The decision-making and governance framework to renew the lodging offer and infrastructures proposed in this study is based on experiences in the destination of the Canary Islands (see
Figure 1). It is a framework based on relational capabilities [
2,
18,
19,
35] because the actions to be performed must be coordinated and implemented by different stakeholders from the public and private sectors [
1,
36,
37,
38,
39]. In this context, Rodríguez-Díaz and Espino-Rodríguez [
18] establish that the combined success of the destination and its individual companies depends on the effectiveness of the coordination and collaboration among the destination’s individual resources and capabilities, as well as its leadership and governance, implemented through close relationships among the stakeholders involved [
40,
41,
42,
43].
The framework has three parts: stakeholders involved, area of actions, and objectives related to the demand in the tourism destination, measured in terms of type of segment and the amount of income to reach. The stakeholders are divided into two areas because the public sector has specific attributions to carry out actions that differ from those of the private sector.
Figure 1 shows that the public and private sectors share the leadership in destinations [
6,
40,
43]. Haugland et al. [
35] (p. 269) consider that “the success of individual actors, as well as the success of the entire destination, is dependent on efficient coordination and integration of individual companies’ resources, products and service”. In this regard, Bornhorst et al. [
39] (p. 572) establish that “competitive advantage requires the ability to effectively manage all components of the tourism system to ensure success is achieved”, and many destinations create a Destination Management Organization (DMO) to provide leadership in managing them. When destinations have not created a DMO, the leadership is normally carried out by the public sector in coordination with the principal stakeholders. This is the case of the Canary Islands, where leadership in managing the planning and actions is provided by the different public administrations directly involved (Canary Government, Island Government, and councils).
In this context, the study of the strategic evaluation of a tourism destination carried out by Rodríguez-Díaz and Espino-Rodríguez [
2] showed that the Public Administrations involved in the destination of the island of Gran Canaria have a low internal and relational view. The stakeholders reviewed consider that the different governments (state, Canary, island, council) did not develop relational capabilities because there was no collaboration or coordination between them. At the same time, the low internal view is related to the leadership capacity in the destination through the governance of infrastructures, urban planning, and legislation about the tourism sector in order to improve the competitiveness of the destination. One of the main conclusions of this study was that neither the non-hotel offer nor the governance of the destination led by the Public Administration integrated the core competences of the Gran Canaria destination.
The private sector is composed of lodging companies as the central object of the destination’s renovation. Banks supply financial resources to companies that need a loan guarantee. Tour operators have different roles in planning lodging renovations. On the one hand, they can give loans to lodging companies for the building or repairs required for the renovation of lodging complexes’ installations. On the other hand, tour operators can participate directly or indirectly in the financial guarantee of bank loans, by means of long-range commercial agreements with the tourism companies (five or ten years). These agreements are usually pledged by the banks to guarantee the payment of loans. Other companies that can participate in lodging renewals are construction companies, complementary offers, or service companies that perform certain activities such as catering, wellness, sport, and so on. As
Figure 1 shows, the private sector also acts directly in the promotion and leadership of the destination [
43,
44].
2.1. Public Sector
Simancas [
50] establishes that the tourism sector is one of the private business fields where entrepreneurs are not only in favor of governmental interventionism, but they demand it. Thus, it is common for public administrations to formulate a set of policies, plans, programs, and projects that focus on the rehabilitation, redefinition, restructuration, and in some cases, reinvention, of the tourism destination. The competencies of the public administration are usually implemented through legislation promoted by the public or private sectors. In the destination of the Canary Islands, the first legal norm established by the Canary Government was passed in 1995 (Ley 7/1995) [
51], marking its exclusive competence in the promotion and ordering of tourism in the Canary Islands, including the power to legislate in this area. It is important to highlight that the urban planning competencies in tourism zones are shared by the councils and governments of each of the seven islands.
Table 1 shows the relevant aspects addressed by the different laws passed on the Canary Islands, highlighting that this first norm (completed by Law 5/1999) [
52] had the main objectives of regulating the tourism activity, setting standards for lodging rehabilitation, defining the joint administration of complexes where the property is divided into multiple small owners in order to improve their competitiveness, and controlling overbooking.
Law 6/2001 [
53] marked a change in the orientation of the Canary Government because it led to the control and protection of the tourism activity. Due to the excessive increase in the number of tourist beds at that time, basically in new hotels inaugurated to satisfy the new needs of customers, and taking into account that the level of demand in the following years would not increase much, the Canary Government decided on the “suspension of management instruments of natural, territorial and urban resources, as well as their implementations” (article 2 of the cited law). It only allows rehabilitation projects and the building of new lodgings with specific high-quality characteristics. The opening statement of the law emphasizes the need to contain the increase in the lodging offer while a new law with new guidelines could be written.
