Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach|"First 'Instagram Hotel' Gives Free Stays For Popularity"

Source             :    travel.cnn.com
Category        :    Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach
By                  :    Michael Stoneman
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach
If you’re going to bill your hotel as the world’s first "Instagram hotel," it helps if you can provide guests with some photogenic surroundings to get snap-happy in. Sydney’s new 1888 Hotel -- the first in the world inspired by the popular photo-sharing app -- certainly isn’t lacking in that department. The 90-room boutique hotel in the city’s waterside Pyrmont suburb occupies a heritage-listed building originally used as a wool store built in, as the name says, 1888.Over the last two years, it's undergone a meticulous AU$30 million ($28 million) restoration, creating a unique space that successfully blends original features, including reclaimed ironbark beams, period windows and exposed brick walls, with colorful furniture and vibrant artwork. “The style of the building and its heritage was very important,” says Paul Fischmann, CEO of 8 Hotels, which owns 1888. 

“We walked in here and you could see all the elements that would make it a cool hotel.”From a light-filled, five-story atrium -- complete with an indoor tree -- to freestanding bathtubs and recycled timber desks in rooms, nearly every angle of the 1888 provides a photo opp for Instagrammers. Taking inspiration from the year 1888 -- when Kodak patented its first box and roll cameras -- the hotel has embraced the popularity of the photo-sharing app, with two screens in reception displaying a constantly updated feed of images guests have uploaded to Instagram using the #1888hotel hashtag. The hotel features a dedicated "selfie space," where guests can pose for photos behind a gilt-edged frame. Insta-walk maps are available from reception, taking guests to Instagrammable sights such as the Pyrmont Bridge, Darling Harbour and Chinese Gardens. Instagram users with more than 10,000 followers are rewarded with a free night’s stay, while each month the guest who has snapped the best Instagram picture during their visit also gets a free night’s accommodation.“So many people are on Instagram and so many people love taking photos and sharing them,” says Fischmann. “People are taking images wherever they go and sharing them with their friends, so we thought we’d play on that a little bit with things like the ‘selfie space’ and the monthly competitions. “What’s been fun is following the people who have started following us. There are actually a lot of people with a lot more than 10,000 followers – we had a guy here who had 650,000 followers, and he took a photo in the selfie space and had 35,000 likes. It’s amazing to think about the reach of it and it’s fun to watch."After a full day of Instagramming, guests can connect smartphones to in-room media hubs to review images on a 40-inch LED TV, before uploading their snaps via the hotel’s Wi-Fi.Each of the 90 rooms features an iPad, which guests can use to order room service, control air conditioning or view staff recommendations for nearby bars and restaurants.

Share plates and charcuterie boards are available at the 1888 Eatery & Bar.The 1888’s rooms range from compact, 15-square-meter "Shoeboxes," which feature queen beds and rain showers, to a 35-square-meter Junior Suite, which has a king bed, lounge area and city views. The rooftop penthouse has a huge outdoor terrace overlooking the city. “People have really embraced it," says Fischmann.  "Photography-based social media is something we can build on. We had all sorts of ideas, such as having photo booths in the lobby and things like that, so there are definitely ways we can continue it on.” A free stay should be motivation for those seeking to gain a few thousand more Instagram followers.

Source : travel.cnn.com/worlds-first-instagram-hotel-1888-sydney-908516

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Hotels In Carolina|"Synergy Hotels & Resorts To Venture"

