Very well said! I'm more and more surprised that municipalities everywhere don't require Airbnbs to be licensed and inspected regularly, rather they attempting to ban them.
I did that with our own portfolio of hundreds of properties. I tried to get Buenos Aires way back in the mid 2000's thinking about this. At the time they wanted to ban short-term rentals. They were stupid. I explained to them calmly that tourism was going to boom. Remember prior to the crash it was $1: 1 peso for 11 years. So Argentina was VERY expensive. NO ONE came here. Only maybe some corporate travel. But no one else. Back then the euro was weaker than the dollar so it was cheaper to go to Paris than come to BA. No one came here.
After the crash I knew it would boom. It went from being one of the most expensive countries to the one of THE cheapest literally overnight. I crunched the numbers and could figure out tourism would boom. The problem?
There weren't enough hotel rooms!! And they STILL aren't enough hotel rooms. So the city could never ban it. But I also advocated common sense safety approaches and standards like fire extinguishers, flashlights, candles for when electricity goes off. Detailed guidebooks that explain what to do in the event of an emergency. I even had 24/7 concierges in case they needed help.
They never implemented any of those things. I really think it's going to go full circle now and You will have intelligent investors that just create amazing buildings of apartments that have the fastest speed Internet and set up redundancies with other companies so if one goes out you have another internet. Dependability. Reliability. Really comfortable, luxurious mattresses (locals use cheap junk). Comfortable work desks and ergonomic chairs. Plug and play wide monitors to dock into. Maybe printers as well.
Brand these as "hotels" even though they are apartments so foreigners can get IVA exemption. Sure, start on Airbnb but fairly quickly you could brand your own building to become known as THE place to stay when you're in Buenos Aires and you need comfortable beds, FAST and always on Wifi, great staff, always clean, great work desks with HUGE monitors you can connect your laptops to.
Also, for those of you that crave the "community" of an ex-pat community you may or may not want that but there would be a social happy hour every evening on the roof top terrace by the pool. I think it makes sense to do many types of buildings like these vs. traditional Airbnbs. The place could charge great rates as they aren't. paying Airbnb their usury 10% from guests and 3% to owners. So right off a bat a 13% savings.
And what if you had someone that had a great reputation developing the building? Maybe you wouldn't want to just rent. Maybe you'd want to buy a place like this and be an OWNER and never rent again. Or use it but when you're not there you make $$$$$ renting it out.
Everything has electronic locks, video doorbells so no one can say they rented it when they didn't. All streamlined. All beautiful. No BS.
Sounds good to me. What about you?