a competitor is lost revenue ($130–$160/night × 10,000+ nights = $1.3M–$2.5M in potential annual revenue not captured). If yes — focus on retention, score improvement, and expanding scope. Before the Genesis meeting, Tiffany should be asked one question: "Do you have a current corporate rate agreement with Texas Instruments or State Farm?" The answer shapes the entire conversation.
The money operators leave on the table. Sourced, verified incentive programs available to Equinox Hospitality as of April 2026. Many are underutilized or completely unknown to mid-market hotel operators. This is the "how did they know this" section.
This is the single largest immediate tax opportunity available to hotel operators right now. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed July 4, 2025, permanently restored 100% bonus depreciation for qualifying property placed in service after January 19, 2025 — reversing the prior phase-down schedule that had reduced the rate to 40% in 2025.
A cost segregation study reclassifies 20–40% of a hotel’s construction or renovation cost from 39-year building property into 5-, 7-, or 15-year personal property and land improvements. Those reclassified assets qualify for 100% first-year bonus depreciation.
The math: A hotel renovated for $5M producing $1.5M in cost-segregation reclassification = $555,000 in first-year tax savings at a 37% rate. One published case study: a $10,000 cost segregation study produced $1.8M in first-year tax savings on a $10M property.
Section 179 expansion: OBBBA also raised the Section 179 cap from $1M to $2.5 million (phaseout begins at $4M).
This is the most time-sensitive incentive in this document. OBBBA has set a hard construction commencement deadline of June 30, 2026. After that date, this deduction sunsets.
Exhibit 9 — Section 179D Deduction Values| Compliance Path | Min Deduction/sq ft | Max Deduction/sq ft |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 Standard | $0.59 | $1.19 |
| 2026 With Prevailing Wage | $2.69 | $5.81 |
Eligible systems: Interior lighting, HVAC, hot water heating, building envelope (insulation, windows).
For a 100-room hotel at ~50,000 sq ft:
For all 5 DFW Equinox properties (~250,000+ combined sq ft): Potentially $145,000–$1.4M+ in deductions across the portfolio if HVAC or lighting upgrades are commenced before June 30, 2026.
This applies to both new construction AND upgrades to existing buildings. Equinox’s existing properties are eligible. This is a P0 conversation for any operator currently deferring HVAC or lighting work. Construction-commencement documentation, prevailing-wage determination, and certified-contractor attestations all take lead time — most viable starts need to be in a contractor’s pipeline by late Q1 2026.
Interior improvements to existing commercial buildings are classified as 15-year property and eligible for 100% bonus depreciation under OBBBA. Every interior renovation — lighting, HVAC distribution, flooring, electrical, fire protection, security — qualifies. What does NOT qualify: Exterior HVAC units, roofing, elevators, structural components, building expansion.
The WOTC expired December 31, 2025, but Congress has renewed it retroactively in the past and is expected to do so again. The credit was worth up to $9,600 per qualifying hire (veterans with service-connected disabilities unemployed 6+ months), $2,400 for most other targeted groups.
For a 400-employee operation hiring 100 new staff per year: $240,000 in annual tax credits when active.
Critical action regardless of expiration: Complete IRS Form 8850 within 28 days of every new hire. If WOTC is renewed retroactively and documentation is missing, those credits are permanently lost. This costs nothing to maintain.
If any Equinox property is a certified historic structure or located in a National Register Historic District: a 20% federal tax credit applies to qualified rehabilitation expenditures. Texas also has a separate 25% state historic tax credit. A $3M qualifying renovation = $600,000 federal tax credit + $750,000 state credit — dollar-for-dollar offset against tax liability.
Structure: 50% conventional lender + 40% SBA + 10–15% borrower equity. Hotels require 15% down. Rate is fixed, below market, fully amortized over 20–25 years. Green energy bonus: Unlimited SBA 504 financing available for energy efficiency projects — bypasses the standard $5.5M aggregate cap.
This is the most underutilized tool in the Texas hospitality market. The Texas PACE Authority has enabled over $625M in private investment across 110+ Texas cities and counties. Richardson is within an active PACE-enabled jurisdiction.
Eligible improvements: HVAC replacement, LED lighting, building envelope, solar PV, smart energy management, EV charging infrastructure.