Source             :    hospitalitybizindia.com
Category        :    Hotels In Carolina
By                  :    HBI Staff 
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Hotels In Carolina
Bengaluru-based Synergy Hotels & Resorts recently unveiled plans to foray into property leasing in Rajasthan and Kerala early next year. The company represents top-notch hotels and resorts across the country and promotes them extensively through trade shows, events and untapped marketing mediums and avenues. Apart from general management, Synergy Hotels focuses on conceptualising; site inspection; planning of facilities; planning management policies and systems; manpower management; F&B management (production and services); purchases; equipment procurement and installation; and branding and market positioning of hotels, resorts, camps and restaurants. Thomas Koshy, Director, Synergy Hotels & Resorts, said, “Being a specialised player in hotel management, 2014 will see us venturing into property leasing. Having expertise in managing hotels, we are now looking at leasing mid-range hotel properties in Rajasthan and Kerala, thus adding to our portfolio of services.”Bengaluru-based Synergy Hotels & Resorts recently unveiled plans to foray into property leasing in Rajasthan and Kerala early next year. The company represents top-notch hotels and resorts across the country and promotes them extensively through trade shows, events and untapped marketing mediums and avenues. Apart from general management, Synergy Hotels focuses on conceptualising; site inspection; planning of facilities; planning management policies and systems; manpower management; F&B management (production and services); purchases; equipment procurement and installation; and branding and market positioning of hotels, resorts, camps and restaurants. Thomas Koshy, Director, Synergy Hotels & Resorts, said, “Being a specialised player in hotel management, 2014 will see us venturing into property leasing. Having expertise in managing hotels, we are now looking at leasing mid-range hotel properties in Rajasthan and Kerala, thus adding to our portfolio of services.”

Source : hospitalitybizindia.com/detailNews.aspx?aid=17889&sid=1

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Discount Hotels In Carolina Beach|"Hotel, Park & Housing Planned For State Farm Project"

Source             :    dallasnews.com
Category        :    Discount Hotels In Carolina Beach
By                  :    KAREN ROBINSON
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Discount Hotels In Carolina Beach
Dallas-based developer KDC announced plans Thursday to add a hotel, housing, a medical facility and a park to the mammoth development that will house a regional office for State Farm Insurance in Richardson. The project, to be called CityLine, will be on roughly 36 acres near the Bush Turnpike and Central Expressway. “CityLine will be an instant city with a true urban environment,” said Walt Mountford, KDC’s executive vice president. “It’s adjacent to DART’s existing light-rail station and is also surrounded by key highways and two major thoroughfares.” The $600 million, 2.3 million-square-foot initial phase of CityLine is slated for completion in early 2015. The project will include more than 92,000 square feet of retail, restaurant and entertainment space; a contemporary 150-room select service hotel; and 520 apartments. Mountford said he expects to announce the operator of the hotel within 60 days and anchor tenant of the “eatertainment” area in the first quarter of 2014. Shops and restaurants will begin opening in late 2014, he said.Phase one also will include an 18,000-square-foot wellness and fitness facility; a 41,000-square-foot medical office building; and a 3.5-acre park with trails.

“I can’t think of another development that, upon opening, will completely integrate over 1.5 million square feet of office with retail, restaurant, entertainment, multifamily, medical, fitness and hospitality uses into an exciting experience for all who live in D-FW,” said Steve Van Amburgh, KDC’s chief executive. A focal point of the initial phase will be CityLinePlaza, a centrally located plaza designed by Office of James Burnett, the landscape architect of Dallas’ Klyde Warren Park. KDC has selected Dallas-based Retail Street Advisors to start pre-leasing and marketing.The plaza and project streets “are oriented and scaled specifically for pedestrians to encourage sidewalk and patio activity and to promote community interaction and gathering throughout the day,” said Aaron Stephenson of Retail Street Advisors. The restaurant, retail and entertainment spaces will be integrated into the base of the office towers, the multifamily residential and the hotel.The master plan also includes 7,700 parking spaces in CityLine garages.

In July, KDC broke ground on the project and announced that State Farm would lease 1.5 million square feet in a 13-story tower, a 15-story tower and a 21-story tower. Each rests on a five-level parking structure along with ground-floor retail space. KDC acquired the land for the project in December. The $600 million price includes the cost of the land. The project, adjacent to Dallas Area Rapid Transit’s Bush Turnpike Station on its Red Line, will be a transit-oriented development on the east and west sides of Plano Road. The east side includes 147.5 acres on the north side of Renner Road between Plano Road and Wyndham Lane. The west side includes 38.5 acres south of the Bush Turnpike between Plano Road and the DART light-rail tracks.Dallas-based developer KDC announced plans Thursday to add a hotel, housing, a medical facility and a park to the mammoth development that will house a regional office for State Farm Insurance in Richardson. The project, to be called CityLine, will be on roughly 36 acres near the Bush Turnpike and Central Expressway.

