Campgrounds tout 'park models' as RV and
hotel alternative
USA Today Posted
7/2/2008 7:37 AM
If you think fewer recreational vehicles are on the road
this summer, you may be right—and it's not just high fuel
costs keeping them from pounding the pavement. RV resorts
across the USA are offering an alternative way to camp out.
Campers are ditching their RVs and tents for recreational
park trailers, or "park models," and campground owners hope
regular vacationers in search of a lodging bargain will
follow suit. These 400-square foot movable resort cottages,
found at RV resorts and campgrounds, are upscale trailer
homes that provide all the amenities of home.
"These units are about the same size as the largest hotel
suites and come equipped with kitchens and bathrooms,"
William Garpow, executive director of the Recreational Park
Trailer Industry Association, said. "But unlike a hotel
room, park models are freestanding units. You don't have
anyone above you or below you or right next to you."
According to Garpow, park models are on the rise in
tourist destinations across the USA. From Orlando to Chicago
to Castle Rock, Colo., there are now more than 100,000
cottages at various camping destinations. Prices range from
as little as $38 a night to close to $200 for the best units
in the most popular places.
Shane Ott, president and COO of Kampgrounds of America
expects "an increased demand in rentals of park models this
summer due to the economy, mostly those who are new to
camping who view staying at park models as a means of
vacationing." Ott added that "a camping vacation is still a
very cost-effective means of travel, compared to airline or
cruise vacations."
Ott notes that the exteriors of KOA's properties are
evocative of their location, just as a hotel or other
lodging might be. Think log or cedar-sided cabins in
locations including Branson, Mo., and Mystic, Conn., with
more of a "beach-front look for coastal properties" such as
Naples, Fla., and South Padre Island, Texas. "The most
popular rental property sites are destination locations such
as the Black Hills in South Dakota, Myrtle Beach, S.C.,
Washington, D.C., and California wine country," he said.
Garpow also credits design advances with the growth of
park models. "Most units have pointed roofs,
floor-to-ceiling windows, lofts and hardwood cabinetry," he
said. "In fact, we've seen a shift in demand from the
trailer-like park models to the newer units that look like
small cottages."
Ott and Garpow agreed that it's hard to get a social feel
from a hotel stay, whereas park models create the perfect
marriage between seclusion and community.
"Camping is all about the experience, memories and
bonding you'll do with your family and your fellow campers,"
Ott said. "Park models are just a way for us to open up this
experience to those who may not have the desire or ability
to invest in camping equipment or recreational vehicles."
In addition to vacation rentals, campground owners have
discovered a market for park models as second homes. "Many
times they find that these units are so popular they wind up
selling them to consumers who want to have an affordable
vacation cottage of their own," Garpow says. Ranging from
$18,000 to about $70,000, visitors often decide to purchase
the park model once they've found a destination that suits
their family's needs.
Travelers, have you stayed at a park model? Tell everyone
about it.
Source:
http://www.usatoday.com/travel/destinations/2008-07-01-park-models_N.htm
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