Cambria Hotel project in Mesa adds rooftop dining plans article cover image
News/Arizona Radar/Breaking/Apr 18, 2026

Cambria Hotel project in Mesa adds rooftop dining plans

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A four-story Cambria Hotel is under construction in Mesa at 3501 S. Ellsworth Road and is expected to open in early 2027. The 107-room project will include a rooftop restaurant and bar open to the public, along with an outdoor pool, meeting rooms, EV charging, and other traveler amenities.

Mesa is getting another hospitality project geared toward both visitors and local patrons, with a new Cambria Hotel now under construction near 3501 South Ellsworth Road. The development is planned as a four-story property with 107 guest rooms and a package of amenities that includes a rooftop restaurant, rooftop bar, lobby bar, outdoor pool, fitness center, market area, guest laundry, and meeting space. The current timeline points to an opening in early 2027.

One of the most notable pieces of the project is that the rooftop food-and-beverage space is intended to be open to the public, not reserved only for hotel guests. That gives the development relevance beyond lodging because it creates a new local hangout with elevated views and a built-in social draw. In practice, rooftop venues can help a hotel act as part of the surrounding neighborhood's dining inventory instead of functioning as a self-contained traveler box.

The project team includes Aspect Hospitality Group, Clarity Strategic Opportunities, and O'Reilly Hospitality, with O'Reilly Hospitality Management set to run day-to-day operations. Public materials tied to the groundbreaking also mention EV charging and a state-of-the-art fitness center, suggesting the property is being positioned for contemporary business and leisure demand rather than as a bare-bones stay option. The developer messaging emphasizes joining the Mesa community, which signals a desire to appeal to locals as well as overnight guests.

For Mesa, this is another indicator of how suburban hotel projects are evolving. New builds increasingly need a stronger food-and-beverage identity and more visible public-facing amenities to stand out. If delivered as described, the Cambria could strengthen the area's hospitality mix while also adding a rooftop destination that local residents can use without booking a room.

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