Archive for January, 2010

WORLDS TALLEST HOTEL OPENS

Rotana, the leading hotel management group in the Middle East, has opened the world’s tallest hotel in Dubai, adding to its expanding hotel empire. The Rose Rayhaan by Rotana opens to the public on 23 December 2009.

The soaring 72 floor tower structure stands at 333 metres and is the second addition to the alcohol-free brand, Rayhaan Hotels & Resorts by Rotana.

The latest jewel in Rotana’s crown offers 481 rooms, suites and penthouses, each with a modern design complementing the values of Arabian culture. All the rooms, suites and penthouses boast their own kitchenette, high-speed internet connection and a variety of amenities and facilities.

“Rose Rayhaan by Rotana is the flagship property for the Rayhaan Hotels & Resorts by Rotana brand, which is uniquely designed to cater to the diverse needs of our guests,” says Daniel Mathew, General Manager of Rose Rayhaan by Rotana.

“This alcohol-free option reflects our respect for the culture and beliefs of our guests and our dedication to fostering a new Arabia in today’s world”

Rose Rayhaan by Rotana features a choice of food and beverage venues, a state-of-the-art fitness centre, outdoor swimming pool, sauna and steam rooms.

Located on two floors, the conference area features 8 meeting rooms, all offering daylight, equipped with the latest audio-visual and wireless connections and expressing a friendly and modern atmosphere. A business centre with secretarial support is also available.

Located in the heart of Dubai, the hotel is five minutes from the magnificent Dubai Mall, the world’s largest shopping and entertainment centre and is surrounded by the Dubai nightlife scene.

Dubai Airport is ten minutes away, whilst MediaCity and InternetCity are 15 and 20 minutes away respectively.

To celebrate the opening, Rotana is offering a special rate of AED 400 for stays up to 20 January 2010. The rate is subject to availability, 10% service charge and 10% municipality fees.

For more information, go to http://www.traveldailyasia.com/AsiaPacificNews/Detail.aspx?Section=33893

UPDATE.

I had one of the worst experiences in my travelling life with this hotel. the worst service l have ever come across. i cannot recomend this hotel at all.

I will never stay at the Rose Rayhaan again. poor service from the moment l walked into reception, a truly dissapointing experience.

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The top ten travel trends for 2010

As the Great Recession kept more travelers tethered and a thwarted Christmas Day terror attack ramped up security concerns, 2009 was an annus horribilus for the travel industry. What’s on the horizon for 2010? USA TODAY’s Laura Bly dusts off a crystal globe.
1. Terminal confusion

Thanks to last month’s bungled bombing attempt aboard a U.S. airliner, travelers will have to "expect the unexpected, and tolerate a certain degree of risk," says airline security expert Richard Bloom of Embry Riddle Aeronautical University.

In the near-term forecast: more airport delays and hassles as airlines, screeners and passengers cope with evolving, inconsistently applied rules, and more widespread use of whole-body imaging scanners that use X-rays or radio waves to detect objects under clothing with what critics call "virtual strip-search" accuracy.

2. Let’s make a deal

If you thought last year was a buyer’s market for travelers, just wait: Even as airlines, hotels and other suppliers talk "cautious optimism" for 2010, a recent USA TODAY/Gallup Poll showed only 16% of respondents plan to fly more or stay more often in hotels this year than they did in 2009 — with about 30% saying they’ll travel less often.

The probable upshot: stable or lower prices, increased willingness to negotiate, and more online auctions from companies trying to unload unused inventory.

3. Rise of the real-time Web

"In the still rapidly expanding online world, instant gratification is even easier to obtain: ‘Digital’ has become synonymous with ‘instant,’ " says Reinier Evers of the trend tracking site Trendwatching.com. With nearly half of U.S. adults using social networking sites, expect more time-sensitive "flash sales" offered via Facebook or Twitter, more real-time postings of travel experiences, and faster response from companies and institutions fearful that negative opinions will go viral. (Are you listening, TSA?) One wild card: Google Wave, a much-hyped but still little-used online tool for real-time communication and collaboration that could set a new direction for trip planning.

4. Appetite for apps

Thanks to a global rollout of high-speed data networks and robust sales of GPS-enabled smartphones, look for an explosion of travel-related apps for everything from airport security (On the Spot System’s new iPhone app lets users rate TSA screening checkpoints) to ordering hotel room service before you check in (just-released apps for Hilton, Embassy Suites and Doubletree)."Traditional travel services will meet geo-location and social networking to make travelers’ lives easier," predicts Alan Warms of review site Appolicious.com.

