And I agree that the PVB original units are worth someone asking for a more detailed explanation.
But, my point about the GV is that the points that are initially assigned to a single unit…when it’s mixed do not have to stay that way..,
It’s not about seasons at all. If my unit has a GV and 2 bedrooms for let’s say 300 points per Use Day, or 109,500 for the year.
The initial chart might have used 150 for the GV, and 75 for each 2 bedroom.
If the thought is the unit has to stay balanced with the total, then nothing prevents my unit from having its GV at 130 and the 2 bedrooms at 85 each.:.it’s still 300 per night for that unit.
So, in this case, they have balanced a unit, but moved points between room sizes because they are the same unit
Obviously for consistency sake, the charts use a set number for all 2 bedrooms and GV in the travel period, but this illustrates that when units are mixed, it’s not as simple IMO,,,
And why I lean that they have flexibility when setting charts for booking to adjust for situations like this.
I mentioned early but the dedicated makes a difference too because dedicated studios and 1 bedrooms don’t hafe a lock off premium. So they have no cushion to add to help that balance.
If it was like BPK, all resort studios, or the bungalows which are a unit with just one room size, then you won’t run into the situation like above.
It’s the resorts that have mixed units, plus the max allocation chart that have me leaning to movement for booking across more than seasons or travel periods and across room types since they can exist in the same unit is allowed.
I dont know if my interpretation is right or wrong, but there is enough evidence for me right now, to say that as long as the total at the resort balances, even with slight variations across room sizes, then I think it should be permissible.
I hope someone at PVB asks next week for explanation!