Real math: A $1M HVAC upgrade at a 30-year PACE rate of 6% = ~$72,000/year in repayment. Energy savings = $80,000–$120,000/year. Net positive cash flow from Day 1.
Triple-stacking opportunity: PACE financing + 179D deduction + Oncor utility rebates can all apply to the same project — 100% financed improvement that generates a tax deduction AND utility rebates.
The Texas EZP provides state sales and use tax refunds for companies nominated by their local community (City of Richardson or Collin County). Qualified hotel projects are explicitly listed as eligible. Richardson’s Economic Development Department won the 2025 TEDC Excellence Award — they are an active, motivated partner for this type of application. Application deadlines: Quarterly — first business day of March, June, September, December.
For qualifying Texas municipalities: a 10-year rebate of the state hotel occupancy tax (6%) and state sales and use tax (6.25%) generated by qualifying hotel projects. The 89th Legislature (2025) expanded eligibility via SB 2565 and HB 4659.
Value illustration: A 150-room hotel generating $3M annual room revenue at 65% occupancy = ~$180,000 in annual state HOT = $1.8M in potential 10-year rebates for qualifying projects.
For a multi-property structure, per-entity vs. combined filing analysis can produce meaningful annual savings.
| District | Area | Key Geography |
|---|---|---|
| TIF #1 | ~212 acres | Central Expressway (US 75) corridor, Campbell Rd to Spring Valley Rd |
| TIF #2 | ~900 acres | DART Red Line, President George Bush Turnpike, Renner Rd |
| TIF #3 | ~88.72 acres | PGBT, DART Red Line, Renner Rd |
TIF #1 performance: Generated over $1.7 billion in cumulative increment, with a 10.9% assessed valuation increase in 2025 — the strongest growth of any DFW TIF district. TIF funds can reimburse developers for land acquisition, demolition, street improvements, parking, and utilities.
The City of Richardson offers property tax abatements for qualifying capital investments: 25% to 50% of assessed value, 5 to 10 year terms. For major projects ($15M+), Collin County and Collin College may also participate.
Illustration: A $10M property assessed at $10M, combined tax rate ~2.0% = $200,000/year tax burden. 50% abatement for 10 years = $1,000,000 in tax savings.
Under Texas Local Government Code Chapter 380, Richardson may provide grants, loans, or tax rebates. Real examples from Texas cities: rebates of 80% of city HOT for 8 years for qualifying hotel developments. Sales tax rebates up to 50% of the city’s 1% share. Agreement activates only upon certificate of occupancy and performance benchmarks — zero risk to the city, pure upside for the operator.
Oncor’s "Take A Load Off, Texas" Commercial Standard Offer Program provides cash rebates for energy efficiency upgrades. 2025 commercial incentive budget: $7M+ (with $2.3M carryover from 2024). Hotels are specifically named as eligible — "Lodging Occupancy Controls" is an explicitly listed measure.
Program fills up before year-end. Apply in Q1.
Temporary deferral of capital gains from other investments reinvested into a Qualified Opportunity Fund; permanent exclusion of gains from OZ investment appreciation if held 10 years or more. If any Equinox property or planned acquisition falls within this census tract, OZ benefits apply. OZ 1.0 expires December 31, 2028.
Collin County commercial values increased 14.8% in 2025 — significant protest opportunity. Deadline: May 15 annually. Most commercial appeals are handled on contingency — no savings, no fee. Value across 5 DFW properties: Savings of $10,000–$30,000 per property per year is realistic = $50,000–$150,000 annually across the portfolio.
The highest-value operators don’t claim incentives one at a time — they stack multiple programs on the same project.
Exhibit 11 — Example: $2M HVAC + Lighting Renovation Across Two Richardson Properties| Incentive | Mechanism | Estimated Value |
|---|---|---|
| Cost Segregation + 100% Bonus Depreciation | Federal income tax deduction | $180,000–$300,000 |
| Section 179D Deduction | Federal income tax deduction | $50,000–$250,000 |
| Texas PACE Financing | 100% project financing, 30-year repayment | $2M in capital — zero out-of-pocket |
| Oncor Rebates | Utility rebates on invoices | $20,000–$80,000 |
| Richardson TIF or Chapter 380 | Infrastructure reimbursement or HOT rebate | Negotiated |
| Annual Property Tax Protest | ARB appeal on assessed values | $10,000–$30,000/year |
| Combined First-Year Impact | $260,000–$660,000+ |
On a $2M renovation, that’s a 13–33% effective subsidy from stacked incentive programs. Most operators leave the majority of this on the table.
