Friday, August 30, 2013

Courtyard Virginia Hotels|"Hotel Loses Lawsuit"

Source              :    perthnow.com.au
Category         :    Courtyard Virginia Hotels
By                   :    BRETT BARROUQUERE
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard

Courtyard Virginia Hotels

The US 6th Circuit Court of Appeals rejected a bid by the former owner of the Grand Resort Hotel and Convention Center in Pigeon Forge, Tenn., to reinstate a defamation lawsuit against the site TripAdvisor. Judge Karen Nelson Moore concluded for the court that the hotel's inclusion on the '2011 Dirtiest Hotels' list doesn't rise to the level of defamation because it is obvious the list simply communicates the opinions of TripAdvisor users. "First, TripAdvisor's use of 'dirtiest' amounts to rhetorical hyperbole," Moore wrote. "Second, the general tenor of the '2011 Dirtiest Hotels' list undermines any impression that TripAdvisor was seriously maintaining that Grand Resort is, in fact, the dirtiest hotel in America." Then-hotel owner Kenneth M. Seaton sued Newton, Mass-based TripAdvisor in 2011. He accused the website of defamation and portraying his business in a way that would keep customers away.

Judge Thomas W. Phillips in Knoxville rejected the claims in August 2012. Attempts to locate Seaton were unsuccessful Wednesday. The hotel shut down in late 2012 and was sold to a holding company. Alison Croyle, a spokeswoman for TripAdvisor, applauded the court's decision "as it continues to protect the opinions of consumers online". TripAdvisor, which bills itself as the world's largest travel site, aids people in gathering travel information, posting reviews and opinions of travel-related content and engaging in interactive travel forums. The site compiles best and worst lists and includes customer comments about featured places. Such lists are common online - including compilations of the most trusted, most handsome and dumbest people - and a reasonable reader understands that placement on such a list is not a statement of fact, Moore wrote. For the '2011 Dirtiest Hotels' list, the Grand Resort was listed first among 10 entries. The accompanying comment from an unnamed guest said: "If you are looking for a hotel with chewing tobacco spit oozing down the halls and corridors; spiders actively making webs in every corner of your room; carpeting so greasy and dirty you wouldn't want to sit your luggage down - let alone walk around barefoot...... by all means, stay at The Grand Resort." Moore cited that comment and others on the list as proof that TripAdvisor wasn't using a scientific method to determine which hotels were actually the dirtiest in the country. "The quotations regarding other hotels on the '2011 Dirtiest Hotels' list confirm that the list cannot be reasonably understood as asserting that the hotels on the list are, in fact, the 10 dirtiest in America," Moore wrote.

Source:perthnow.com.au/travel/travel-news/playing-dirty-hotel-loses-lawsuit/story-fnho5w8j-1226707299176

Courtyard Virginia Hotels|"Shangri-La Hotels, Phoenix Mills Call Off Management"

Source              :    articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com
Category         :    Courtyard Virginia Hotels
By                   :    ET Bureau 
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard

Courtyard Virginia Hotels

Hong Kong-based hotel operator Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts and Mumbai-based Phoenix Mills have 'mutually' agreed to terminate the management contract of the latter's five-star hotel in Mumbai, just nine months after the hotel became operational. "Shangri-La International Hotel Management and Pallazzio Hotels and Leisure have mutually decided to end their relationship and Shangri-La will withdraw from the management of the Shangri-La Hotel, Mumbai," a spokesperson for Shangri-La said in response to an email query by ET. Pallazzio Hotels is a subsidiary of Phoenix Mills, which owns the 40-storeyed luxury hotel in the Phoenix Mills compound in Lower Parel, Mumbai. Shangri-La will withdraw from the management of the hotel on September 6. "The hotel will be handed over to the owning company on September 6 and will no longer be part of Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts," the spokesperson said. Shishir Shrivastava, joint managing director and group chief executive officer of Phoenix Mills, confirmed the development.

Both Pallazzio and Shangri-La, however, declined to comment on the reason behind the termination of the 20-year contract within nine months. The mutual decision, however, means there will be no penalties involved. "Reasons are confidential and as of now, officially, both the parties have mutually agreed to terminate the contract," Shrivastava said. Pallazzio has now finalised a new operator to manage the 390-room hotel. "We have narrowed down on the new operator we want to work with and as soon as we finalise, we will announce it," he said. At present, 223 of the hotel's 390 rooms are operational. The remaining will be made operational in phases. The company has invested over Rs 1,000 crore on the hotel project. "The property will continue to operate as an uber-luxury hotel with several enhancements, new banquet facilities and further the signature restaurant Mekong and Libai Bar will launch as planned by mid-September," Shrivastava said. Phoenix Mills had faced several issues while obtaining environmental clearance for the project, as the construction work of the hotel had commenced before obtaining the mandatory clearances from the State Environment Impact Assessment authority, the three-member committee set up by the Ministry of Environment and Forests to scrutinise and grant clearance to all major construction projects.

Source:articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2013-08-28/news/41539003_1_phoenix-mills-shangri-la-hotels-hotel-project

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Hotels With Ocean Views VA|"Top 7 Hipster Hotels"

Source              :    foxnews.com
Category         :    Hotels With Ocean Views VA
By                   :    Oyster
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard

Hotels With Ocean Views VA

The term “hipster” has a lot of connotations these days, but we think we have a pretty good idea of what it means when it comes to travel. If you’re a hipster, you’re probably the type who won’t want to stay somewhere mainstream — and certainly not a major chain. You’re the type who appreciates what’s cool, yes, but in a way that is interesting and different. You love anything eco-friendly and organic.Sound at all familiar? Fess up. We at Oyster have a special spot in our heart for hipster travelers. After all, they, like us, have high standards when it comes to choosing a hotel. They’ll often gravitate toward spots that are uber-trendy, quirky, or extremely green, and with that in mind, we unearthed some of the best hotel options in the world for the hipster set. The Wythe Hotel is a hub for hipster travelers and locals alike. With a hopping rooftop bar boasting jaw-dropping views of Manhattan, a wonderful restaurant, and cutting-edge industrial design, the Wythe is a destination unto itself. It’s located near the subway as well as dozens of restaurants, bars, and shops in the heart of trendy Williamsburg, Brooklyn, a neighborhood boasting one of the highest concentrations of hipsters in the country. Rooms are spacious and have high pine ceilings, reclaimed wood furnishings, and great amenities, including flat-screen TVs; local, hand-made toiletries; free Wi-Fi, and radiant floor heating.