A new law was passed in 2003 (Ley 19/2003) [
54] to achieve a model of sustainable development in the Canary Islands. This law defines the guidelines for tourism organization in order to induce changes in the production and management methods of the lodging offer. The main objectives were: (a) the rehabilitation of existing lodgings as a preferred alternative to their extensive increase; (b) the increase in the lodging offer would be related to improving the value of the destination and its image; and (c) planning would favor the diversification and differentiation of the tourism offer, as well as increasing the leisure offer. However, the rehabilitation of the oldest lodgings continued to be the main objective; in reality, the effect of this law was very limited. At that time, the sector was going through a period of economic stagnation in which the revenues of companies were reduced. The oldest lodgings needed financing resources that they could not obtain with the expectations and means available to them. In a practical sense, this law did not develop the relational capability between public administrations and the private sector. On the contrary, the purpose was to limit the competences of the islands’ governments and councils in order to stop the building of new lodgings in the most competitive and highly demanded customer segments. With this constraint, competitiveness between Islands was controlled, avoiding a drop in prices.
The next law was passed in 2009 (Ley 6/2009) [
55] in the midst of the world economic crisis. The increase in unemployment and the decrease in the gross domestic product forced the Canary Government to rethink the planning of the tourism sector. The circumstances had changed, and the priority was to give a boost to the sector by simplifying administrative actions related to urban planning, removing unnecessary requirements stated in previous legislations, and acknowledging that the private sector would increase its involvement. The Canary Government had a dilemma. On the one hand, if lodging construction increased, the economy would improve, but tourism prices would drop, and companies would further reduce their revenues. On the other hand, a strategy focusing on lodging rehabilitation would affect both the building sector and the competitiveness of older lodgings. The latter was the option selected by the Canary Government, but the practical effects were only seen in the reduction of the administrative process followed in the lodging renewal. Although the Canary Government started to develop a primary level of relational capability with other administrations and the private sector, it continued to have a restrictive view of the problem and did not notice that the actions would be more integrated if they included more economic activities. The practical result was very poor because the rehabilitation process was not adopted by many lodgings. Evidently, the rehabilitation problem was too complex to be resolved by a declaration of intent in a new law.
In 2012, a radical change occurred in the perspective on analyzing tourism destination renewal. The law passed (Ley 2/2012) [
56] explicitly recognizes the need to carry out an in-depth analysis with the broad participation of the sectors involved and society in general. The objective was to formulate an adequate approach to organizing the main economic activity of the Canary Islands. Later, the tourism renovation and modernization laws of the Canary Islands (Law 2/2013 and the complementary Law 9/2015) [
57,
58] were approved. The most significant measure taken was the strengthening of the urban planning agreement among the public administrations involved (Canary Government, Island Governments, and councils). The process involved the development of a consensual procedure for initiatives proposed by owners of lodgings, and this was the basis for the “Planes de Modernización, Mejora e Incremento de la Competitividad” (PMMs) (Modernization Plans). These plans promoted an agile process, instead of a lengthy planning process, inserting a new management tool in tourism urban planning. At the same time, the councils involved decided to reduce the capital gains taxes on rehabilitation projects. Furthermore, the councils decided to invest all the taxes obtained from renovation projects in improving tourism infrastructures, and this was complemented by public investments in the renewal of infrastructures in the tourism zones to be rehabilitated. Therefore, the actions promoted involved the development of a relational capability between the public administrations and the private sector because all the stakeholders cooperated in pursuing a common objective.
A second important measure was related to financing renewal projects. The Canary Government agreed to offer urban incentives for rehabilitation by increasing the ratios of occupancy and the buildability of the complexes to be renovated. The objective was to supply a new source of financing for rehabilitation by increasing the percentage of land occupancy allowed, in order to improve or diversify the services offered to customers. Likewise, the new orientation seeks to provide the possibility of increasing the number of rooms in order to obtain additional revenues to pay for investments in rehabilitation.
In this context, for the first time, the Canary Government began to understand that legislation must supply new financing methods to carry out a true renewal of the destination. However, the Canary Government went further because it noticed that the investments needed public and private financing sources. Two main actions were performed by the public administrations. The first was to encourage public subsidies through a joint mechanism between the European and Spanish governments, applied by the Canary government. This subsidy is integrated in the Canary Island program of Regional Incentives, and the funds come from Europe, with the project providing a real improvement in the category and quality of service delivery to customers. Small and medium-size companies can achieve a subsidy of up to 55% of the total investment applied to the renovation of complexes.