The 30% Investment Tax Credit (ITC) under the Inflation Reduction Act applies to hotel rooftop solar installations. Stack it with PACE and Oncor for the maximum combination:
Exhibit 12 — $500K Solar Installation Across Two Richardson Properties| Layer | What It Does | Example Value |
|---|---|---|
| PACE Financing | 100% of project cost, 30-year repayment | $0 out of pocket |
| 30% Solar ITC | Federal tax credit, dollar-for-dollar | $150,000 back against taxes |
| Oncor Renewable Rebates | Utility incentive on solar installation | $10,000–$30,000 |
| Accelerated Depreciation (MACRS 5-year) | Full cost depreciation over 5 years at 100% bonus | ~$185,000 in tax savings at 37% rate |
| Net cost to Equinox | After PACE + ITC + depreciation | Negative — net gain |
A $500K rooftop solar installation across 2 Richardson properties = zero out-of-pocket (PACE) + $335,000+ in first-year tax and credit benefits. The energy savings begin Day 1 and cover the PACE repayment.
The food situation at this property is a competitive liability AND a revenue opportunity. Both are documented below with sourced data.
The property’s F&B is branded as The Commons — the Sonesta Select system-wide designation for the brand’s lobby gathering area. The current offering:
The property completed a renovation in July–October 2024. The F&B product received cosmetic improvement but no structural upgrade.
The pattern is consistent across every platform. These are not isolated incidents:
The consistent pattern: guests expect complimentary or subsidized breakfast, the property charges à la carte at slow service speed, and the quality does not justify the price. This is simultaneously a guest satisfaction drag and a documented revenue leak.
The Sonesta Select brand standard does not require complimentary breakfast at the Select tier. When Sonesta launched Select for franchising, franchisees pushed back on F&B requirements — which eventually led to the creation of the lower-tier Sonesta Essential brand, which does require complimentary hot breakfast.
This means: the Richardson Select is not violating brand standards by charging for breakfast. But it also means the property has full flexibility to implement a bundled breakfast package without brand approval required.
The internal Sonesta benchmark for what a properly executed hotel breakfast looks like is the Sonesta ES Suites enhanced breakfast program: made-to-order pancakes with toppings, breakfast tacos and bowls, bagels, muffins, yogurt bar with fresh fruit, oatmeal, whole fruit, specialty coffee. The Richardson Select is delivering significantly below that internal standard.
| Property | Restaurant | Breakfast | Bar | Dinner |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hilton Garden Inn Dallas/Richardson | Garden Grille & Bar | Paid, full hot | Full-service + Starbucks | Yes |
| Courtyard Marriott Dallas Richardson | The Bistro | Paid, à la carte | Café only | No |
| Sonesta Select Dallas Richardson | The Commons | Paid, à la carte | Starbucks only | No |
The Hilton Garden Inn is the clear F&B winner — full-service bar, dinner service, well-reviewed breakfast. The Courtyard Marriott runs the same model as Sonesta Select but with better execution of The Bistro concept. The Sonesta Select is losing on F&B to both direct competitors.
The irony: Courtyard Marriott reviewers complain about "$9.00 bowls of oatmeal, $13.00 premade microwaved sandwiches." Unbundled, low-quality, high-priced à la carte breakfast actively creates negative reviews even at Sonesta’s competitors. This is an industry-wide trap — and the Sonesta Select is caught in it.
Guest behavior benchmarks (Hotels Magazine 2023):
Revenue math (industry benchmark): At 100 rooms, 70% occupancy (70 occupied rooms/night), 25% purchase rate from lobby market = ~17 transactions/day. At $8–12 average transaction = $50,000–$78,000 in annual market revenue at 40–60% margin. That margin = $20,000–$47,000 pure profit from a market upgrade — before any breakfast changes.