The 40-room property, originally built as a motel in 1939, incorporates a stylish, minimalist design and sits at the center of Austin’s SoCo neighborhood, a trendy area known for great music. The hotel reflects its hipster surroundings by offering lots of cool stuff on loan: an excellent music library (both CDs and pre-filled iPods), a video collection, Polaroid cameras, bicycles, and even a Remington typewriter (for writing the next great American novel, naturally). There’s a small swimming pool, an outdoor lounge serving drinks and snacks, and the locally famous Jo’s Coffee next door. Urban-chic rooms have modern wooden platform beds, polished concrete floors, paisley bedspreads, and flat-screen TVs.The Michelberger Hotel is a trendy, budget-friendly option set in a former warehouse in the Friedrichshain neighborhood. Most of the 119 rooms have spare, modern decor; some have exposed cement, big windows, and open showers, while others have bunk beds and can accommodate larger groups. A big breakfast buffet (for a fee) is served daily, and food and drinks can be ordered from the outdoor terrace. Highlights at this quirky hotel include a stylish lobby full of books and magazines and a bar with live DJs. In short, it checks all of the hipster boxes — budget-friendly, hip, quirky, and in a happening neighborhood.

Source : foxnews.com/travel/2013/08/28/top-7-hipster-hotels/

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Meeting & Events Hotels In Virginia Beach|"A New View At Chelsea Hotel"

Source              :    online.wsj.com
Category         :    Meeting & Events Hotels In Virginia Beach
By                   :    Ed Scheetz
Meeting & Events Hotels In Virginia Beach

Ed Scheetz has become the Chelsea Hotel's new sole owner after buying back five properties from Joseph Chetrit, his partner in King & Grove Hotels who earlier this year purchased the Sony building on Madison Avenue for $1.1 billion. Mr. Scheetz, the onetime CEO of Morgans Hotel Group, MHGC -0.73% will now retain Ruschmeyer's in Montauk and King & Grove in Williamsburg, but the crown jewel might be the fabled Chelsea, which is currently under renovation. Mr. Scheetz said he took over the hotel so he and Mr. Chetrit "could each pursue a focused and clear strategy" in their real-estate holdings. He described the renovation project as "challenging." "You're rebuilding it from the inside out," he said. When he now tells people he owns the hotel, "They say, 'Are you crazy?'" Mr. Scheetz said. "Because it's such a challenging project with a high profile. It's an iconic property, one of the most famous hotels in the city. It has one of those famous cultural histories, from Mark Twain to Sid Vicious. Every time I go by, tourists are taking pictures of themselves in front of the door. It's got that kind of pull."

A home for bohemian artists and writers, the Hotel Chelsea since it opened as a luxury co-op in 1884 has housed, among many others, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Andy Warhol, Tennessee Williams, Patti Smith, Joni Mitchell, Dylan Thomas, Bob Dylan, Arthur Miller and Allen Ginsberg. Mr. Scheetz said he is taking over the project mid-construction. "It certainly shows its age," he said. "When the building was acquired, it was in a pretty fat state of disrepair. Not in great shape. It's been a substantial project to renovate all the rooms and rebuild while people are living there." The hotel has around 170 rooms and 65 apartments, said Mr. Scheetz. On Tuesday afternoon, he planned to send a letter to the building's tenants association about the changeover and to describe "the significant enhancements to the way the property is managed and the manner in which the restoration is conducted," including lobby usage and removal of construction detritus. In an interview, he added that all of his area hotels have had residents. "It's extraordinarily common, and I've never had problems with the tenants," he explained. "We anticipate there will always be residents. The fact that people live there is part of the history. It's part of the fabric of the hotel."

Mr. Scheetz said it was too early to tell when the hotel would reopen for business, and he was waiting to announce any new food and beverage concepts. "The big-picture game plan is to restore the Chelsea to the point where it's respectful of its long and storied history, but able to move forward," he said. "I don't want it to be a museum, but a living, breathing fabric of the culture of the city." To that end, he hopes it eventually will be a place where locals can go for dinner, a book signing or an exhibition. "All of those kind of things can happen at the Chelsea," he said. "Part of what I think is important is the community." Mr. Scheetz said it's surprising that many hotel brands don't have emotional connections with consumers, even though hotels are places where you actually spend time and go to sleep. "You might see someone wearing a Four Seasons golf shirt, but you don't tend to see people wearing a T-shirt that says Marriott," he said.

Trying to create that emotional connection is important to him, he said. "People have seen everything," he said. "When I started working with Ian Schrager, what he did was novel, but that attracted everybody's attention worldwide. Subsequently, you had a lot of other players who hired fancy designers, fancy chefs and nightlife people, threw it in a box and said, 'This is a nice hotel.'" It's Mr. Scheetz's belief that the new customer is looking for a modern, fun experience, but also comfort and value "more so than being shocked by a new design." "We want to bring that sense of gathering and community back to a hotel space," he said. In particular, the Chelsea appeals to him as a fan of music and literature. But no one, he added, has an actual picture of the hotel at a specific point in time. "It's much more of a romanticized view," Mr. Scheetz said. "You're not restoring this property to 1972. You're restoring the romantic vision of the hotel of the last 100-plus years and making sure it lasts for another 100-plus years."

Source : online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323407104579039031666119834.html

Meeting & Events Hotels In Virginia Beach|"Accor Chooses Bazin To Drive Asset-Light Hotels Strategy"

Source              :    reuters.com
Category         :    Meeting & Events Hotels In Virginia Beach
By                   :    Dominique Vidalon
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard

Meeting & Events Hotels In Virginia Beach

Accor has named private equity specialist Sebastien Bazin as the French hotel group's new chairman and chief executive in a move expected to speed Accor's asset sales to boost investor returns. The appointment of Bazin, who has ended all his duties as head of European operations for U.S. investment fund Colony Capital, Accor's largest shareholder, was made at a board meeting on Tuesday morning. Colony and other large shareholders had been unhappy with the pace at which Accor was progressing with its strategy of expanding in emerging markets to cope with a weak Europe while moving away from hotel ownership towards franchising or managing hotels for others. Potential disposals mainly involve hotels, with the company banking on the strategy to lift its operating margin to more than 15 percent of sales by 2016, from 9.3 percent at the end of last year.

Accor, which competes with global rivals InterContinental , Marriott and Starwood, wants to operate 80 percent of its rooms under franchise or management contracts and 20 percent in owned and leased hotels by the end of 2016. At June 30 this year, 42 percent of the hotel portfolio was owned by Accor, the company's website says. Rival InterContinental, meanwhile, owns 1 percent of its portfolio and had a 2012 operating margin of 33 pct of sales. Bazin, who was also Accor's vice-chairman, will assume his CEO duties with immediate effect, Accor said in a statement confirming a report by Reuters. "I take on this new role with great ambition for the group, to which I am deeply committed, and acute awareness of the challenges," the statement quoted Bazin as saying. Bazin, a French national, became vice-chairman in April after the world's fourth-largest hotel group by sales ousted Chairman and Chief Executive Denis Hennequin and put in place a transition-management team. Bazin, 51, is leaving Colony after 16 years with the $27 billion U.S. private equity firm. "He knows Accor and the hotel business inside out, and for him it's a personal challenge to jump to the operational side," a source close to the matter said.