“CityLine will be an instant city with a true urban environment,” said Walt Mountford, KDC’s executive vice president. “It’s adjacent to DART’s existing light-rail station and is also surrounded by key highways and two major thoroughfares.” The $600 million, 2.3 million-square-foot initial phase of CityLine is slated for completion in early 2015. The project will include more than 92,000 square feet of retail, restaurant and entertainment space; a contemporary 150-room select service hotel; and 520 apartments. Mountford said he expects to announce the operator of the hotel within 60 days and anchor tenant of the “eatertainment” area in the first quarter of 2014. Shops and restaurants will begin opening in late 2014, he said.Phase one also will include an 18,000-square-foot wellness and fitness facility; a 41,000-square-foot medical office building; and a 3.5-acre park with trails. “I can’t think of another development that, upon opening, will completely integrate over 1.5 million square feet of office with retail, restaurant, entertainment, multifamily, medical, fitness and hospitality uses into an exciting experience for all who live in D-FW,” said Steve Van Amburgh, KDC’s chief executive. A focal point of the initial phase will be CityLinePlaza, a centrally located plaza designed by Office of James Burnett, the landscape architect of Dallas’ Klyde Warren Park. KDC has selected Dallas-based Retail Street Advisors to start pre-leasing and marketing.The plaza and project streets “are oriented and scaled specifically for pedestrians to encourage sidewalk and patio activity and to promote community interaction and gathering throughout the day,” said Aaron Stephenson of Retail Street Advisors. The restaurant, retail and entertainment spaces will be integrated into the base of the office towers, the multifamily residential and the hotel.The master plan also includes 7,700 parking spaces in CityLine garages. In July, KDC broke ground on the project and announced that State Farm would lease 1.5 million square feet in a 13-story tower, a 15-story tower and a 21-story tower. Each rests on a five-level parking structure along with ground-floor retail space. KDC acquired the land for the project in December. The $600 million price includes the cost of the land. The project, adjacent to Dallas Area Rapid Transit’s Bush Turnpike Station on its Red Line, will be a transit-oriented development on the east and west sides of Plano Road. The east side includes 147.5 acres on the north side of Renner Road between Plano Road and Wyndham Lane. The west side includes 38.5 acres south of the Bush Turnpike between Plano Road and the DART light-rail tracks.

Source:dallasnews.com/business/commercial-real-estate/headlines/20131024-hotel-park-housing-planned-for-state-farm-project-in-richardson.ece

Hotels In Carolina|"Hotel Prices Skyrocket"

Source             :    bostonglobe.com
Category        :    Hotels In Carolina
By                  :    Katie Johnston
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC
 Hotels In Carolina

When Shane Victorino hit the grand slam that propelled the Red Sox into the World Series late Saturday night, Hotel Commonwealth was ready. Knowing the first two games of the World Series would be played around the corner at Fenway Park if the Sox beat the Detroit Tigers, general manager Adam Sperling had kept about 20 rooms open. He brought in an extra staff member to take reservations overnight and set rates for Wednesday and Thursday at the top level, around $600 a night. His foresight paid off. “Between 12:02 a.m. when the game ended on Saturday and before the sun came up on Sunday, they were gone,” Sperling said. Hotels in Boston are already stretched to capacity in October, with convention-goers, leaf peepers, and Head of the Charles fans out in full force. Add the World Series, and you have a sold-out market, extending to the suburbs and beyond. This has sent room rates soaring, with prices as high as $1,000 a night on Expedia and travelers scrambling to find a place to stay.