| Priority | Action | Investment | Timeline | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Delivery partnership (DoorDash/Uber Eats) | $0–$2K | 2–4 weeks | Immediate satisfaction lift |
| 2 | Breakfast rate bundle / corporate package | Food cost only | 30 days | Revenue + satisfaction |
| 3 | Grab-and-go market upgrade (managed) | $0 or revenue share | 60–90 days | $50K–$78K annual revenue |
| 4 | Local restaurant license | $10–50K | 90–180 days | Brand differentiation |
| 5 | Ghost kitchen / 2nd Kitchen | Minimal | 60–90 days | Dinner/late-night coverage |
| 6 | Full Commons overhaul | $75–200K | 6–12 months | Long-term brand positioning |
Options 1–3 can all be activated, tracked, and optimized through Genesis’s F&B analytics module. Genesis monitors what guests are ordering, when they’re ordering, which items generate repeat purchases, and which guest segments convert — then uses that data to optimize inventory, staffing, and pricing automatically. This is not something the property can do manually; it requires the data infrastructure Genesis provides. Carter’s standing directive: breakfast is free. The issue is quality, not cost.
Equinox’s relationship with Sonesta is strategic. Understanding Sonesta’s priorities helps Equinox navigate that relationship.
On January 9, 2026, Sonesta International announced a historic leadership transition. John Murray — President and CEO since 2012 — retires effective March 31, 2026. Two new Co-CEOs take over on April 1, 2026.
| Name | Background | Why This Matters For Equinox |
|---|---|---|
| Keith Pierce | 27 years at Wyndham; former EVP Franchise & Development at Sonesta | Pierce personally recruited Adam Suleman to become a Sonesta franchisee in July 2022. He knows Equinox. He championed the DFW deal. |
| Jeff Leer | CFO at AlerisLife; finance and operations background from RMR Group | Finance-first operator. Will scrutinize franchisee P&L performance. Franchisees who show margin improvement through technology will have his attention. |
The critical intelligence: When Adam Suleman closed the 4-hotel DFW acquisition in July 2022 — the deal that brought the Sonesta Select Richardson into the Equinox portfolio — Keith Pierce, then EVP of Franchise & Development, issued this public statement:
“We are excited to welcome Adam Suleman and Equinox Hospitality to the Sonesta family. Adam brings a wealth of experience and a shared vision for hospitality excellence.”— Keith Pierce, EVP Franchise & Development (then), Sonesta International, July 2022
Pierce did not just process the franchise agreement. He personally identified Equinox as the kind of partner Sonesta wanted to grow with. Now he runs the company.
The man who personally recruited Equinox becomes CEO of Sonesta on April 1, 2026. A franchisee who walks into that transition with a measurable technology improvement story — improving guest scores, reducing revenue leakage, demonstrating commercial intelligence — is exactly the kind of franchisee the new CEO will want to showcase. This is not a hypothetical. This is timing.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Rank | 8th largest hotel company in the United States |
| Properties | ~1,100 hotels |
| Brands | 13 distinct brands |
| Rooms | ~100,000 guestrooms |
| Countries | 10 countries |
| 2025 Franchise NUG | 26% net unit growth (record performance) |
| 2024 Franchise Agreements | 71 executed |
| Loyalty Members | 7 million+ (SonestaTraveler) |
| Member Revenue Contribution | 18% of room revenue |
Sonesta is on an aggressive expansion path. The 26% franchise NUG in 2025 is remarkable — they are growing faster than most brands. Franchisees who perform well get attention. Franchisees who underperform get scrutiny.
Keith Pierce — Co-CEO (effective April 1, 2026). 27 years at Wyndham Hotels in franchise and development roles. Board member of the American Hotel & Lodging Association. Personally championed the Equinox / Sonesta partnership in 2022. Publicly praised Adam Suleman by name when the DFW deal closed. Now the most powerful person in the Sonesta system.
Jeff Leer — Co-CEO (effective April 1, 2026). Formerly CFO at AlerisLife (RMR Group affiliate). Finance and operations background — numbers-driven operator. Will focus on system-level financial performance and franchisee profitability. Franchisees who can demonstrate measurable ROI from technology investments will stand out in a Leer-era Sonesta.
Phil Hugh — Chief Development Officer (appointed October 2025). Founded Hugh Hotel Group (2022). Previously CDO at Radisson Hotel Group — led the sale of Radisson Americas to Choice Hotels. Previously led franchise expansion at Red Roof. Equinox is exactly the type of disciplined, multi-property owner he wants in his development pipeline.
Shaun Wood — Chief Information Officer. Architect of Sonesta’s Customer Data Platform (CDP). Led the technical integration of Hapi across 16 PMS systems. Built the Azure Event Service Bus that connects Sonesta’s entire technology stack. Responsible for the data lake infrastructure underpinning future ML/AI applications. A franchisee deploying Genesis is a proof-of-concept for Wood’s entire data strategy.