5. Wi-Fi breaks free

McDonald’s offer of gratis wireless in more than 11,000 of its U.S. restaurants starting this month is the latest example of making Internet access "part of the plumbing of our lives," says tech columnist Larry Magid. Expect more upscale hotels to join their economy and midpriced brethren in letting guests surf for free. Amtrak, meanwhile, will launch free Wi-Fi this spring on Acela Express trains.

6. A la carte airlines

Odds are good you won’t have to pay to use an in-flight toilet in 2010, despite Irish discounter Ryanair’s repeated threats. And "we’re probably already at the limit" for checked-bag fees, says airline analyst Darryl Jenkins. But, adds Jenkins, look for more charges for "perks" like aisle and window seats, and greater traction for the "plane as retail store" model of Las Vegas-based Allegiant Air, which sells everything from travel pillows to show tickets on board.

7. Betting on Vegas

With gaming revenue and visitor arrivals down, recession-ravaged Sin City is counting on last month’s debut of the glitzy CityCenter to generate new buzz — and enough bodies to fill the complex’s nearly 6,000 hotel rooms. But bargain-hungry visitors will still be hitting the jackpot in what Getaroom.com’s Bob Diener declares the USA’s "No. 1 value." This winter, says Diener, weekday rooms are as low as $15 a night at a just-opened Hooters and $99 at the high-end Trump International Hotel & Tower. Other sure bets: Orlando (where Universal’s Wizarding World of Harry Potter opens this spring) and cruises in the Caribbean, where Cruise Week’s Mike Driscoll says passengers can set sail this winter from a "record low" of $349 a week.

8. High scores for Vancouver and South Africa

Both locations will be front and center in travelers’ consciousness this year, thanks to the Winter Olympic Games (held in metropolitan Vancouver and nearby Whistler from Feb. 12 to 28) and the FIFA World Cup soccer tournament (held in nine South African cities, June 11-July 11).

And while Bob Whitley of the U.S. Tour Operators Association notes that Americans have historically shied away from such high-profile events over worries about overcrowding and jacked-up pricing, "the aftermath brings a huge benefit," thanks to infrastructure improvements and a barrage of free publicity.

9. Healthy outlook for medical tourism

As Washington lawmakers continue to grapple with health-care reform, more Americans — an estimated 1.6 million by 2012, according to Deloitte Center for Health Solutions — will combine foreign vacations with carpal tunnel surgery, dental crowns and other short-stay, outpatient procedures that cost 30%-70% less than U.S. prices. Driving the trend: more coverage of overseas medical care by major U.S. insurers, an increase in individual insurance policies that typically carry a high deductible, and a marketing push by companies that combine travel and medical services.

10 On a wing and a prayer

With more than 300 million people traveling each year for religious and pilgrimage reasons and with annual revenues that exceed $18 billion, faith tourism has become a significant global industry that extends from cruises to volunteer vacations. Fueling extra interest in 2010: the 375th anniversary of Germany’s once-a-decade Oberammergau Passion Play, a rare exposition of the Shroud of Turin in Italy, and Spain’s Camino de Santiago. The ancient route to Galicia, whose cathedral reportedly shelters the remains of James the Apostle, typically draws more visitors when the saint’s Feast Day, July 25, falls on a Sunday, as it will this year.

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Hotel Royal Gardenia, was conferred the highest rating for green buildings in the world

KOLKATA, INDIA—ITC’s new luxury hotel in Bengaluru, the ITC Hotel Royal Gardenia, was conferred the highest rating for green buildings in the world—the LEED India Platinum Rating. This recognition makes it the world’s largest platinum rated hotel and is another manifestation of ITC’s leadership in sustainability practices. ITC is the only company in the world to be carbon positive, water positive and solid waste recycling positive. The LEED Platinum rating for the ITC Hotel is one more green milestone for ITC. It is close on the heels of the ITC Green Centre in Gurgaon—one of the world’s largest green buildings. This Centre was chosen by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as the venue to announce her vision on Indo-U.S. collaboration on climate change during her last visit to India.

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Novotel survey reveals hotel guest habits

06 Jan 10 (TravMedia.com): A decade after the first Novotel Survey was conducted in Australia and New Zealand, the new survey of in-hotel habits reveals that guests of both sexes are leaving their rooms cleaner and greener, but still ending up naked in corridors and leaving unusual objects behind in their rooms.

The Novotel Survey looks behind closed (hotel) doors, with housekeepers and other hotel staff reporting on the differing travel habits of men and women who stay at the group’s 30 Novotel hotels and resorts in Australia, New Zealand and Fiji.