Colony invested 1 billion euros ($1.34 billion) in Accor in 2005 and was joined in 2008 by French private equity fund Eurazeo. Together they control 21.4 percent of the group and four board seats. Colony directly owns about 11 percent of Accor. "Given that Accor is among Colony Europe's largest investments, Sebastien's move represents the perfect opportunity to optimise the company's ability to drive a substantial enhancement of shareholder value," Colony Capital said in a statement. Over the past 12 months investors have made a 13.6 percent return on Accor shares, assuming dividends were reinvested. That compares with 37.5 percent on rival InterContinental, Thomson Reuters data show. Bazin's appointment also has the approval of the head of Eurazeo, Patrick Sayer. "Competency, experience, vision, courage: Sebastien Bazin is the man of the situation for Accor," he wrote on Twitter. Colony is also a key shareholder of Carrefour, Europe's largest retailer, where Bazin, who acts as vice chairman of the board, was believed by some investors, unions and analysts to be behind a failed plan to spin off the company's property assets from the rest of the business. "The key issue is that Accor's asset-light strategy of selling assets and developing its franchise will continue and even accelerate as Colony and Bazin initiated that strategy," said one sector analyst who declined to be named.

Colony masterminded the separation of Accor from its vouchers business Edenred in 2010 and the latter's successful listing. Former Accor CEO Hennequin was said by analysts and sources to have resisted pressure from its top shareholders - notably Colony - to split property holdings from the hotels business. At the time of Hennequin's ousting, sources said that stakeholders were losing patience with the weak performance of Accor shares and the pace of asset sales and franchising. Since news of Hennequin's departure broke on April 23, Accor's shares have risen 15.3 percent, outperforming its peers. The shares gained more than 2 percent in early trade on Tuesday but closed down 1.5 percent, against a 2.4 percent decline in the CAC-40 blue-chip index.

Source : reuters.com/article/2013/08/27/accor-ceo-idUSL6N0GS0II20130827

Monday, August 26, 2013

Ocean Views Hotels in Virginia Beach|"Pitching Tents At Luxury Hotels"

Source              :    usatoday.com
Category         :    Ocean Views Hotels in Virginia Beach
By                   :    Deepti Hajela
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard

Ocean Views Hotels In Virginia Beach

Ahh, the joys of roughing it in the great outdoors - champagne, high thread-count sheets, flat-screen television. Camping, New York City-style. At least a couple of city locales are offering this unusual option - the chance to sleep outdoors, incredibly comfortably. It's an urban take on "glamping," where hotel comforts are taken outside. "It's basically being able to sleep under the stars in a luxury setting," said Jeffrey Poirot, general manager at AKA Central Park, which offers an outdoor bedroom on its 1,000-square-foot terrace outside its 17th-floor penthouse. For about $2,000 per night, the offering includes a bedroom setup - queen bed, fireplace, television - but also a telescope to look at the stars and the ingredients for that campfire favorite, s'mores.

AKA has been offering the option for the past few years, Poirot said. It's a popular option in the summer months, and has been booked more than half a dozen times this year, he said. The idea of glamping (glamorous + camping, get it?) is a relatively recent arrival in the United States over the last decade or so but has been popular in other parts of the world, like Africa, where wealthy visitors wanted to travel but always in comfort. There are websites dedicated to it, showcasing luxury camping sites in some of the world's most beautiful natural environments. On a recent night, Anita Waxman and Tom Dokton made a go of a night on the terrace. The couple, who live in San Francisco but spend time in New York City frequently in their roles producing musical theater, eagerly made use of the fire to roast some marshmallows. "That's what camping is all about," Waxman said, who admitted that in previous camping forays with friends, she would stay for dinner, then return to her home or a hotel.

"This is exactly what I want," Waxman said, and Dokton agreed. "The access to the city, being in the middle of the city and having this kind of atmosphere, it's fantastic," he said. They had engaged in luxury camping during their travels internationally, but were thrilled to have the chance to do it in New York. And they still felt a sense of solitude, even in a city of millions. "There's a sense of privacy up here, too," Dokton said. At the Affinia Gardens hotel on the Upper East Side, guests who book the patio suite (starting at around $300 per night) can pick from a range of options from dinner outside to a bed made up on the patio floor in an actual tent. General Manager Steve Sasso said the offerings had been in place for a few years, with around 10 percent to 20 percent of those booking the suite choosing from the outdoor options. "Today's travelers are really looking for unique experiences," he said.

They're guests like Kathleen Boyle, of Queens. She and her husband booked the room to celebrate their anniversary, and decided to sleep in the tent. "We thought that would be really cool and different," she said. Having the ability to sleep outside but have access to the hotel room made a difference, Boyle said. "The safety of being able to go back inside, not having to pee in the woods, here's a nice bathroom, that was excellent," she said.

Source:usatoday.com/story/travel/destinations/2013/08/25/glamping-nyc-luxury-hotels/2688279/

Ocean Views Hotels in Virginia Beach|"Starwood Hotels & Resorts Expands Footprint in Turkey"

Source              :    dailyfinance.com
Category         :    Ocean Views Hotels in Virginia Beach
By                   :    Business Wire via The Motley Fool
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard

Ocean Views Hotels In Virginia Beach

Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc. (NYS: HOT) today announced that it has signed an agreement with Tanriverdi Mensucat Sanayii A.S. to open a new-build Sheraton hotel in Samsun, Turkey. Scheduled to debut late 2014, Sheraton Samsun Hotel will mark Starwood's entry into the emerging city and will be the company's 11th hotel in Turkey. The Sheraton brand continues to grow around the globe and remains on track to open its 500th hotel by 2015."I would like to thank the Tanriverdi family for putting their trust in Starwood and the Sheraton brand as we enter into our first hotel development together with the Sheraton Samsun hotel," said Michael Wale, President, Starwood Hotels & Resorts, Europe, Africa and Middle East. "Our innovative approach to managing lifestyle brands continues to set us apart from the competition and, with the signing of this agreement, we are proud to debut Starwood and the Sheraton brand in the emerging city of Samsun, further underlining our commitment to expansion in Turkey." "Sheraton Samsun Hotel will be the first international five-star, and also the largest, hotel in Samsun, marking a milestone in the city," said Recep Tanriverdi, Chairman of the Board, Tanriverdi Group of Companies."We are excited to work with Starwood to bring the world-renowned Sheraton brand to Samsun as it continues to grow as an important business, industry and transport hub."