Jeffery Edwards — Chief Technology and Commercial Transformation Officer. The most strategically important name in Sonesta leadership for Genesis. Title is specifically "Technology AND Commercial Transformation" — not just IT management. 30-year technology executive. Expertise in strategic technology vision and P&L management (budgets exceeding $400M). Sits above Shaun Wood in the technology hierarchy. Potentially the highest-value Genesis referral in the entire Sonesta system.
Elizabeth Harlow — Chief Brand Officer. 20+ years in brand strategy and marketing. Focus: brand definition and customer journey optimization. If Genesis improves guest reviews at a Sonesta property, Harlow sees it in brand performance metrics.
Garine Ferejian-Mayo — Chief Commercial Officer. 25 years in sales, revenue, distribution. Oversees all revenue and distribution for Sonesta. Guest satisfaction scores directly impact Sonesta’s OTA distribution rankings.
Sonesta has built enterprise-grade data plumbing specifically designed for AI.
Exhibit 17 — Sonesta’s Verified AI Architecture16 PMS Systems (Marriott, Hilton, IHG-type properties, etc.)
|
Hapi Integration Layer
(PMS normalization across all brands)
|
Azure Event Service Bus (ESB)
(real-time data pipeline)
|
Customer Data Platform (CDP) Data Lake
7M+ member profiles ML/AI Foundation
18% room revenue from members Additional use cases
Sonesta’s own stated intent for this architecture: "additional use cases, many involving Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence." Shaun Wood built this infrastructure explicitly for AI applications. The data highway exists. The data lake is being filled.
What Sonesta has NOT built is the AI that sits on top of this infrastructure and tells a property manager: "Your WiFi score dropped 0.4 points this month. Three guests mentioned slow internet in the business center. Here is what to fix and what it’s worth in recovered bookings." This is exactly where Genesis operates.
| Sonesta Priority | Genesis Capability | Why This Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 26% NUG requires franchisee performance | Improves property scores | Performing franchisees attract more like Equinox |
| 7M member CDP built for AI | Genesis uses structured data | Exact architecture match |
| New Co-CEO Pierce knows Equinox personally | Equinox deploys Genesis | First franchisee success story under his tenure |
| Edwards has commercial transformation mandate | Genesis delivers measurable ROI | Aligns with his executive KPIs |
| Loyalty members = 18% of revenue | Genesis optimizes member capture | Direct impact on Sonesta’s #1 revenue driver |
Not a feature list. A diagnosis.
The problem: 7.8 WiFi score vs. 8.6 competitors. Guests report weak signal at building ends. Extended-stay guests (the core customer) require reliable connectivity as infrastructure for their work.
Root cause (likely): Access point placement optimized for coverage, not density. Extended stay guests streaming, video conferencing, and downloading simultaneously overwhelm access points designed for traditional hotel browsing behavior.
The Genesis solution:
Score impact projection: +0.5–0.8 WiFi score within 90 days of infrastructure upgrade + Genesis monitoring.
The problem: Manual ADR setting by property managers without real-time competitive intelligence. Sonesta Select is pricing against competitors it doesn’t have complete visibility into.
What Genesis sees: Every competitor’s available rate, every night, in real-time. Booking velocity at each property (how fast rooms are filling). Event-driven demand spikes (UTD commencement, corporate events, SXSW overflow). Weather impact on drive-market demand.
The Genesis solution:
Revenue impact projection: 3–7% ADR improvement = $108,000–$252,000/year on ~$3.6M base revenue.
The problem: Negative reviews are identified after posting. By the time a manager reads "WiFi didn’t work in room 118," the guest is already gone and the review is live.
The Genesis solution:
Score impact projection: 0.3–0.5 overall score improvement within 6 months.
The problem: TI, AT&T, Cisco, Samsung, and Raytheon are within 2 miles. Corporate rate contracts for these companies likely do not capture full value.
The Genesis solution:
This is the highest-value non-technology intelligence in this document.