Over the past decade there have certainly been changes in guest behaviour. Both genders are traveling with fewer bags (1 bag per male to 2.1 bags per woman), guests are more likely to reuse towels, men are drinking less beer and more wine, more guests are bringing along laptops and guests are making healthier food choices.

But it seems the more things change, the more they stay the same, with women guests still messier than their male counterparts, more likely to souvenir items from their rooms and more demanding. And while the contents of minibars have changed in the past decade, the number one choice for each gender has remained the same – beer for men and chocolate for women.

While we all know women do more housework at home, it seems their good habits fly out of the window and onto the floor in hotels, with Novotel housekeepers confirming that female guests are more likely to leave their rooms in a shambles than men (69%) and are more likely to flood the bathroom (72%). Women are also more likely to ‘souvenir’ items from their rooms with shampoos and toiletries being the most popularly pilfered items (which are acceptable), but extending to bathrobes, hairdryers, cushions and even toilet paper (not acceptable). See breakout box below for the most audacious hotel five-finger discount.

Comparisons with the results from the 2000 Survey show that women are now more assertive than they used to be, are more likely to dine alone in hotel restaurants, to be the ones ordering the wine when in a couple and are more likely to request massages from the opposite sex than before. More women than ever are watching adult movies, now representing 12% as opposed to 8% ten years ago.

The proliferation of celebrity ‘caught in the act’ videos might have contributed to a big increase in the number of couples caught canoodling outside their rooms – in pools, spas, saunas, hallways, stairwells, bars and even in storeroom cupboards – and increasingly in front of very obvious security cameras. In each hotel surveyed, more guests are being ‘caught out’ than a decade ago and this level of exhibitionism perhaps comes from the sense of freedom and anonymity that comes with being in a hotel – but also from the increased security now in place in hotels compared with ten years ago.

The items guests forget can also be an interesting revelation into what goes on behind closed doors and while mobile phone chargers, sex toys and lingerie are popular items picked up by the housekeepers other items are more perplexing – including fake limbs, a snake, a nun’s habit, false teeth, a two-metre hand-carved statue, a riding crop under the pillow and even in one case a baby! Thankfully the tot was quickly reunited with his forgetful parents.

Men, meanwhile, are more generous tippers (65%), are more likely to be caught naked outside their rooms (71%) and are more likely to order the most expensive wine on the list. Due in part, perhaps, to the global financial crisis, there was more restraint shown in tipping from both genders and the year saw an increase in guests wanting more for less from their hotel experience.

Thankfully the Survey has highlighted an increased level of care for the environment, with 32% of guests now reusing towels (and, in some cases, even bed linen not be changed). This compares with just 11% ten years ago.

Men are more likely to carry laptops than women (68%) but it is women who more often use the Novotel’s MAC webcorner, which provides free internet access for guests.

Steak remains the number one choice for men (38%) but women have moved on from the previous favourite of Caesar Salad, to fish or seafood dishes (32%).

While women dining alone in hotel restaurants has increased in recent years, they are still outnumbered by their male counterparts. To encourage and make more women feel more comfortable dining alone, a special dinner package will be offered by Novotels in Australia this year that will fast-track a main meal and glass of ‘Tik Tok’ wine, along with magazines. In the new Novotel Christchurch, which opens later this month, solo diners will be able to take advantage of special dining ‘pods’ which provide a discrete fold out TV screen. It is the first such innovation to be offered in a hotel restaurant in this part of the world, though a familiar offering at Novotels in the UK and Europe.

Interesting tales from behind closed doors

Working in a hotel is never dull, with the Novotel Survey always uncovering some odd demands including the guest at Novotel Canberra who insisted the concierge arrange an appointment with the Prime Minister or the guest who said she shouldn’t have to pay the extra for her ocean view room at Novotel Manly Pacific because it had rained all week so the view was obsolete. Then there was the guest who asked if he could have an Aboriginal witch doctor perform a ceremony in the lobby to help his arm grow back after he lost it in a motorbike accident and the elderly guest who demanded the executive housekeeper clip her toenails.

Other interesting requests included a guest who asked if 33 rubber ducks could be placed in the bathtub before his girlfriend checked in, the guest who wanted the bath filled with red wine at the Novotel Barossa Valley after reading about the hotel’s signature spa treatment (in which a special red wine recipe is used, rather than straight wine from a bottle), and the guest who wanted his room filled with hay for his farm-loving girlfriend. And there was one guest who literally took the clothes off a staff member’s back when he left his suit behind for a wedding. Thankfully the new Novotel uniforms were designed by Peter Morrissey so the guest looked suitably stylish.