Sheraton Samsun Hotel will be ideally located in the heart of Samsun on the Black Sea coast, three kilometers from the city center and 25 kilometers from Samsun Carsamba Airport. The hotel will feature 200 guest rooms and 20 suites, all with scenic views of the Black Sea. The 29-storey hotel will be the largest hotel and the tallest building in Samsun. The hotel is being designed by Turkish architectural firm, Piramit Mimarlik, together with Istanbul-based interior designer, Kreatif Mimarlik. The hotel will feature an all-day dining venue, a specialty restaurant, a lobby bar, as well as a rooftop bar and lounge. Sheraton Samsun Hotel is set to become the choice gathering place for business travelers, offering extensive modern meeting and event space, including a grand ballroom, 10 meeting rooms and a business center.

Signature Sheraton experiences will include the all-white Sweet Sleeper® beds, the Sheraton Club Rooms and Lounge, the Link@Sheraton® experienced with Microsoft® and Sheraton Fitness® by Core Performance™, designed exclusively for Sheraton guests through its partner Core Performance. The hotel will also offer the signature Sheraton Shine Spa with 10 treatment rooms, an indoor swimming pool and retail shops. Home to the largest and busiest Turkish port on the Black Sea, the city of Samsun is positioned to become an important and strategic center for trade, medical and natural gas industries, as well as international and domestic transportation networks. Starwood has nine hotels in Turkey under five of its lifestyle brands, including four hotels in Istanbul: Sheraton Istanbul Maslak Hotel, Sheraton Istanbul Atakoy Hotel, W Istanbul and Le Méridien Ä°stanbul Etiler. Outside of Istanbul, Starwood has the Sheraton Cesme Hotel, Resort and Spa, Sheraton Ankara Hotel & Convention Centre, and The Lugal, A Luxury Collection Hotel, Ankara.

Earlier this year, the company entered Bursa with the Sheraton Bursa Hotel and Aloft Bursa Hotel, marking the entry of the fast-growing Aloft Hotels brand into Turkey. Later this year, Starwood will open its 10th hotel in Turkey with the Sheraton Adana Hotel, making Turkey one of the largest markets in Europe for the Sheraton brand. "Sheraton continues to be a popular choice for owners and developers in both primary and secondary markets, and has long been recognized as a pioneer in new markets around the globe," added Bart Carnahan, Senior Vice President, Acquisitions & Development, Starwood Hotels & Resorts, Europe, Africa and Middle East. "Turkey is an important growth market for Starwood and we continue to look for the right expansion opportunities."

Source : dailyfinance.com/2013/08/26/starwood-hotels-and-resorts-expands-footprint-in-t/

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Courtyard Virginia Hotels|"Hotels Quietly Adding Lots Of Extra Fees"

Source              :   newsday.com
Category         :   Courtyard Virginia Hotels
By                   :   SARA CLEMENCE
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard

Courtyard Virginia Hotels

If anyone is an educated hotel guest, it's Bjorn Hanson, dean of New York University's Preston Robert Tisch Center for Hospitality, Tourism and Sports Management. But even Hanson got confused during a business trip when a hotel bill included $18 in charges for gratuities. One fee was for a bellman he didn't use, and the other was for housekeeping service, even though he had already left a tip. It took some discussion with the manager to get the fees dropped. While travelers were complaining about airline fees -- additional charges for putting luggage on planes, reserving seats and other services -- the hotel business quietly experimented with fee after fee. The result is that your bill at checkout can be confounding. Hotels are tacking on lots of extra charges in addition to sales tax and the city and state tariffs that apply only to the hospitality industry. Common fees include resort usage, airport pickup, parking and gym visits along with charges for room service.

Some of the more surprising charges include a fee for moving items around in the minibar (not actually consuming any), a bellman (whether you use one or not), the room safe (even if you don't stash valuables in it), checking out early, checking in early and upgraded amenities (such as shampoo). And here's a new fee: parking in an open, unattended lot. These charges are most common at higher-end hotels, resorts and properties in urban centers. A parking fee at suburban hotels is still relatively rare. Most hotels in the middle of the price spectrum -- the most popular segment in the United States -- continue to avoid most fees in favor of offering free Internet, free breakfast and free parking. Fees collected by the hotel industry this year will hit a record $2.1 billion, according to a projection released this month by NYU's Hanson, who tracks hotel fee trends annually. That's double what consumers paid a decade ago. Among luxury properties, 99 percent charge for a late cancellation, compared with 29 percent among so-called midscale properties, a 2012 study by the American Hotel and Lodging Association found.

The biggest problem with fees, Hanson says, is not disclosing those that are mandatory. Last fall the Federal Trade Commission sent warning letters to 22 hotel booking companies for leaving details out of the price projection when consumers shopped for hotels. It is now common to find a section on fees on hotel booking sites as well as a disclosure when a "resort fee" applies. Nearly a quarter of hotels now charge for in-room Internet access, according to a 2012 survey commissioned by lodging association. Wi-Fi charges are most common in luxury hotels -- with the fee assessed at more than three-quarters of all properties in that category. Business travelers to big cities, in particular, are targeted for the Wi-Fi charge -- which can be as high as $15 a day. "If you're headed to downtown -- anywhere, there's a good chance you'll see a Wi-Fi fee on your bill," says Jeremy Murphy, chief executive of TheSuitest.com, a travel website that analyzes hotel rooms and prices. NYU's Hanson says it can be tough for consumers to understand what might end up on their bills. "Fees and surcharges are not even uniform across brands," he says. If you can, find out in advance what the extra charges are, and pay close attention to your bill when you're checking out. Tom Waithe, director of operations for Kimpton Hotels in the Pacific Northwest, encourages hotel guests to challenge charges they disagree with."The desk has, in many cases, the full ability to reverse a charge or reduce it, but be fair -- the charges are often posted in advance," Waithe says.

Source : newsday.com/business/hotels-quietly-adding-lots-of-extra-fees-1.5940804

Courtyard Virginia Hotels|"The World's Most Luxurious Hotel Suites"

Source              :   online.wsj.com
Category         :   Courtyard Virginia Hotels
By                   :   SARA CLEMENCE
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard

Courtyard Virginia Hotels

IN THE QUARTERS at the top of a Victorian-era building overlooking London's Thames River, no detail has been overlooked. The two-bedroom, duplex space has bathrooms clad in honey-colored onyx and Skyros marble, with shelves lined in leather. There is a semicircular living room, a walk-in wine cellar and a spa suite. If stairs are not your thing, an elevator will gently lift you to the upper level. High-end hotels are unveiling fresh or refurbished super-suites that are huge, decadent and can cost tens of thousands of dollars a night. Sara Clemence and Cornell School of Hotel Administration Associate Dean Steven Carvell discuss. Photo: Mandarin Oriental. It's not a billionaire's pied-a-terre—at least, not for keeps. The Corinthia Hotel London's Royal Penthouse suite (not to be confused with the Whitehall Penthouse or the five other slightly less luxurious penthouse complexes) goes for around $28,000 a night.

