Aman Resorts opened Aman Rosa Alpina in San Cassiano, Alta Badia, last week—the brand's first alpine property in Italy—and disclosed plans for a Mexico debut alongside several unnamed locations through 2027. The company, which has historically averaged one opening every 18 months, now operates 54 properties and has telegraphed the fastest expansion cadence in its 35-year history.
The Dolomites property seats 113 guests across suites and private residences. Three pools, a spa built into a former barn, and proximity to the Sella Ronda ski circuit position the asset as year-round rather than seasonal. Aman acquired the Rosa Alpina brand and infrastructure from the Pizzinini family in 2022 for an undisclosed sum, then spent two years on interiors and service integration. Average daily rates will likely settle north of €2,000 in winter high season, consistent with Aman's other European alpine outpost, Le Mélézin in Courchevel.
The Mexico announcement matters because it breaks a longstanding geographic gap. Aman operates 19 properties across Asia, eight in the Americas—all currently in the United States and Caribbean—and none in Latin America's second-largest luxury travel market. The brand declined to name the Mexican location or confirm a debut quarter, but real estate filings and CEO commentary suggest a coastal property in either Baja California Sur or the Riviera Maya, likely operational by late 2026. That timing aligns with the broader rebound in North American allocations to hotel development: $14.3 billion in luxury and upper-upscale commitments in 2024, per CBRE, up 22% year-over-year.
What separates this news from standard expansion chatter is the simultaneous confirmation of multiple undisclosed sites through 2027. Aman has historically moved in single steps—one property, one announcement, minimal forward guidance. The shift to a declared multi-year pipeline suggests either balance sheet pressure to accelerate returns or a recognition that competitors like Six Senses (now at 23 properties, with 30 more contracted) and Rosewood (37 open, 40 in pipeline) have outpaced Aman in visibility and investor confidence. The company remains privately held, majority-owned by Vladislav Doronin's Aman Group since 2014, with minority stakes from Pontegadea and an undisclosed Middle Eastern family office.
Operators and allocators should track three follow-on events. First, whether Aman files for permits or breaks ground in Mexico by Q2 2025—construction lead times in that market run 18 to 24 months, meaning a late-2026 opening requires visible progress soon. Second, whether the brand begins recruiting general managers for the unnamed pipeline properties, a signal that sites have moved from option to contract. Third, how Aman prices its residences program at Rosa Alpina: if units move at €5 million or above, it confirms that the Dolomites can support the same unit economics as Aman's proven markets in Japan and Southeast Asia.
The Dolomites now have three Aman-tier operators within 40 kilometers: Aman Rosa Alpina, Ciasa Salares in San Cassiano, and Ultima Colfosco. The clustering is not accidental. Single-family offices have been buying secondary alpine real estate since 2021, and the allocations follow a pattern: acquire aging four-star infrastructure, commit €15 million to €30 million in repositioning capital, and exit at a 12% to 18% IRR through either sale to a flag or operation under a private brand. Aman's entry validates the thesis and likely accelerates the timeline for the next wave of conversions.
The takeaway
Aman's Dolomites opening and Mexico confirmation signal a shift from deliberate scarcity to active pipeline competition, with multi-site commitments through 2027.
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