It actually depends on how the bungalows & studios were declared into the condominium.
Technically, the total number of points required to reserve every night of the year for a UNIT can't change. I don't know how the UNITS for PVB were declared. It may be that a UNIT for PVB consists of a single bungalow and no studios. Perhaps another UNIT contains only a group of studios or maybe an entire building of studios. Or perhaps a UNIT consists of a few bungalows and a group of studios. This is a question for someone who follows the declarations - perhaps wdrl will see this and reply.
If a UNIT contains studios and bungalows, then YES, a reallocation could make studios more expensive and bungalows less expensive.
If a declared UNIT only contains bungalows, then points could not go from bungalows to studios. In that case, a reallocation could only occur between seasons or days of the week for the bungalows. And a reallocation for studios could only involve studio point costs, not bungalow point costs.
I'd like to know this myself!
The configuration of the Residential Units has nothing to do with how points are allocated on the
point chart. Conversely, how the points are distributed on a point chart has nothing to do with the configuration of the Residential Units. All that matters is the total number of points that represent the real estate interest at the resort.
DVD can mix and match different types of vacation homes in a single Residential Unit, and even if they are the same type of vacation home they don't have to have the same view classification. Nor do the Units have to be of equal size.
Each
DVC resort has a single formula that translates the Units into points based on the size of the Unit's real estate interest. It doesn't matter what kind of vacation home(s) comprises the Unit, only how much residential space is allotted to the Unit.
Let me use AKV to illustrate. AKV's Residential Units have eight different configurations containing various combinations of studios, two-bedrooms, or grand villas. The number of points allotted to each AKV Unit follows a set formula: Studios are allotted 5,485 points, two-bedrooms are allotted 16,290 points, and grand villas are allotted 36,130. Because there are eight different Unit configurations, there are eight different sizes of Units with point sizes ranging from 16,290 points to 48,870 points.
Based on the size of the total real estate interest and the point formula used, AKV contains a total of 7,400,270 points. Once the real estate interest-to-point formula has been establish, DVD has never altered it at any DVC resort. This is why the total points shown on a point chart never changes for the life of the condo association.
It doesn't matter what view classification a vacation home may have for booking purposes. Around 2010 some Savanna View two-bedrooms were downgraded to Standard View but they still contribute 16,290 points to the resort's total points.
In PVB's initial declaration, there are five Units containing two bungalows each, 19 Units containing four studios each, and 11 Units containing six studios. It doesn't matter that some of the studios are Lake View and others are Standard View. All studios contribute the same number of points to PVB's total. Once we see at least one deed from a bungalow Unit and one deed from a studio Unit, we can determine the total number of points for the entire resort, even the parts that have not yet been declared.
This is premature on my part, but I have reason to suspect that each bungalow and studio contributes about 53,655 points and 8,322 points, respectively to PVB's resort total. These numbers result in a resort point total of 4,069,020. Those 4,069,020 points (or whatever the final numbers end of being) can then be distributed on the point chart however DVC deeds appropriate, with one limitation: The Standard View studios must have at least one night on the point chart no higher than 22; the Lake View studios must have at least one night no higher than 26 nights; and the bungalows must have at least one night no higher than 147.
So, DVC could reallocate the point chart requirements of the bungalows downward if it deems necessary, and raise point chart requirements the studios an equivalent amount.