‘Between 12:02 a.m. when the game ended on Saturday and before the sun came up on Sunday, they were gone.’ “You piece this all together, it is perfectly designed to sell out not only the city but spread at least within a 50- to 60-mile radius,” said Paul Sacco, president of the Massachusetts Lodging Association.The Revere Hotel in the Back Bay was already sold out when the Sox clinched the pennant on Saturday night, but had two cancellations earlier this week for the opening games. When the hotel made the rooms available at $800 a night, about double the normal rate for this time of year, they were snapped up within half an hour. The staff has been tracking the Red Sox games since before the playoffs, calculating how each win and loss could affect the team’s post-season and the hotel’s business. “Everyone here has become a baseball expert if they weren’t one,” said general manager Simon Mais. At the Westin Copley Place, which sold its last rooms at $600 a night, managers looked at bookings during the 2004 World Series, when the Red Sox also played the St. Louis Cardinals, to see what demand might be like this year. Some teams’ fans “travel well,” meaning they show up for away games, said general manager Ray Hammer, and St. Louis is one of those teams.

Big events taking place in a peak season in a tight market like Boston allow hotels to charge their top rates, which usually only happens a few times a year, said Matthew Arrants, executive vice president at the hospitality consultancy Pinnacle Advisory Group. And as the Red Sox got closer to the World Series, rates inched up; at the Hotel Commonwealth, rooms that went for about $400 in the division series were $500 for the league championship and $600 for the World Series Even the Holiday Inn Express in Lawrence, some 30 miles from Fenway, is hopping. It’s a no-frills place without room service — although guests get a free breakfast buffet of eggs, sausages, and cinnamon rolls. But with a $139 price, and a few rooms still available earlier this week, the hotel has attracted some Red Sox fans, said general manager Molly Mulholland, who brought in an extra breakfast attendant and housekeeper to keep up with demand. “Some want to be in the chaos,” she said, “others choose to be away from it.” Mike Morgan is ready to embrace the chaos, but he can’t find a hotel room that will let him. Morgan lives in Pepperell, but because he has to work as the executive producer at the Karson & Kennedy show at Mix 104.1 in Brighton at 4:30 a.m. Friday, he planned to get a hotel room in the city after going to the game Thursday night. No such luck. After spending hours trying to find a place, he’s considering spending the night on a recliner at the radio station. “If it was Game 7, I’d sleep in the street,” Morgan said.

Those who started making World Series reservations in September fared much better. The Howard Johnson Hotel on Boylston Street sold out a month ago, with rates as low as $145 for regular guests. Still, the calls keep coming. “The phone hasn’t stopped ringing,” said front desk clerk Larry Bavis, who estimates more than 100 people have called since Monday. “It’s actually a pain in the butt.” What hoteliers really want is for the series to extend to Games 6 and 7, which would be played in Boston Oct. 30 and 31, said Andrea Foster, vice president at PKF Consulting USA. The last week of October is usually fairly weak because business travelers want to be at home with their kids for Halloween, she said. The games would bring in a healthy crowd, and, fans will be happy to note, at much more reasonable rates than this week.

Source:bostonglobe.com/business/2013/10/22/world-series-opens-hotels-sold-out-for-miles-around-boston/e13w4cRKD84Bhi49SL0qRP/story.html

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Carolina Beach Hotels Deals|"No Security Clearance Yet For Major Aerocity Hotels"

Source             :    timesofindia.indiatimes.com
Category        :    Carolina Beach Hotels Deals
By                  :    Suhas Munshi
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Carolina Beach Hotels Deals
After the first hotel in Aerocity, JW Marriott, opened its gates to visitors last Friday, more clearances were expected by other hotels in the 43-acre complex. However, these hotels may have to wait longer for their NOCs. Right after inspection and partial clearance to Marriott, two other hotels-Red Fox and Lemon Tree-had been queued up for inspection. Sources say the inspection has just been conducted by a Delhi Police team and a report is being compiled on it. The report is said to have highlighted several deficiencies in the security of both the hotels. Though no major security loophole was found, the team is said to have found some minor aberrations and so clearances have been postponed, at least for now.

"There were some issues like easy access to the verandah or a baggage scanning mechanism not up to the mark. Things that don't directly threaten the security of flights but can prove to be just the loopholes someone wishing to create trouble would be looking for," said a senior airport security official. The official added that Defence Research and Development Organization must check the grade of glass fixed in the hotels' tarmac facing rooms and submit its own report.