Over the past few years, the world's fanciest hotels have been introducing a new generation of incredibly posh suites. These signatures spaces have eye-widening views and couture furnishings, and they are immense—in many instances, bigger than the average American home, which is about 2,200 square feet, according to the U.S. Census. In tourist magnets like New York, Paris, London and Dubai, the suites can be priced at tens of thousands of dollars a night. As part of a roughly $100 million makeover, the Connaught created the top-floor Apartment. The 3,000-square-foot space has marble baths and two landscaped terraces. The space features a chandelier custom-designed by French sculptor Philippe Anthonioz and a bespoke lacquer-and-brass table topped with antique glass. "These are for people who don't pay their own bills," said Steven Carvell, associate dean for academic affairs at the Cornell University School of Hotel Administration. "They have people who pay their bills for them."

Some of these super-suites are the crowning glories of new, haute hotels hoping to make a splash; others are being carved out of existing space by properties seeking to raise their profiles in the luxury market. And plenty are remakes of older suites that had faded and grown dated over the years. In the first category are the suites at the Corinthia, which opened its doors in 2011. That same year, the Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group unveiled its first outpost in Paris, which included a 1930s-inspired duplex Royale Mandarin Suite with a double-height living room and a private terrace. This March, the Waldorf Astoria Berlin made its debut, complete with a Presidential Suite that takes up its entire 31st floor. Bonus: A gilded wall that reflects light into the bedroom.

Source : online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324747104579024671168518290.html

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Meeting & Events Hotels In Virginia Beach|"Tiger Has Neck, Back Pain Because Of Soft Hotel Bed"

Source              :   usatoday.com
Category         :   Meeting & Events Hotels In Virginia Beach
By                   :   Steve DiMeglio
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard

Meeting & Events Hotels In Virginia Beach

The world's No. 1 player didn't hit a full shot Wednesday over the last nine holes of The Barclays pro-am at Liberty National Golf Course because of neck and back tightness, the result of a bad night's sleep. Woods took a precautionary approach and just chipped and putted over the final nine holes. Woods will see a back specialist Wednesday afternoon and said he has no concerns about being able to play Thursday when the FedExCup Playoffs begin at Liberty National.

"My neck and back are a little bit stiff. It was stiff this morning after a soft bed and just one of those things, sleeping in hotels," said Woods, a winner of five PGA Tour titles this season. "I didn't want to push it, so just took it easy and chipped and putted." Woods, who dealt with a right elbow inflammation after the U.S. Open, said his current issues with his neck and back are not a long-term concern. "No, it was fine at home," he said. "Hotel beds." When asked if he was going to get a new bed, Woods smiled and said, "What do you think" We'll have something."

Source : usatoday.com/story/sports/golf/2013/08/21/tiger-woods-the-barclays-pro-am/2681305/

Meeting & Events Hotels In Virginia Beach|"Nara Gathers ‘Digital DNA’ To Find You The Perfect Hotel Room"

Source              :   venturebeat.com
Category         :   Meeting & Events Hotels In Virginia Beach
By                   :   Rebecca Grant
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard
Meeting & Events Hotels In Virginia Beach


Nara is channeling its “digital DNA” technology to help you find the perfect hotel room. Nara is a “computational neuroscience company” that analyzes user behavior and uses artificial intelligence to make personalized recommendations. It draws inspiration from how the brain manages information to create a cloud-based “neural network” that can identify and understand your tastes. Founder and CEO Tom Copeman said the goal is to shift the Internet from search-based to find-based. ““The Internet is chock-full of information and data, but it takes hours of wasted search time to mine through it,” Copeman said to VentureBeat. “Rather than continue with the mass of confusing web clutter, Nara’s mission is to design and engineer a more personable, actionable and liberating web to achieve a life well found. The Internet has become a big, giant haystack, and Nara helps you find the needle.”
A brain trust of MIT astrophysicists, neuroscientists, computer scientists, artists, and entrepreneurs began building Nara’s technology in 2010. The first application of the system focused on personalized restaurant recommendations. Nara combines analysis of your activity with analysis of millions of restaurant reviews and descriptions to make suggestions about restaurants you are likely to like. You thumb restaurants up or down to refine your presences.

Today Nara is extending this technology to hotel search. Its algorithm can now generate relevant recommendations for hotels in 50 North American cities. Users can turn to Nara to discover hotels in new cites that are similar to those they already like and learn why Nara made that recommendation. Nara partnered with the Expedia Affiliate Network to offer online direct bookings and pulls from TripAdvisor ratings and reviews. Nara rolled out major updates to its restaurant engine and released in nationwide in June. The engine went from 50 cities to 20,000 in less than 90 days and included new features like the ability to save locations for later, connections with third-party platforms like OpenTable, GrubHub, and Uber, and a social layer for following friends. These features are all useful for locals looking for new spots, as well as travelers who want to discover places in new cities.

Copeman said that once they were able to scale the restaurant product, the intent was to expand into other lifestyle verticals. Travel is a major Internet industry. 148.3 million travel bookings are made on the Internet each year and 39 percent of all online travel sales come from hotel reservations. Travel sites like Expedia and Priceline make most of their money through hotel bookings, and reviews are a critical part of this process. 81 percent of travelers find user reviews important and 49 percent won’t book without reviews. People want to know that the hotel they are spending their money on will provide a pleasant experience. The shift from search to find is being seen in many Internet industries — travel, e-commerce, app discovery, recruiting etc… The quantity of information on the Internet is so massive that people need various filters or layers to make sense of it. Nara’s goal is to create a more “personal, actionable, and liberating” Web. It has raised $7 million to date and is based in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Source : venturebeat.com/2013/08/22/nara-gathers-digital-dna-to-find-you-the-perfect-hotel-room/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Venturebeat+%28VentureBeat%29

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Courtyard Virginia Hotels|"Is It Ever OK To Steal Items From Your Hotel Room? "

Source              :   theage.com.au
Category         :   Courtyard Virginia Hotels
By                   :   Fairfax Media
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard

Courtyard Virginia Hotels

I am not a thief. But when I find myself in the comfort of a hotel room swollen with tiny shampoo bottles and different-size pieces of soap, kleptomania stuffs me straight into her bag and runs away with me. It can happen to the most upstanding among us. We've paid for the room, so we wrongly feel entitled to its contents. Only morality and the size of our bag stand in our way. David Elton, partner of the small UK Homegrown Hotels chain, said: "People will steal just about anything they can. Bathrobes, coat hangers, bed linen, mattress covers, towels, pillows, toilet-seat covers - pretty much everything in a room. "With a small independent hotel there's maybe more of a pang of conscience, but in bigger chain hotels people are less scrupulous." I spoke to a number of hotel groups on the subject and the consensus seemed to be that toiletries are fair game. The principle is: if it cannot be reused then it can be taken. Likewise, small items with hotel logos, such as stationery, won't be greatly missed; you can assume you are providing a nice bit of publicity when you flash your stolen pencil on the bus.