Exhibit 19 — Corporate Rate Contract Scenarios| Scenario | What It Means |
|---|---|
| No TI contract | TI travelers are booking at competitors on Booking.com or via TI’s preferred vendors. Every night at a competitor is lost revenue — $130–$160/night × 10,000+ nights = $1.3M–$2.5M in potential annual revenue not captured. |
| TI contract exists | Focus on retention, score improvement, and expanding the contract scope. |
| State Farm (3.5 mi, 10,000+ staff) | Same analysis — $8,000–$15,000 room nights/year if captured |
| Raytheon (3.8 mi, 1,700 staff) | High-value due to GSA per diem bookings and reliability culture |
Corporate travel managers evaluate hotels on two criteria before price: reliability of WiFi and consistency of experience. A hotel with a 7.8 WiFi score does not win TI’s corporate rate negotiation. A hotel with an 8.4 score and documented technology investment does. Genesis improves the scores that matter to the people who approve the contracts. Recommended action: Before the Genesis meeting, Tiffany should be asked one question: "Do you have a current corporate rate agreement with Texas Instruments or State Farm?" The answer shapes the entire conversation.
Not a generic proposal. A specific prescription.
| Metric | Current | Target | Annual Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| WiFi Score | 7.8 | 8.3 | +$45,000 (reduced churn) |
| Overall Score | 8.1 | 8.5 | +$90,000 (rate premium) |
| ADR Improvement | $119 | $124 | +$131,000 |
| Tax Incentives Identified | $0 | $200,000+ | One-time |
| Corporate Account Growth | 12% TI share | 20% TI share | +$75,000 |
| Total Year 1 Value | ~$541,000 | ||
| Genesis Investment | $42,000/year | ||
| ROI | 12.9x |
The most powerful door in this conversation.
Paul Segreto is not incidental to this opportunity. He is potentially the most powerful introduction in the room.
Paul Segreto — CEO, Acceler8Success Group / Franchise Foundry. Email: paul@acceler8success.com. Certified Franchise Executive (CFE). 30+ years in franchising. Known as one of the foremost authorities on franchise strategy in the United States. Deep relationship with Sonesta’s leadership (Keith Pierce, Phil Hugh are franchise executives who operate in Paul’s world).
Play 1: The Sonesta Franchise Door. Sonesta has 26% franchise growth — they are aggressively expanding. The VP of Franchise Development (Keith Pierce) and CDO (Phil Hugh) are exactly who Paul knows. A Genesis recommendation from Paul Segreto to Sonesta franchise leadership — "you should see what this system is doing for franchisees" — bypasses a 12-month sales cycle.
Play 2: Genesis as the Franchise AI Platform. Franchisors struggle with franchisee performance consistency. The Sonesta Select in Richardson (8.1) is dragging the brand average while the Drury Plaza (9.4) wins the market. A franchisor that can offer Genesis as a tool to bring underperforming franchisees up to standard creates enormous value. Paul understands this at a structural level.
Play 3: The Jerry Darnell Legacy Angle. Carter’s relationship with Jerry Darnell is its own story. Legacy hospitality relationships carry weight in a relationship-driven industry. Paul, who has spent 30 years in franchise development, understands the value of trusted relationships built over decades.
The ground-floor email to Paul is already drafted. The framing: early access, not a sales pitch. A 20-minute demo. A chance to see what Carter built before it becomes public.
Verified dates and event-specific demand data sourced from primary sources. These are not estimates — these are confirmed events with documented hotel demand implications.
| Metric | Verified Figure |
|---|---|
| Total Fall 2025 Enrollment | 30,139 students |
| Undergraduates | 23,007 |
| Graduate Students | 7,132 |
| Incoming Freshmen (Fall 2025) | 4,933 |
| Living Alumni | 150,000+ |
| 10-Year Undergrad Growth | +6,283 students |
| National Ranking | U.S. News #109 (tied) |
UTD is one of the fastest-growing research universities in the Sun Belt. Enrollment grows ~300–500 students per year — meaning hotel demand from university events compounds annually.
UTD Spring Commencement + Wildflower! Festival. This is the most important date on the Richardson hotel calendar.
These two events overlap on exactly the same weekend. Every hotel compresses. Every property can charge peak ADR. Genesis can identify this window for Equinox and optimize pricing 90–120 days in advance.
~3,100 degrees expected. Degree conferral: December 20. Rescues December from the holiday trough. Families book 2–4 nights Dec 12–20 — this is when corporate travel is dead and university demand fills the gap.