DRDO in Chandigarh recently completed testing bulletproof glass samples and recommended a material for the windows of Aerocity hotels. Sources in airport security said both hotels have rooms facing the tarmac and a clearance in immediate future looks unlikely. The two hotels have a combined capacity of 487 rooms and strength of 600 employees. Once open, the budget hotels are likely to provide a breather to visitors looking for cheaper alternatives located close to the airport. The newly constructed hotels have been waiting for the past 10 months for police clearance.

Source:timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/delhi/No-security-clearance-yet-for-major-Aerocity-hotels/articleshow/24556873.cms?cfmid=14000000

Monday, October 21, 2013

Hotels In Carolina|"Room Testing Reveals Contamination Still Rampant"

Source             :    cbc.ca
Category        :    Hotels in Carolina
By                  :    Megan Griffith Greene
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Hotels in Carolina
A year after CBC's Marketplace revealed shocking issues with cleanliness in Canadian hotels, follow-up testing reveals that lack of proper sanitizing is still a problem in top chains.Marketplace retested six of Canada’s biggest hotel chains and found that despite some progress, some chains actually performed worse than last year.“Certain hotels have actually gone backwards. They've actually gotten worse,” microbiologist Keith Warriner told Marketplace co-host Erica Johnson. The full investigation, The Dirt on Hotels: We’re Back, which also ranks hotels based on their performance and their improvement from last year, airs Friday at 8 p.m. (8:30 p.m. NT). Some of the problems that Marketplace found in this year’s test included unclean bedding and surfaces that hadn’t been properly cleaned or sanitized. In one case, a stain found last year on the wall of a room at the EconoLodge in downtown Toronto -- which Warriner says was likely urine -- was still there.Last year, Marketplace tested 54 hotel rooms in Vancouver, Montreal and Toronto across six of Canada’s biggest hotel chains. The hotels tested included budget options such as the Super 8 and EconoLodge, mid-range hotels the Holiday Inn and Best Western, as well as higher-end rooms in the Sheraton and Fairmont.

For this year’s investigation, Marketplace retested rooms in the same hotel chains in Toronto, testing three rooms per hotel.Under the guidance of Warriner, a professor at the University of Guelph and one of Canada’s leading microbiologists, Marketplace tested the hotel rooms both for general cleanliness and for a variety of germs that can’t be detected by the naked eye. The tests included visual inspection with a black light; microbiological testing for germs including bacteria, coliforms -- which could indicate fecal contamination -- and antibiotic-resistant superbugs. There was also a hidden camera test to document housekeeping practices. Marketplace also took samples from ice machines and tested the ice for coliforms. Lack of proper cleaning could pose a serious risk to travellers, says Warriner, because people have no way of knowing if previous guests were sick, and because of the high volume of people who stay in hotels, that exposure can be even greater.

Marketplace focused on surfaces in hotel rooms that guests frequently touch, such as remote controls, telephones, faucet handles and lamps.This year’s testing indicates that hotels taken some positive steps in their cleaning practices, while other problems remain. In last year’s investigation, ice machines in all six hotel chains were found to contain coliforms, a possible sign of fecal contamination. In one instance -- an ice machine at the Sheraton Centre hotel in Toronto -- the tests found a strain of E. coli. This year’s testing, however, found clean ice in every hotel tested. “I think it's very good what they're doing, I think it's very positive that they're taking steps,” says Warriner. Air vents -- a site of visible mold growth in last year’s tests -- also appeared to be cleaner. However, results from microbiological testing found superbugs at all chains except one, Super 8. MRSA, which is an antibiotic-resistant strain of Staphylococcus bacteria, was found on a variety of frequently touched surfaces in hotels, including a TV remote, bathroom counter and lamp.

The Marketplace testing also found C. difficile, which can cause serious illness in some people, on a toilet seat at the Sheraton Centre hotel in Toronto. While MRSA and C. difficile may not be an immediate threat to healthy individuals, they can pose problems for those who are sick or have compromised immune systems. According to Warriner, the results indicate that hotels are not properly sanitizing rooms. “In hotels, we don't know who's been in there before,” Warriner says. It’s a concern, he says, that combined with the lack of sanitizing could easily lead to the spread of illnesses such as flu or norovirus.This year’s examination suggested that while housekeepers were often diligent, test results at some hotels revealed widespread cross-contamination in some hotel rooms. “What the study's really showing is that they're not sanitizing the room. They're cross-contaminating rooms,” says Warriner.