If it's the free toiletries you want, then go wild, said Jacob Tomsky, author of the bestselling Heads in Beds, a memoir of 10 years spent in the hotel industry. "Hotels have plenty of items, all cute and travel-sized, waiting in store rooms. And checking out from the hotel isn't like going through airport security. No respectable hotelier is going to want to prise open your luggage and search for shampoo." Indeed, he even advises taking your swag bag farther afield: "Consider the unmanned housekeeper's trolley a smash-and-grab situation. Take three of everything and get the hell out of the hallway. If you do get caught, just say you were out of shampoo, or, even better, toilet paper, and thought you'd save them the trouble by grabbing it for yourself."
Towels are the items that straddle the do-I-don't-I boundary, but from the hotels we spoke to, it is clear that they are certainly not yours to take. Despite a reported 68 per cent of British travellers confessing to towel theft, items that can and will be reused are out of bounds. I spoke to the UK's Metropolitan Police about the law on towel-lifting. "It is a crime," its spokesman said. "If we were to receive allegations, we would follow them up." In practice, it appears most hotels would simply blacklist a guest over a petty theft and charge the items to their card. In Japan, however, one hotel reportedly had a young couple arrested for running off with bathrobes and an ashtray, and a woman in Nigeria was sentenced to three months in prison for stealing two towels from the Transcorp Hilton Abuja Hotel. Previous research in London's Telegraph has compiled a list of the most frequently stolen items, which includes light bulbs, batteries and kettles. I once met someone who claimed to systematically strip his hotel room of batteries as a matter of principle. Such is the sense of entitlement a little chocolate on the pillow instils in some customers.

When it comes to independent hotels, such as The Pig in Hampshire, I'm told "people like to walk off with the quirky things". While a foyer ornament makes for a memorable keepsake, some light-fingered guests at other hotels have shown a preference for more unusual mementos, including a grand piano, wheeled out of reception, and an owner's pet dog. One person in the United States turned up at the hotel with a removal van and took everything. So how do hotels practise damage limitation without risking angering or embarrassing their guests? Many encourage you to buy the objects that take your fancy by selling them in the gift shop or online. "If the guest enjoys something enough to want to take it home with them," said Robert Thrailkill, general manager of the Conrad Miami, "they are welcome to do so, but at a charge." In the US a couple of years ago, a few chains invested in electronic tags for their various luxury linens, in order to monitor the whereabouts of bed sheets and bathrobes. If it's tagged and you take it, you risk a naming and shaming when the alarm goes off. And when it comes to toiletries, impracticality becomes the hotelier's ally. "The trend in luxury hotels is to go bigger and bigger with toiletry containers, so most guests don't or indeed can't take them, leaving them to be refilled," Elton said. Ultimately, it seems you should use your better judgment, or, if your better judgment isn't up to much, ask the hotel, even if that means losing the little frisson of excitement you get as you wrap the hairdryer up in your pyjamas. But given the eternal allure of the freebie, I feel hotels are probably fighting a losing battle.

Source: theage.com.au/travel/is-it-ever-ok-to-steal-items-from-your-hotel-room-20130819-2s6lp.html

Courtyard Virginia Hotels|"Hotel Prices Latest Concern For Brazil In World Cup Preparations"

Source              :    foxnews.com
Category         :   Courtyard Virginia Hotels
By                   :    Fox News Latino
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard

Courtyard Virginia Hotels
It appears the distrust between Brazil and FIFA is mutual. As FIFA Secretary General Jerome Valcke begins his inspection visit Monday amid a series of concerns about the country's readiness for the 2014 World Cup, the Brazilian government is doing an inspection of their own. Brazil is reportedly considering investigating the FIFA-appointed agency in charge of hotel accommodations for the tournament after concern was raised that some hotels listed on FIFA's website are planning steep price hikes. The Brazilian tourism board has notified the justice ministry after its research showed that rates will be up to 500 percent more expensive during the World Cup in some hotels offered by the agency MATCH Services on FIFA's website. "It's probable that MATCH is exercising intermediation fees that are a lot higher than usually exercised in the tourism market," the board said in a document obtained by The Associated Press, "harming the rights of potential consumers."

MATCH denied any wrongdoing on Saturday, saying it "provides a totally transparent price structure."
"With a small number of exceptions where MATCH Services has had to accept higher than normal rates, all other participating hotels have accepted and agreed to embrace FIFA's and MATCH's policy to provide reasonably acceptable rates," it said in a statement. The Swiss-based company is primarily responsible for contracting and delivering accommodation for the FIFA community, including its officials, delegates, guests and staff. It also sells rooms to FIFA's commercial affiliates, the media and customers of the official hospitality program. Rooms are offered to the general public through the FIFA website operated and maintained by MATCH. The study by the tourism board, known as Embratur, compared prices in several dozen hotels in the 12 host cities. It was conducted through researching prices announced on booking websites, the hotels' sites and FIFA's official web page. Embratur did not say exactly how many hotels were compared, but of the 65 hotels listed in the study's results 22 increased prices more than 200 percent, with six offering rates at least 300 percent higher. The biggest increase was by a hotel in the northeastern city of Salvador, which will charge $509 per night during the World Cup, a 583 percent increase compared to the $75 it charged this July. The host cities with the smallest increase in rates are Recife and Sao Paulo, with hikes of about 100 percent on average. The capital of Brasilia had the most expensive hotel in the study, with certain rooms costing $639 per night, a 376 percent increase compared to the current price.

The study showed that the average cost for a room in Rio de Janeiro during the World Cup will be $461, more than double the rate in Johannesburg for the 2010 World Cup final in South Africa. Embratur said it wants to negotiate better prices in part because it's afraid that excessive rates during the World Cup may hurt Brazil's tourism in the long run. "Raises without limits may satisfy the profit expectations of some, but they are bad for the sustainability of the business," Embratur president Flavio Dino said in a statement sent to the AP. "We are hosting these mega events in Brazil to help increase the flux of tourists in the country in the long run. The government will do everything possible to protect the image of the country and of the industry itself." Pricey hotel rooms became a hot topic last year during the Rio+20 U.N. conference, when the hotel sector took advantage of the spike in demand to charge exorbitant rates. The average cost of a room in Rio during the conference rose to nearly $800 a night, prompting a barrage of criticism from conference delegates. The European Parliament canceled its entire 11-person delegation due to the costs. President Dilma Rousseff's office got involved at the time and negotiated with the hotel sector to reduce some of the prices. In its letter to the justice ministry, which is responsible for handling consumer rights issues, Embratur also criticized MATCH for imposing minimum stays of at least two nights at the World Cup hotels. The document dated June 17 was obtained by the AP on Friday. MATCH may also reportedly be targeted by Brazil's antitrust agency for potential violation of free competition rules. The Valor Economico newspaper has said that prosecutors have already asked the agency to investigate the company's operations.