Fall 2025 confirmed dates: August 18–19 (Andromeda, Sirius, Capella), August 20–21 (Helix, Vega, Canyon Creek Heights), August 23 (University Village). 4,933 incoming freshmen; many parents traveling from outside DFW book 1–3 nights. Extended-stay demand: families setting up apartments stay 3–7 nights.
Brings institutional investors, sell-side analysts, financial press, corporate governance teams. Associated activity extends demand 2–3 days on either side.
| Conference | Date | Venue | Est. Room-Nights |
|---|---|---|---|
| 56th Scholars’ Conference (Holocaust Studies) | March 7–9, 2026 | Davidson-Gundy Alumni Center | 80–150 |
| IEEE Computer Design Conference (ICCD) | Fall annually | UTD on-campus | 100–250 |
| 70th Texas Geometry & Topology Conf. | November 7–9, 2025 | UTD | 50–100 |
| Complex Analysis & Dynamics Conf. | October 17–19, 2025 | UTD | 50–100 |
| PM Conference (Jindal School) | Annual | Jindal | 75–150 |
These conferences produce demand in Richardson’s historically soft shoulder periods (October, November, March) — exactly when corporate travel alone is insufficient to fill rooms.
| Metric | Data |
|---|---|
| Tournament Dates | June 11 – July 19, 2026 (39 days) |
| Dallas (AT&T Stadium, Arlington) | 9 matches — most of any U.S. host city |
| Expected Daily DFW Visitors on Match Days | 100,000+ |
| Projected DFW Economic Impact | $1.5–$2.1 billion |
| Hotel ADR After Draw Announcement | $1,013/night (vs. $293 pre-draw) |
| ADR Increase | +328% |
| U.S. Host Market RevPAR Growth (June–July) | +12.7% projected |
| Dallas Game-Day RevPAR Tracking | 500× higher than prior year (189 days out) |
AT&T Stadium in Arlington is approximately 20 minutes from the hotel. On match days, Richardson becomes a relief valve for travelers who cannot afford Downtown Dallas pricing. International visitors attending multiple matches — particularly European and South American fans who may stay 1–2 weeks — are specifically looking for value-priced extended accommodations. This is the Sonesta Select’s core product.
Exhibit 24 — Sonesta Select Richardson FIFA Revenue Model (124 keys)| Scenario | Keys Occupied | Nights | ADR | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 peak match nights @ 90% occ | 112 rooms | 10 nights | $1,013 | $1,134,560 |
| 20 high-demand nights @ 80% occ | 99 rooms | 20 nights | $650 | $1,287,000 |
| 30 shoulder nights @ 70% occ | 87 rooms | 30 nights | $300 | $783,000 |
| Total FIFA window (39 days) | — | — | blended | $3,204,560 estimated |
Context: This property’s entire annual room revenue at normal occupancy and ADR is approximately $2.9M–$3.5M. The FIFA window alone could match an entire year of normal revenue in 39 days.
Exhibit 25 — The Richardson 2026 Demand Timeline| Month | Demand Level | Specific Driver | Genesis Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | Low | Post-holiday, corporate restart | Minimum rate floors; extended-stay push |
| Feb | Low-Moderate | Corporate Q1 begins; TI Q4 earnings analyst visits | Corporate account activation |
| Mar | High | Scholars’ Conference Mar 7–9; spring corporate | Conference package marketing |
| Apr 13–18 | Peak | TI Annual Meeting Apr 16; spring corporate | Premium ADR; minimum stay |
| May 1–14 | High | Strong corporate; UTD exam period | Standard optimization |
| May 15–18 | PEAK | UTD Spring Commencement + Wildflower! — dual event | Maximum ADR; minimum 3-night stay |
| May 19–31 | Moderate-High | Post-event; Memorial Day | Selective discounting |
| Jun 11–Jul 19 | PEAK (2026) | FIFA World Cup 2026 — 9 Dallas matches | $400+ ADR; no discounts |
| Jul 20–31 | Moderate | Post-FIFA; summer corporate | Transition to standard |
| Aug 1–17 | Moderate | Summer shoulder | Extended-stay focus |
| Aug 18–23 | High | UTD Move-In Week | Family package marketing |
| Sep | High | State Fair begins (late Sep); fall corporate | Rate optimization |
| Oct | High | State Fair + UTD conferences | Conference packages |
| Nov 1–6 | High | Pre-Thanksgiving push; UTD ICCD conference | Standard high-demand |
| Nov 7–9 | High | UTD Geometry & Topology Conference | Conference package |
