In an industry where the first and last impressions of a guest are increasingly defined by the transition from the curb to the lobby, Towne Park has signaled a major strategic pivot. The company, a long-standing titan in hospitality services, has officially rebranded as Towne. This evolution represents far more than a mere shortening of the company’s name; it marks a comprehensive shift in the firm’s identity as an “arrival-through-departure” experience partner.
Complementing this brand transformation is the launch of Nexity by Towne, a sophisticated, cloud-based platform designed to harmonize the fragmented world of hotel parking. By consolidating payment, access, data, and revenue optimization into a singular ecosystem, Towne is positioning itself to help hotel owners navigate the complex economic landscape of 2026.
The Strategic Evolution: Redefining the Guest Journey
For decades, the hospitality industry viewed parking as a utility—a functional necessity that was often neglected until a gate malfunctioned or a guest complained. Towne’s rebranding signifies the end of that siloed mentality. According to Andrew Kerin, Chief Executive Officer of Towne, the evolution is a direct response to the shifting realities of modern travel.
“The evolution to Towne reflects our role as a fully integrated hospitality, parking, and mobility partner,” Kerin explains. “Towne is a clearer articulation of the role we play and the value we deliver for the brands we serve, hotel owners, and their guests. We are often responsible for the first and last impression of a property. As mobile key adoption grows and front-desk interactions become digitized, our associates are often the primary—and sometimes only—human point of contact a guest has upon arrival.”
This shift recognizes that the parking attendant is no longer just a valet; they are a brand ambassador. By integrating hospitality training with operational technology, Towne aims to ensure that the guest experience remains seamless, whether a visitor is checking into a luxury resort or a business hotel.
Chronology of a Transformation
The move to rebrand and launch a proprietary technology platform did not happen in a vacuum. It is the culmination of years of observing the “fragmentation” of the hotel tech stack.
- Phase 1: The Integration of Services. Over the last several years, the company moved beyond traditional valet services to provide comprehensive mobility solutions, recognizing that parking assets were becoming more complex due to the rise of ride-sharing and electric vehicles.
- Phase 2: Technological Consolidation. Recognizing that hotel owners were struggling with multiple disparate systems—payment gateways, access control, and manual reporting—the company began developing the architecture for what would eventually become Nexity.
- Phase 3: The Rebrand. In early 2026, the company officially transitioned to the “Towne” moniker, streamlining its visual and operational identity to better align with its broader mandate as a hospitality experience partner.
- Phase 4: The Nexity Launch. Simultaneously, the Nexity platform was rolled out, marking the company’s formal entry into the high-tech property management space, focusing on data-driven revenue generation and hardware reliability.
The Economic Imperative: Why 2026 Demands Change
The hospitality sector currently faces a challenging macroeconomic environment. With occupancy rates hovering in a relatively flat zone and RevPAR (Revenue Per Available Room) growth projections remaining modest for 2026, hotel operators are under immense pressure to squeeze every dollar of value out of their existing assets.
“When speaking with our clients, the focus has been on driving revenue and optimizing every aspect of the hotel environment,” Kerin notes. “Some in the industry are starting to look at RevPAG—Revenue Per Available Guest—to better capture the full landscape of revenue-generating services at hotels, including F&B, events, spa, and parking.”

Parking, often an overlooked line item, is being reframed as a high-margin ancillary revenue source. By applying the same rigorous principles used for room rates—such as dynamic pricing and e-commerce inventory management—hotels can see a radical shift in profitability. Towne reports that when operations are fully optimized, they can achieve a margin exceeding 60 percent. By utilizing proprietary AI-based pricing and "Smart Aggregation" to sell inventory across 15+ channels like Google and ParkWhiz, hotels can turn a static concrete slab into a dynamic yield-generating machine.
Nexity: Solving the "Pain Points" of Infrastructure
The launch of Nexity is, at its core, a technological intervention into the physical failures of the past. Hotel owners have long suffered from “operational friction”—the cumulative loss of revenue caused by broken gates, manual ticket systems, and unoptimized labor.
Eliminating Technical Debt
Nexity by Towne is a cloud-based platform that replaces the patchwork of legacy systems. Its primary features include:
- LiDAR and AI Integration: Utilizing advanced laser remote sensing to track vehicle movement and occupancy in real-time.
- Open API Architecture: The system is "future-proofed," designed to integrate seamlessly with emerging technologies such as autonomous vehicle arrival systems and advanced ride-share coordination.
- Durable Hardware: The company re-engineered its gate infrastructure to feature retractable, auto-resetting arms. If a gate is accidentally struck, it resets automatically, preventing the "revenue leakage" that occurs when a broken gate remains stuck in the open position.
“The technology was built for the future and for reliability,” says Kerin. “We’ve addressed the hardware failures that plague the industry. Our gate technology minimizes downtime, which reduces guest friction, lost revenue, and unnecessary capital expenditure on repairs.”
Implications for Asset Value and Ownership
For hotel owners and asset managers, the shift toward a centralized platform like Nexity offers three primary benefits:
- Operational Consolidation: By replacing fragmented systems with a single data-centric platform, owners reduce the administrative burden on staff, allowing them to focus on guest service rather than troubleshooting parking hardware.
- Maintenance Cost Reduction: The durability of the new hardware, combined with the ability to diagnose issues remotely, significantly lowers the total cost of ownership over the lifecycle of the parking asset.
- Enhanced Revenue Transparency: Perhaps most importantly for investors, Nexity provides real-time visibility across an entire portfolio. An owner with multiple properties can now see performance data, occupancy, and revenue streams in a single dashboard, enabling data-backed decision-making rather than relying on periodic, static reports.
A Future-Proofed Hospitality Landscape
As the hotel industry moves further into the digital age, the "Arrival-Through-Departure" model is likely to become the gold standard. Towne’s transition represents a broader trend in the hospitality sector: the realization that the "hotel" is no longer defined by the four walls of the room, but by the entire journey of the guest.
By investing in technology that facilitates a frictionless arrival, optimizes yield through AI, and ensures that physical infrastructure is resilient, Towne is positioning its hotel partners to thrive even when RevPAR growth is stagnant. In a world where guests demand convenience and owners demand margin, the convergence of hospitality and high-tech infrastructure—exemplified by the Nexity platform—is no longer a luxury; it is a necessity for long-term asset viability.
Ultimately, Towne’s evolution underscores a fundamental truth about modern hospitality: the guest’s journey begins the moment they pull into the drive. If that experience is handled with intelligence, efficiency, and a commitment to service, the foundation for guest loyalty and profitability is set before they ever reach the front desk.