MATCH has vehemently defended itself, saying that "it is incorrect to suggest" that the hotels it signed a contract with in Brazil are overcharging. "The rates secured by MATCH Services from its partner hotels and those it offers to its customers are in the vast majority of cases reasonable and compare well to rates available outside of the FIFA World Cup," it said in a statement. "(Hotels are) acting in a fair and reasonable manner taking into account the market forces and the investment made by them." It added that higher prices were already expected in Brazil during a major event like the World Cup. "These prices are dictated by the prices MATCH Services have been able to secure from the hotels," it said. "They are not the product of an abuse of a dominant position held by MATCH Services, but rather the fact that the Brazilian hotel industry by tradition over many decades has enjoyed high yields per room night during major events, whether it is a major conference, Carnival, New Year or Formula 1 racing." The president of the Brazilian Association of the Hotel Industry downplayed the Embratur study, calling it opportunistic because nearly all of the rates had already been set a long time ago. Enrico Fermi said the prices were established when MATCH signed agreements with more than 800 hotels right after Brazil was picked as World Cup host in 2007. "FIFA told us that the prices here are acceptable and compatible with the international market," Fermi told the AP in a telephone interview. The average price of a room in Johannesburg for the 2010 final was $200, while in Berlin in 2006 it was $300, according to Embratur. "To compare room rates in Sao Paulo and Rio for the 2014 FIFA World Cup to those that MATCH Services provided in Johannesburg for the 2010 FIFA World Cup does not make sense," MATCH said in its statement. "All it would prove is that the difference is in line with the difference at any given time between the cost of accommodation in Rio or Sao Paulo and Johannesburg."

Source:latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2013/08/18/hotel-prices-latest-concern-for-brazil-in-world-cup-preparations/?test=latestnews

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Hotels With Ocean Views VA|"LEE DANIELS’ THE BUTLER – The Review"

Source              :  wearemoviegeeks.com
Category         :   Hotels With Ocean Views VA
By                   :    Jim Batts
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard

Hotels With Ocean Views VA

Usually once or twice during the big Summer movie season, the Hollywood studios release a film that’s a bit more serious than the action, science fiction, fantasy comedy blockbusters that normally populate the multiplex during those balmy months. Bypassing the Oscar-bait year-end log jam this time is LEE DANIELS’ THE BUTLER. Like the recent independent feature FRUITVALE STATION, it concerns a hot-button topic from recent headlines: race relations. While STATION told the story of a fairly recent true-life incident, the new film spans several decades with special emphasis on the tumultuous 1960′s much like the Summer drama of 2011 THE HELP (which later did take home some Oscar gold). So, are movie audiences ready to take a break from the car chases and explosions, and embark on a trip through some dark moments of  America’s recent history? And will Academy voters remember this drama when they begin filling out their ballots in a few months?


When we first meet the title character, eight year-old Cecil Gaines is picking cotton alongside his mother and father in Macon, Georgia circa 1926. A violent tragedy lands him in the plantation mansion were he is trained as a servant. Several years later teenage Cecil leaves the farm and heads North in search of work. The destitute young man is taken in by a the head of a hotel’s staff who trains Cecil in the ways of serving the public. He’s then scooped up by one of the exclusive luxury hotels in Washington DC. Soon Cecil (Forest Whitaker) is married to a former hotel staffer Gloria (Oprah Winfrey), who leaves the hotel world in order to care for their two sons: fun-loving little Charles and serious older brother Lewis (David Oyelowo). One day Cecil is recruited for the biggest job of his service career. He joins the household staff of the White House and is soon the personal butler to the President. Over the next three decades Cecil adjusts to the different administrations at work while he tries to hold his family together through the country’s many social and political changes as Gloria struggles for her own identity, Charles heads off to Vietnam, and Lewis clashes with his father when he joins the civil rights movement.

The thread that unifies this historical journey is the Gaines family, headed by Cecil. For much of the film Whitaker must act as silent observer who conveys much of his thoughts through his eyes as he delivers food and drink. He lets us see the hurt and concern through those tired eyes, hunched shoulders, and tired gait. This even extends to his home life, perhaps compounded by childhood trauma. It’s after he responds to his son’s insolence (oddly over a remark concerning a popular actor) that Whitaker gets to unleash his inner fire and frustration. Being the watcher is a tricky role, but Whitaker draws us to this quiet man. That quiet may be one of the reasons for the wild behavior of his wife Gloria portrayed by Winfrey as neglected woman who only seems to feel alive when she’s partying. And for the first hour, she’s partying hard, always with a cocktail in one hand and a cigarette in the other. Winfrey seems to enjoy shedding her prim TV host persona and truly dives into the earthy role whether dancing, riding her hubby about his job (“How many shoes Miss Jackie got?”), or sharing secretive glances at the lowlife neighborhood ladies man, and numbers runner, played by Terence Howard. Happily she soon appreciates and supports her hubby during his most trying times, most of which are caused by son Lewis. Oyelowo also conveys much of his inner struggle through his eyes as he has a front row seat for most of the civil rights struggle. He feels that he must join the fight and defy Dad, but still yearns for his family. In the more heart-wrenching scenes he dismisses his father’s work, then seconds later his sad eyes show his regret for demeaning him. Whitaker also has great rapport with two staffers that end up being the brothers he never had. Lenny Kravitz is superb as the somber, studious James while Cuba Gooding, Jr. is very entertaining as the clowning, happy-go-lucky Carter.

As for the historical figures that Cecil must serve, we must deal the film makers decision to indulge in a bit of stunt casting. Perhaps this is to give the film a more grand, epic feel, but often it proves to be distracting as we look for make-up tricks, hair styling, and vocal impressions while not giving proper attention to the script. Mostly, they seem to be glorified cameos to entice the movie-going public into the theatre. A couple do play well, particularly X-man James Marsden as JFK who may be a tad too youthful as he speaks in a thick “Baaastan” accent. It’s hard to imagine Robin Williams as a tough WWII general, but he conveys Dwight Eisenhower well enough. Liev Schrieber gives us a coarse, crude LBJ, but he moves a bit too sprightly and doesn’t really commit to that slow Texas drawl. Alan Rickman (yup, Hans Gruber) makes a fairly effective Ronald Reagan with just a hint of his hesitant speaking tone, while Jane Fonda pops in briefly in a wide-eyed, dithering performance as wife Nancy. But the biggest distracting misstep is John Cusack as a sweaty, twitchy, cartoon version of Richard Nixon, complete with flies buzzing about his head (and putty nose). Cusack is one of our finest actors, but this is a big embarrassment.