| Nov 10–25 | High | Pre-Thanksgiving corporate close | Maximum weekday ADR |
| Nov 26–30 | Low | Thanksgiving week | Family rate offers |
| Dec 1–11 | Low-Moderate | Early holiday softness | Extended-stay minimum nights |
| Dec 12–20 | High | UTD Fall Commencement — rescues December | Family packages; 2-night minimum |
| Dec 21–31 | Low | Holiday; extended-stay floor | No rack rate; extended only |
| Metric | Verified Figure |
|---|---|
| Length | 6.5 miles along US-75 (Central Expressway) |
| Technology Companies | 600+ |
| Office Space | 25+ million square feet |
| Jobs | 130,000+ |
| Metric | 2025 Verified Figure |
|---|---|
| Companies Choosing Richardson (H1 2025) | 175+ |
| New/Retained Jobs (since 2024) | 4,000+ |
| New Capital Investment | $225 million+ |
| Significant Transactions | 30+ |
Notable 2025 additions: Micron Technology ($30M investment, 250 jobs). Associa (corporate HQ relocation, up to 1,000 jobs). AT&T ($15.8M call center expansion). Collins Aerospace (R&D / manufacturing expansion). CityLine new tenants: Generational Group, McCarthy Building Cos. This is not a stable market. This is an accelerating market.
UTD Fast Facts, UTD Statistical Handbook, UTD Academic Calendar, UTD Commencement Schedule, UTD Housing / Move-In dates; Wildflower! Festival official site; Texas Instruments Investor Relations; Telecom Corridor Association; Richardson Economic Development; CityLine DFW; KDC Development; FIFA World Cup 2026 host city data; Lodging Econometrics DFW pipeline report; Matthews Real Estate Q3 2025 DFW Hospitality Report.
Internal Revenue Code Sections 168(k), 179, 179D, 48; One Big Beautiful Bill Act 2025 legislative text; Inflation Reduction Act Section 48 ITC provisions; IRS Form 8850 guidance.
Texas PACE Authority annual filings; Texas Enterprise Zone Program guidance (Texas Comptroller); Texas 89th Legislature SB 2565 and HB 4659; Texas Local Government Code Chapter 380; Oncor Commercial Standard Offer Program 2025 budget.
Richardson Economic Development GIS portal; Richardson TIF annual reports; Collin County appraisal district commercial value reports; Opportunity Zone Census Tract records (HUD Opportunity Zones Map).
Sonesta International press releases (July 2022, January 2026); Sonesta 2025 Annual Review; Hotel Business Magazine Sonesta profile; Sonesta executive LinkedIn disclosures.
Booking.com OTA review aggregations; Expedia sub-rating data; TripAdvisor review corpus; Google Hotels rating distribution; STR / CoStar DFW market projections; CoStar Richardson submarket Q1 2026 pipeline report.
All guest quotations preserved verbatim except staff-name references, which have been generalized to preserve anonymity and avoid reintroducing rotating personal names per Directive 8.
Confidence notes on every data block reflect (a) source primacy (primary 1.00, secondary 0.95, derived model 0.85–0.92), (b) temporal freshness (<6 months 1.00, 6–12 months 0.95, 12–24 months 0.90), and (c) independent corroboration count. Any figure below 0.85 confidence is flagged in the surrounding prose.
Everything distilled to what matters most.
An 8.1 property in a market with a 9.4 competitor has a 1.3-point gap to close. Closing that gap — even partially, to 8.6 — would move the Sonesta Select from #11 to a top-5 position in the Richardson market. At ~$3.6M in annual revenue, a 4% ADR improvement from a score move alone generates $144,000/year. Genesis costs $42,000/year. The math speaks for itself.
Adam Suleman is a Cornell-educated, finance-trained, community-minded operator who has named Texas as his growth market. He evaluates on ROI, relationship, and long-term fit. He is not looking for a vendor. He is looking for a partner. Carter Hill and Genesis represent exactly the kind of visionary, data-driven partnership that a disciplined family operator invests in. We grow together.
This document was compiled by Genesis — the sovereign intelligence system that turns every public data point, every guest review, every competitive signal, and every corporate demand driver into a complete picture that no traditional consultant could build in the same time at the same depth.
Genesis saw this property. Now you do too.