One of the causes of the cross-contamination, according to Warriner, may be lack of proper equipment, and insufficient use of sanitizer. In some hotels, hidden camera testing revealed that the cleaning caddies provided to housekeepers may allow sponges, cloths and toilet brushes to come into contact with one another, allowing cross-contamination. The Hotel Association of Canada, which describes itself as the “voice of the Canadian Hotel & Lodging industry” declined to speak with Marketplace for the story. In a statement, the association wrote that “The health, safety, and welfare of our guests has always been and continues to remain our top priority.” None of the hotel chains agreed to be interviewed for the Marketplace investigation, although many committed to continuing to improve training and cleaning practices.

Source : cbc.ca/news/dirty-hotels-room-testing-reveals-contamination-still-rampant-1.2101331

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Discount Hotels in Carolina Beach|"Room Testing Reveals Contamination Still Rampant"

Source             :    cbc.ca
Category        :    Discount Hotels in Carolina Beach
By                  :    Megan Griffith Greene
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Discount Hotels In Carolina Beach

A year after CBC's Marketplace revealed shocking issues with cleanliness in Canadian hotels, follow-up testing reveals that lack of proper sanitizing is still a problem in top chains. Marketplace retested six of Canada’s biggest hotel chains and found that despite some progress, some chains actually performed worse than last year.“Certain hotels have actually gone backwards. They've actually gotten worse,” microbiologist Keith Warriner told Marketplace co-host Erica Johnson. The full investigation, The Dirt on Hotels: We’re Back, which also ranks hotels based on their performance and their improvement from last year, airs Friday at 8 p.m. (8:30 p.m. NT). Some of the problems that Marketplace found in this year’s test included unclean bedding and surfaces that hadn’t been properly cleaned or sanitized. In one case, a stain found last year on the wall of a room at the EconoLodge in downtown Toronto -- which Warriner says was likely urine -- was still there.Last year, Marketplace tested 54 hotel rooms in Vancouver, Montreal and Toronto across six of Canada’s biggest hotel chains. The hotels tested included budget options such as the Super 8 and EconoLodge, mid-range hotels the Holiday Inn and Best Western, as well as higher-end rooms in the Sheraton and Fairmont.

For this year’s investigation, Marketplace retested rooms in the same hotel chains in Toronto, testing three rooms per hotel.Under the guidance of Warriner, a professor at the University of Guelph and one of Canada’s leading microbiologists, Marketplace tested the hotel rooms both for general cleanliness and for a variety of germs that can’t be detected by the naked eye. The tests included visual inspection with a black light; microbiological testing for germs including bacteria, coliforms -- which could indicate fecal contamination -- and antibiotic-resistant superbugs. There was also a hidden camera test to document housekeeping practices. Marketplace also took samples from ice machines and tested the ice for coliforms. Lack of proper cleaning could pose a serious risk to travellers, says Warriner, because people have no way of knowing if previous guests were sick, and because of the high volume of people who stay in hotels, that exposure can be even greater. Marketplace focused on surfaces in hotel rooms that guests frequently touch, such as remote controls, telephones, faucet handles and lamps.This year’s testing indicates that hotels taken some positive steps in their cleaning practices, while other problems remain.

In last year’s investigation, ice machines in all six hotel chains were found to contain coliforms, a possible sign of fecal contamination. In one instance -- an ice machine at the Sheraton Centre hotel in Toronto -- the tests found a strain of E. coli. This year’s testing, however, found clean ice in every hotel tested. “I think it's very good what they're doing, I think it's very positive that they're taking steps,” says Warriner. Air vents -- a site of visible mold growth in last year’s tests -- also appeared to be cleaner. However, results from microbiological testing found superbugs at all chains except one, Super 8. MRSA, which is an antibiotic-resistant strain of Staphylococcus bacteria, was found on a variety of frequently touched surfaces in hotels, including a TV remote, bathroom counter and lamp. The Marketplace testing also found C. difficile, which can cause serious illness in some people, on a toilet seat at the Sheraton Centre hotel in Toronto. While MRSA and C. difficile may not be an immediate threat to healthy individuals, they can pose problems for those who are sick or have compromised immune systems.

