Hospitality Design Trends 2026: Wellness, Dwell Time & Revenue Activation

With rising construction costs and increasing guest expectations, every square foot inside a hotel or casino resort must deliver measurable value. Yet many public spaces — lobbies, lounges, pre-function areas, and resort environments — remain underleveraged.

The most important question for owners and operators today is simple: Are your public spaces working hard enough?

Across the hospitality industry, a shift is underway. Spaces that were once designed primarily for circulation are now expected to drive revenue, extend guest stays, and strengthen brand loyalty.

The future of hospitality design lies in activated public environments.

The 2026 Shift in Hospitality Design

One of the defining hospitality design trends of 2026 is the shift from passive gathering areas to multi-functional, revenue-generating environments.

Two major forces are driving this change.

First, hospitality and retail research consistently shows a direct correlation between guest dwell time and spending. When guests stay longer in an environment, they are more likely to engage with food and beverage, entertainment, retail, and premium amenities.

Second, the global wellness economy has grown to $6.8 trillion, according to the Global Wellness Institute. Wellness is no longer limited to spas or fitness centers; today it encompasses social connection, relaxation, and shared experiences — all of which take place in public environments.

For casino resorts and destination hotels, this means public space has become one of the most powerful economic tools on the property.

Public space is no longer transitional — it is strategic.

What Is Public Space Activation?

Public space activation is the intentional design of hospitality environments to support both experience and economics.

These spaces are designed to:

  • Increase guest dwell time
  • Encourage social interaction and group gathering
  • Support multi-generational audiences
  • Flex across dayparts and programming needs
  • Strengthen brand identity
  • Generate direct or indirect revenue

When done well, activated public spaces become the connective tissue of a resort, linking hospitality, entertainment, dining, and gaming into a seamless guest experience.

Gun Lake Resort: Designing an Indoor Destination

At Gun Lake Casino Resort, public space activation takes the form of an immersive indoor resort environment—free to guests during the day as a vibrant pool experience that also builds anticipation for the events and entertainment the space hosts at night.

The Wawyé Oasis, a 32,000-square-foot indoor tropical atrium, creates a year-round destination that blends leisure, entertainment, and social gathering into a single environment. The climate-controlled space includes resort-style pools, cabanas, lounge seating, and integrated food and beverage venues arranged around a flexible event stage.

The key to the space’s success is programmatic flexibility. During the day, the Oasis operates as a relaxed indoor pool retreat for hotel guests and families, while its open layout and visual connections to the stage and surrounding venues create energy and anticipation for evening programming. At night, the same environment transforms into a concert venue, DJ lounge, or special event space—dramatically increasing utilization and guest engagement across dayparts.

The environment also expands the resort’s audience. By creating a destination amenity that appeals to couples, families, and younger social groups, the property broadens its demographic reach beyond traditional gaming audiences.

Since completing its $300 million resort expansion, which introduced a hotel, spa, and new entertainment amenities, Gun Lake Casino Resort has reported a 20% increase in revenue along with strong hotel occupancy—signaling demand for experiential resort environments that extend the guest journey beyond gaming.

In this model, public space is not simply decorative—it becomes a strategic connector that builds visibility, excitement, and demand for the resort’s revenue-generating amenities.

Golden Mesa: Cultural Identity as Competitive Advantage

At Golden Mesa Casino & Hotel in Guymon, Oklahoma, public space activation takes a different approach — one rooted in cultural storytelling and social connection.

The property’s $78 million expansion doubled gaming capacity while introducing a new hotel, dining venues, and multiple gathering spaces that together transform the property into the Oklahoma Panhandle’s only full-scale casino resort destination.

Rather than designing the lobby as a traditional circulation zone, the space functions as a hospitality hub.

Residential-style seating clusters encourage guests to gather and linger, while the adjacent Panhandle Press café and nearby Cimarron Ridge restaurant create natural activity throughout the day. These proximities were intentionally designed to increase visibility and engagement with food and beverage offerings.

Technology also plays a role in activating the environment. On the casino floor, a 12-foot CLEAR digital signage wall introduces dynamic content and branding while maintaining visual transparency between the high-limit room and the gaming floor — drawing attention and curiosity from guests moving through the space.

Another key moment occurs at the transition between hospitality and gaming. A dramatic geometric light portal connecting the hotel lobby to the casino floor transforms circulation into an experiential threshold, guiding guests from calm social space into the energy of gaming.

These types of architectural moments do more than create visual impact — they encourage exploration and movement throughout the property.

Golden Mesa demonstrates how culturally authentic environments can drive both guest engagement and long-term brand differentiation.

The Future of Hospitality Public Space

Across hospitality and gaming resorts, a clear pattern is emerging.

The most valuable square footage in a property may no longer be the gaming floor or guestrooms — but the spaces in between.

When designed intentionally, public environments can:

  • Extend guest stays
  • Increase cross-property spending
  • Support events and entertainment programming
  • Strengthen brand identity
  • Create memorable social experiences

For owners and operators navigating rising construction costs and competitive markets, activated public space represents one of the most powerful design strategies available.

The most successful resorts in the next decade will not treat public space as circulation.

They will treat it as performance.