Cocoa Beach was once a sleepy strip of Florida sand. Now it's one of the hottest hotel markets in the country. The reason is what keeps lifting off just up the coast.
Rockets Made The Land Valuable
The private space economy has boomed on Florida's coast. SpaceX is spending $1.8 billion on Starship sites.
On top of that, Blue Origin is adding a $600 million plant that brings 500 jobs. Those jobs pay about $98,000 a year on average.
The new building will cover about 830,000 square feet. It will speed up work on Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket.
Amazon works on satellites near the Kennedy Space Center. Firms like Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman crowd in around it.
All those launches pull in bosses, engineers, and scientists. Each one needs a nice place to stay.
That demand is why builders are spending big on fancy hotels near the launch pads. A beach town for tourists is turning into a work hub.
We track the money flowing into the space economy and a lot more in Market Briefs, delivered every weekday morning, plus a free investing masterclass when you sign up.
One Firm Is Buying Up The Beach
Miami-based Driftwood Capital has moved fast. It already owns an Element hotel and the Crowne Plaza in Melbourne, Florida.
Its biggest bet is the $420 million Westin Cocoa Beach Resort and Spa. The new resort adds meeting space for all those work trips.
It's set to open next year. Once it does, Driftwood will hold about 11% of all hotel rooms in the area.
On the beach, its grip is much tighter. The firm will own close to 62% of the beachfront rooms.
That's like owning most of the oceanfront squares on a Monopoly board. And the whole town just got hot.
Driftwood didn't stumble into this. It saw a steady stream of high-paying guests and built for them.
That's a safer bet than leaning on tourists alone. Tourists come and go with the seasons, but launches run all year.
Why The Money Is Flowing In
A luxury hotel only makes sense if the guests keep coming. Here, the guests are the people who run and build the rockets.
They fly in to watch their own launches. Many are high earners, and they want a nice room and a place to meet.
So the meeting space is not a frill. It's the point.
There's a bigger story here for investors. The space boom isn't just rockets and satellites anymore.
It now spills into hotels, shops, and real estate. When an industry grows this fast, the money spreads to everything around it.
What To Watch
The bet here is simple. As long as rockets keep flying, the crowds keep coming.
The launch calendar is booked for years. The new hotel rooms are being built to match.
Cocoa Beach is the early proof. A quiet beach town is now fighting for corporate cash.
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