The other financing source is articulated through the European Investment Bank (EIB), which offers loans by subsidizing part of the interest. The Canary Government has promoted the concession of these types of loans through private financial entities. Another characteristic of these European loans is the inclusion of a public guarantee for all or part of the credit given by private banks to tourism companies. In conclusion, combined and integrated actions led by the public administration to renew the lodging offer are the only way to achieve practical results. This means that the development of relational capabilities is the path to the successful rehabilitation of destinations. When the Canary government finally understood that legislation is not sufficient to carry out rehabilitation projects because they are complex and have different stakeholders, rehabilitation started to be a successful reality. When the Canary government applied actions in all the related aspects, the results began to appear. In this context, the public administrations, tourism sector, financial sector, and other companies, such as tour operators, building and service companies, and complementary offers, were involved. Likewise, the Canary government intensified public investments in improving tourism infrastructures and promoted campaigns to improve the the destination’s image. This special legislation was only applied for a limit period of time, and currently the common administrative urban planning process is applied with severe consequences. The legal bureaucracy keeps renewal or innovative tourism projects from being carried out because, in many cases, urban planning in tourist towns can take more than 10 years.
2.2. Private Sector
The Canary Islands is a tourism destination with a high demand, receiving more than fifteen million tourists per year, with an average occupancy of 9.75 nights per client in non-hotels and 8.39 nights in hotels per client [
59]. It is a destination focused basically on sun and beach tourism, but it is diversifying its offer in other segments (sport, golf, rural tourism, cultural). This destination has 1168 lodging non-hotels that represent about 22% of the total offer in Spain in this category (see
Table 2). The island with the largest number of non-hotel complexes is Gran Canaria, with 435, followed by Lanzarote (190), Tenerife (188), and La Gomera (159). With regard to the hotel offer, the island with the greatest number of lodgings is Tenerife (234), whereas Gran Canaria has 154, Fuerteventura 84, and Lanzarote 72.
Taking into account the structure of the lodging offer by island,
Table 2 shows that Gran Canaria and Lanzarote have more non-hotels (73.85% and 72.52%, respectively) than hotels (26.15% and 27.48%, respectively. Moreover, the islands of Tenerife and Fuerteventura have a more balanced structure because hotels represent 55.45% and 51.85%, respectively, and the percentage of non-hotels is 44.55% and 48.15%, respectively.
Table 3 shows that there were 427,354 tourist beds in the destination in 2016. Analyzing the number of beds by island, the greatest number is in Gran Canaria island (140,956), followed by Tenerife (136,269). Another important characteristic of the destination is that the percentage of non-hotels and hotels is similar (50%) because in the initial stage, the non-hotel offer was more important than the hotel offer. However, this trend changed in the 1990s because customers began to prefer hotels. In this context, the islands of Gran Canaria and Lanzarote have more non-hotels, and, therefore, they need more renovation in order to maintain their sustainability and competitiveness. Moreover, there are also hotels that are designed with old characteristics and require renewal in order to adapt them to customers’ new demands.
The options for renovating lodgings are described in
Figure 2. The companies could decide to include the rehabilitation project in the Modernization Plans (PMMs) in order to increase the surface dedicated to services or enhance the number of rooms. This process requires improving the category of lodgings, and the result would be to increase revenues by raising prices and increasing the number of rooms. Another option is to carry out the renovation without benefiting from these alternatives. Currently, the Modernization Plans are not activated.
The financial perspective can be addressed in different ways. First, private banks are giving loans in this strategic tourism sector individually or with the support of the EIB. European subsidies can be achieved by presenting innovative projects that lead to an increase in the category and service quality of lodgings. Tour operators are another important financing source because they need to control the beds offered in a high-demand destination like the Canary Islands. Therefore, they grant loans to tourism companies to renovate buildings in exchange for controlling the sale of beds. Finally, lodging companies can use their own financial resources. Loan guarantees can come from the EIB, tour operators via long-term sales agreements (5 or 10 years), and companies’ assets. Financing and guarantee options are currently available.
Companies can improve the results of renovation projects through the development of relational capabilities with competitors, outsourcing firms, and tour operators. With direct competitors, it is possible to create specific alliances to improve the infrastructures of tourist areas and influence with the political powers. In relation to outsourcing firms, rehabilitation can involve offering new services to customers. In many cases, the outsourcing of certain activities is a satisfactory way to resolve the complexity of tourism processes. Catering, wellness, golf, gym, and animation are some examples of complementary services that improve the value and competitiveness of lodgings. Finally, tour operators develop a close relationship with lodgings in order to guarantee their sales and share the risk and responsibility. Today, tour operators continue to have special agreements because the demand continues to increase. If this trend continues in the coming years, tour operators will maintain their policy of support for the rehabilitation of lodgings. However, if other competitor destinations begin to activate their sales, tour operators’ interest in the Canary Islands could decrease.