Life for a hotel staffer can be dangerous too, with one hit on the head by a sex toy that had been thrown over the balcony by an angry husband and another asked to remove a ‘hazardous reptile” from a guest’s room – only to turn up and find a 3cm gecko above the bed.

While revealing some colourful tales about hotel life, the Novotel Survey has a serious side in uncovering trends in conferences and catering, food and beverage and guest desires and is used by management to ensure the Novotel brand stays ahead of its competitors in meeting guest needs. Some examples include the introduction of minimum organic and gluten-free items as a brand standard, the introduction of a free yoga channel and in-room yoga mat and the introduction of Novotel’s Family Offer to meet the changing face of its guests. All these were reflected by behaviour in previous Novotel Surveys.

The most brazen five finger hotel discount

Shampoo, soap, even a shower cap is ok – but this is taking the five finger discount a little too far! Novotel St Kilda Rooms Division Manager, Jodie Bell, had a hunch something was amiss when she assisted a couple on check-out, heavily laden with luggage and boxes after only a 1 night stay. After lugging the goods out to the front of the hotel Jodie was surprised to find a car packed full of more bounty. A quick check of the guests room amenities, however, showed all was in order and Jodie continued with attending to other guests until a late afternoon phone call from Moorabbin Police Station. They advised they had found a large amount of goods which appeared to belong to the hotel, having pulled over the same two guests for poor driving (quite possibly because the car was out of alignment from its load!). It turns out, the guests had raided the housekeeping store rooms and trolleys and amongst the returned goods were towels, linen, hundreds of tea and coffee sachets, stationary, boxes of amenities and even a portable heater! The incident proves two things -Rooms Division Managers should go with their hunch and cheaters never prosper!

SOURCE: http://www.traveldailyasia.com/AsiaPacificNews/Detail.aspx?Section=34175

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ITC Hotel Royal Gardeniavconferred the highest rating for green buildings in the world-the LEED India Platinum Rating

ITC’s new luxury hotel in Bengaluru, the ITC Hotel Royal Gardenia, was conferred the highest rating for green buildings in the world—the LEED India Platinum Rating. This recognition makes it the world’s largest platinum rated hotel and is another manifestation of ITC’s leadership in sustainability practices. ITC is the only company in the world to be carbon positive, water positive and solid waste recycling positive. The LEED Platinum rating for the ITC Hotel is one more green milestone for ITC. It is close on the heels of the ITC Green Centre in Gurgaon—one of the world’s largest green buildings. This Centre was chosen by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as the venue to announce her vision on Indo-U.S. collaboration on climate change during her last visit to India.

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Next Little Thing 2010 Wireless electricity See what’s coming in 2010.

©Peter Yang

Eric Giler, CEO of WiTricity, which uses low-level magnetic fields to transmit electricity around a room.

Electricity Without Wires

WiTricity
Cambridge, Mass.

Marin Soljacic couldn’t sleep. The problem was his wife’s Nokia cell phone. The tyrannical device beeped on the bedside table when it needed to be plugged in. It could not be disabled.

Instead of taking a hammer to the phone, Soljacic marveled at the fact that this device, and billions of others like it, was sitting a few feet away from all the electricity it could ever need. Why couldn’t it receive power wirelessly, just as laptops get Wi-Fi?

A physics professor, Soljacic dug into the problem and learned that if you could get two magnetic fields to resonate — to sing the same note, in effect — they could transfer an electric current. With two large magnetic coils, he found a way to throw 60 watts across a room, powering a lightbulb. MIT, his employer, quickly patented the technology and encouraged Soljacic to start a company.

WiTricity’s 15 employees are hard at work proving that Soljacic’s magnetic coils can power almost any electrical device. Most of the company’s potential customers have one major question: safety.

"There’s a real perceptual problem," says CEO Eric Giler. "People think we’re putting electricity in the air, and that’s called lightning, and they know to stay away from that."

In fact, the coils turn electricity into magnetic fields, then back into electricity. Magnetic fields interact weakly with humans; as far as the fields are concerned, we are no different from air. Giler makes a point of standing between the coils whenever he demonstrates the technology.

At the Nikkei electronics conference in Tokyo in October, he was able to power a 1,000-watt klieg light from across the room — a far cry from that 60-watt lightbulb in Soljacic’s first experiment. "We’re going up the power curve," he says

For more information head to http://finance.yahoo.com/career-work/article/108344/next-little-thing-2010?mod=career-leadership

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