BANGKOK — Former Six Senses president Bernhard “BB” Bohnenberger has created a hotel management company whose ideals have already won over several owners to build authentic niche resorts in unique locations bearing the company’s name, Discover Collection.
A dozen Discover Collection hotels are now in conceptualization, design or construction stages. The first to open, in October 2025, will be Discover Collection R’as Amud, located on a stunning cape in Musandam, Oman. The rest are in diverse destinations, including Ireland, Kenya, Botswana, Mexico, Albania, Thailand, Bhutan and Zambia.
Generally, the cost per key of each project is on par with the likes of Aman, Four Seasons and Six Senses, which typically is around $1 million to $2 million, excluding land. Bohnenberger is targeting an internal rate of return of at least 20%.
The portfolio is aimed at affluent guests who seek extraordinary settings and are mindful about the need to protect them. They must sign up as members of Discover Collection, but the company won’t yet be charging a one-time annual membership fee. It will only do so when more of its hotels are open. Registration is open on its website, and it expects 10,000 to 20,000 members to join in the initial stages.
The company is a joint venture between Bohnenberger and Mike Meldman, founder of U.S.-based Discovery Land, a real estate developer and operator of private residential communities whose 37,000 members include A-list celebrities. Both entrepreneurs share the passion of being sensitive to environments, and to create private and exclusive havens for family and friends to enjoy special moments together.
“I started my journey with Six Senses, and Discover Collection is the culmination of everything I believe in,” Bohnenberger told Travel Weekly sister publication Hotel Investment Today in an exclusive interview about his new venture.
The Discover Collection concept: ‘No compromise’
Bohnenberger was with Six Senses for nearly three decades and was its president from 2011 until his resignation in 2019.
“I’ve told myself that for this new brand, there is no compromise anymore,” he said. “I only want to work with people I enjoy working with, and who hopefully enjoy working with me and the team. I only want to hire really passionate people. We only pick places that are remote yet reachable, with a lot of culture and meaningful local community [interaction]. Meeting a Masai person and hearing the story of his land and his people from him is so much more wonderful than having a Masai tribe jumping around in front of cameras, which is sad.”
Bohnenberger also won’t compromise on exclusiveness. Guests won’t see any neighboring hotels, whether their Discover Collection hotel is on a beach, island or in a mountain valley, he said.
Nor would Discover Collection invite other properties managed by another operator into the portfolio.
Nor would he rebrand existing independent hotels into Discover Collection for expansion’s sake. “Currently all our projects are new builds,” he said. “We have a strong opinion on location, look-and-feel and concept, that few properties globally would be a perfect fit. If we come across one that fits, we will certainly do some renovations or improvements,” he said.
Among the investors who are building Discover Collection projects are Six Senses hotel owners who worked with him previously, such as the owner of Six Senses Zighy Bay in Oman and the family in Bhutan that owns Six Senses Bhutan.
“We will have a new interpretation. I believe we will put something together that is even better than what we’ve done in the past — more intimate, more exclusive, more private, more away from it all.”
Other owners include American actor and angel investor Edward Norton, who will channel 100% of the net profit from his two resorts in Kenya, Discover Collection Amboseli and Discover Collection II Ngwesi, into conservation efforts for the region.
Every property, along with Discover Collection itself, puts a percentage of revenue aside for local causes. The company is a for-profit enterprise with a strong conscience, Bohnenberger added.
Rooms and rates
Projects have no more 60 rooms. The hotel in Oman, for instance, has 31 villas, but can house 100 guests as villas have one to four rooms. The two properties in Kenya, which are the next ones to open, have nine rooms each, and five owners’ villas between them which are managed by the lodges.
Discover Collection hotels are fully all-inclusive. As a gauge of room rates, the Oman property will be charging at least $3,000 a night per couple for an entry-level room. Rates could go as high as $3,000 per person for properties that provide high infrastructure cost activities and excursions such as safari trips.
As Discover Collection gains traction, Bohnenberger aims to be the rate leader in each location, hoping this will enable the hotels to make even more contribution to local causes. His own cause is to fund underprivileged locals to go to a university or learn a craft. In the future, he would also like to see the general manager of every Discover Collection hotel to be a local.
“The typical safari hotel brochure looks colonial. Imagine how wonderful it would be if a local leader tells you about his or her surroundings with pride, rather than somebody who’s thrown in from Paris or London and most probably has the nose a bit up in the air,” he said.
A partnership plan for building and managing
Discover Collection is “extremely involved” in the conceptualization, design and construction of the projects, although the company does not invest in the assets.
An aspect of Bohnenberger’s “no compromise” ideal is creating a “true” owner-operator partnership. “I don’t anymore use ‘owner’ and ‘operator’ in the management contract, but ‘capital partner’ and ‘operating partner,’ which [reflect] a true partnership. The capital partner brings in the capital to build the hotel, and typically has fantastic insights into the country, area and community and can do things that we couldn’t do,” Bohnenberger said.
The contract also comes with a “creative conceptualization and technical service agreement,” not just the usual letter where “typically, the hospitality company will just pass on the folders and photos of standards and let the owner build the hotel.”
Bohnenberger said he was grateful to be working with like-minded capital partners with whom he has had “wonderful” relationships or being recommended to other partners by them.
“If you understand and trust each other, it’s much easier to work together. A fund that sits somewhere in London or New York acquires properties but isn’t intimately involved in them; the properties tend to be a bit like stepchildren,” Bohnenberger said. “These funds also look to flip the assets. So, I’m looking for individuals who really care about creating assets that make a difference and who are in it for the long term. We have to have a purpose, otherwise it won’t work for me personally anymore.”
As a result, contracts are at least 40 years, with extension up to 60 years, subject to performance clauses.The company currently has a team of 21 staff in the corporate office in Bangkok. They include chief creative officer Apiwat Anukularmphai; chief operating officer Anne-Marie Houston; corporate director of development and wellbeing Chunxia Gao; and director of business and legal strategy Ludovic Tendron. There are also two “experiential analysts” looking at events planning and creative food and beverage, and an “environmental designer.” The list reflects the company’s emphasis on design and architecture, sustainability, content programing, culinary and wellbeing.
More to come
What is the ideal number of Discover Collection hotels in the portfolio? Said Bohnenberger, “If the partner fits and they can commit to the kind of budget we need, and if we have the bandwidth, we’ll take the project. We’re not doing gold taps and such stuff, but there are costs because we want the highest quality. I think we can’t open more than three to five a year.
He added, “Fortunately, Mike Meldman and I don’t have any pressure to produce [numbers]. We are not a public company that has to report every quarter how many contracts it has signed and what it has achieved.
“I also need to look at my age, and it matters to me if some of the things we do will hopefully drive the industry to think differently and will trickle down for the next generation to take it forward.”
This report, “Exclusive: Bohnenberger’s bold new bet” was originally published in Hotel Investment Today, a sister publication to Travel Weekly.