Blasson, the Madrid-based private developer, opened Four Seasons Hotel Seville this month, marking its first Four Seasons partnership and third operational luxury property in Spain. The 178-key hotel occupies two restored palaces in the Barrio de Santa Cruz, with construction costs estimated near €80 million based on comparable Andalusian conversions. The move extends Blasson's portfolio beyond its Barcelona and Madrid holdings and positions the firm inside Seville's accelerating competition for ultra-high-net-worth European and North American travelers.
The property includes 20 suites, a rooftop terrace with cathedral views, and ground-floor retail facing Plaza de la Alianza. Four Seasons will operate under a long-term management contract; Blasson retains asset ownership. The opening follows 18 months of structural work coordinating with Seville's heritage commission, which required façade preservation and限制ed excavation depth for the spa and below-grade MEP systems. Blasson declined to disclose ADR targets but comparable Four Seasons properties in secondary European heritage cities—Porto, Prague—stabilize above €650 in year two.
The timing reflects two converging allocator theses. First, Seville's hotel supply remains structurally constrained: the historic center permits fewer than 12 new hotel projects annually, and most involve conversions with unit counts below 100. Second, airlift into Seville grew 22% year-over-year through Q3 2024, driven by new transatlantic routes and positioning the city as a Madrid-Barcelona alternative for travelers seeking lower density. Blasson's entry with a globally recognized flag captures both the supply scarcity and the demand shift before independent luxury operators can scale. The firm is also betting that Spain's 7% tourism VAT—unchanged since 2012—remains stable through the next cycle, preserving after-tax yields that are 180-220 basis points higher than comparable French or Italian markets.
Blasson operates a €340 million Spanish hospitality portfolio, including a boutique property in Madrid's Salamanca district and a coastal resort in Marbella. The Seville project was financed with 65% senior debt from Banco Sabadell and 35% equity from the family office of Blasson's founding principals. The firm has no announced pipeline beyond Seville but holds pre-acquisition agreements on two additional Andalusian heritage buildings, per CoStar records. Four Seasons now operates 126 properties globally, with nine in Spain and Portugal; the brand added four European hotels in the past 18 months, all in cities with UNESCO heritage designations.
Operators and allocators should track Seville's Q2 2025 STR reports for the property's first full-quarter performance and whether it lifts the submarket's luxury-tier ADR ceiling above €500. Blasson's debt maturity is Q4 2028, creating a potential sale window if the asset stabilizes ahead of schedule. The firm's two undisclosed Andalusian sites are expected to move into due diligence by mid-2025, with Cádiz and Córdoba the most probable targets given their heritage density and limited branded penetration. Four Seasons' European development pipeline includes six signed projects through 2027, but none yet in secondary Spanish cities—Blasson's early positioning in Seville hands it a 24-36 month brand exclusivity advantage in Andalusia before competing flags arrive.
The Seville opening is less about the single asset than the template: heritage conversion, external flag, sub-200 keys, debt from regional banks comfortable with hospitality exposure, and markets where supply growth is structurally capped. Blasson is now the reference operator for that playbook in southern Spain, and the cost of replicating it just moved higher.