For the most part, these re-enactors don’t upset the tone of the film too much. Because of the main character’s nature, most of the scenes at his modest home don’t have a lot of passion. For the most part, Cecil is truly bottled-up.  When we meet Gloria, they already have made a family. Perhaps if we had seen their initial romance, we could better understand their many ups and downs. Maybe this would’ve been better accomplished in a TV mini-series format that would allow screenwriter Danny Strong (HBO’s “Recount” and “Game Changer”,but forever Jonathan Levinson, Sunnydale High School class of 99) to give us a better insight into the family dynamic and also give us a bit of the Ford and Carter administrations. Unfortunately director Lee Daniels must rely on familiar news footage to convey the passage of time (that’s a long “Soul Train” clip!). And a few of the scenes with real folks are a bit clunky. Did Nixon really toss campaign buttons at the waiters? And a scene involving young Caroline Kennedy rings a tad false. What doesn’t ring false are the powerful scenes of hatred and bigotry. We witness the full horror in the cruel opening scenes in a cotton field and later as young Cecil stumbles upon a recent lynching. Later he must remain silent while listening to stinging comments from the more “sophisticated” classes. His son Lewis is the one who finds himself truly in the thick of it as he and other protesters must sit passively at a “whites only” lunch counter and endure the monstrous jeers and physical abuse from the town citizenry. Later we can almost taste the fear as the Freedom Riders bus is attacked and burned on a dark bridge. The image of those twisted faces screaming in fury at the bus windows is stunning and sickening. A subplot involving a fitful romance with another college student perhaps inspired by Angela Davis doesn’t really work as does a scene with an admonishing Martin Luther King, but it doesn’t make the earlier sequences any less riveting. When LEE DANIELS’ THE BUTLER works, it is a compelling reminder of the  unimaginable injustices that many Americans faced just a few short decades ago. Let’s hope it will be sent out to schools, because the film truly makes those brief passages in classroom history book come to life.

Source : wearemoviegeeks.com/2013/08/lee-daniels-the-butler-the-review/

Hotels With Ocean Views VA|"Hotels Lure Businesses With 'Fun' Meetings"

Source              :   cio-today.com
Category         :   Hotels With Ocean Views VA
By                   :    Nancy Trejos 
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard
Hotels With Ocean Views VA

Having a meeting at a hotel no longer means having to sit in a windowless, overly air-conditioned room and noshing on cold cuts sandwiched between stale bread. Hotels are finally starting to lure leisure travelers back as the economy improves, but they are still struggling to convince businesses that they should send groups of employees off-campus for face-to-face meetings. To do so, they're coming up with creative ways to make meetings easier, more comfortable and even more fun. Think lounge-like conference rooms, make-your-own trail mix stations and apps Relevant Products/Services that let you ask for a temperature change.

Patrick Scholes, managing director of gaming and lodging equity research at SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, says that for a typical Marriott, Starwood, Hilton or Hyatt, group business represents 30% to 40% of overall revenues. "This segment of the business is still lagging," he says. The Global Business Travel Association says that group travel spending will grow 5.3% to $117.1 billion this year. But the total number of business travelers expected to go on trips for meetings, conventions and other group travel will fall 0.3% to 166 million people. "Meetings is a pretty big business for the hotel industry, and what we felt is that there really isn't a lot of differentiation in the industry, and there haven't been a lot of innovations in the last 50 years," says Peggy Roe, vice president of global operations for Marriott International.

Marriott Hotels and Resorts recently launched Workspring, a suite that consists of five studios to fit from three to 75 attendees. The suite has work spaces as well as common areas, many with natural light and access to the outdoors. The hotel also provides the latest in technology, wireless Relevant Products/Services access, office supplies and food and beverage. For even smaller groups, Marriott now has Workspace on Demand, which allows locals and guests to book online any space by the hour. The space can be a table in the lobby or a conference room. Roe says customers want the spaces "to feel more residential and less institutional." Westin Hotels, meanwhile, is rolling out its Tangent flexible meeting space to more than 40 hotels worldwide. 

Source : cio-today.com/story.xhtml?story_id=032003NTN0YO

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Courtyard Virginia Hotels|"Good year For City Lodge Hotels"

Source              :   bdlive.co.za
Category         :   Courtyard Virginia Hotels
By                   :    NICK HEDLEY
Posted By      :    Hotels in Virginia Beach North Courtyard

Courtyard Virginia Hotels
JSE-listed City Lodge Hotels on Wednesday reported the results of "a good year" to the end of June, with improving occupancy rates contributing to a 31% rise in diluted normalised headline earnings per share to 578.3c. CEO Clifford Ross said while occupancies were still below their long-term average, "it is encouraging that occupancies are going in the upward direction, albeit rather slowly". "We have come through a fairly tough time as an industry, with a lack of demand on the one side and overcapacity on the other," Mr Ross said. City Lodge, which is "refreshing" its branding to better differentiate its four brands, increased its average occupancies by 3 percentage points to 62% in the year ended June.

The improved occupancies, together with the first-time contribution from City Lodge’s joint venture in two Kenyan hotels, translated into an 11% revenue increase to R975.9m. While operating costs, excluding depreciation, rose 11.7%, the increase in the group’s operating costs per room sold was limited to 5.8%.
In line with its African-expansion intentions, the group opened the 104-room Town Lodge Gaborone in mid-May, adding to its interests in the two Kenyan hotels. Financial director Andrew Widegger said City Lodge had encountered difficulties in securing the site for its planned hotel in Pietermaritzburg, but was "still hopeful that we will achieve that by the end of this calendar year". City Lodge is also "very close to finalising agreements for the leasing and development of a City Lodge Hotel in Waterfall City" near Midrand, Mr Widegger said.

North of South Africa’s borders, City Lodge has "signed a couple of memorandum of understandings in Kenya and one in Ghana — but negotiations are tough and slow". Mr Widegger said these were nonbinding agreements. In addition, there are "at least another three that we are working on". The group is targeting further investments in South Africa and opportunities in Southern African Development Community (Sadc) countries. Electus investment analyst Warren Jervis said while he had expected "a slightly higher occupancy rate", City Lodge had reported a "great result". "Despite the benign environment", Mr Jervis said, City Lodge had achieved good numbers by managing well what it could control, "which says to me that they’re very good operators". Mr Jervis said it had taken time for the group to work through the excess supply that it had brought on ahead of the 2010 Fifa World Cup. "But if you look at their long-term average occupancies, it’s around 75%", although City Lodge had reached average occupancy levels of about 83% before. An improvement in economic conditions would accelerate City Lodge’s return to normal occupancies, which would "generate some really good numbers".

Source : bdlive.co.za/business/transport/2013/08/14/good-year-for-city-lodge-hotels