According to Warriner, the results indicate that hotels are not properly sanitizing rooms. “In hotels, we don't know who's been in there before,” Warriner says. It’s a concern, he says, that combined with the lack of sanitizing could easily lead to the spread of illnesses such as flu or norovirus.This year’s examination suggested that while housekeepers were often diligent, test results at some hotels revealed widespread cross-contamination in some hotel rooms. “What the study's really showing is that they're not sanitizing the room. They're cross-contaminating rooms,” says Warriner. One of the causes of the cross-contamination, according to Warriner, may be lack of proper equipment, and insufficient use of sanitizer. In some hotels, hidden camera testing revealed that the cleaning caddies provided to housekeepers may allow sponges, cloths and toilet brushes to come into contact with one another, allowing cross-contamination.

The Hotel Association of Canada, which describes itself as the “voice of the Canadian Hotel & Lodging industry” declined to speak with Marketplace for the story. In a statement, the association wrote that “The health, safety, and welfare of our guests has always been and continues to remain our top priority.” None of the hotel chains agreed to be interviewed for the Marketplace investigation, although many committed to continuing to improve training and cleaning practices.

Source : cbc.ca/news/dirty-hotels-room-testing-reveals-contamination-still-rampant-1.2101331

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Virginia Oceanfront Hotels|"Terror Night In Scottish Hotel"

Source             :    express.co.uk
Category        :    Virginia Oceanfront Hotels
By                  :    Ashlie McAnally
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Virginia Oceanfront Hotels

Stephanie O’Brien, 24, told the High Court in Glasgow she was staying at a hotel in the city with three friends when her skirt’s zip became stuck. Two of her friends went for help and returned with Clive Carter, a security guard, who pulled at the zip and broke it. Ms O’Brien did not go out with her friends later and while in the room alone, Carter returned holding a fire extinguisher. The jury heard she felt “sick to the stomach” when she saw him and he claimed she had telephoned reception to report a fire. Ms O’Brien, from Cumbria, was giving evidence at the trial of Carter, 35. He is accused of breach of the peace at the hotel by entering her room uninvited and scaring her on November 4, 2012. Carter, from Motherwell, Lanarkshire, is also charged with murdering Khanokporn Satjawat at the Clyde Auditorium, in Glasgow on November 12, 2012, by  striking her with a fire extinguisher.

He has pleaded guilty to the culpable homicide of Ms Satjawat and lodged a special defence of diminished responsibility, but the Crown did not accept it. Ms O’Brien told the court that she and her friends were on an overnight stay in Glasgow on November 3, 2012, but she did not  go out with them. There was a knock at the door and, through the peephole, she saw Carter: “I froze, terrified,” she said. “I wasn’t going to open it, but then I kept thinking, I am 23 I have to open this door, he works for the hotel.  “He said that I had phoned reception saying that there was a fire in my room.  “I thought it was a lot of rubbish,” she said and added that she was “even more scared”. At this point, she said, She went out of the room and Carter went inside. Ms O’Brien told the jury: “I had my phone, I can remember lighting the screen up and saying ‘my friends are coming back now they have just gone for food’. “He came towards me and I ran right past him into the room and locked the door.”  She contacted her friends, who come back to the hotel and they all sat in the bar. They told staff what happened, but did not lodge a complaint. Police contacted her a couple of weeks later after Carter had been charged with murder. Carter denies the charge and the trial before Lord Matthews continues.

Source:express.co.uk/news/uk/436757/My-terror-night-in-Scottish-hotel-Woman-s-claim-over-murder-accused

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach|"Hotels Swell In Manhattan"

Source             :     online.wsj.com
Category        :    Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach
By                  :     CRAIG KARMIN
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC
Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach

New York is experiencing its biggest hotel expansion in a generation, attracting a host of new brands and developers betting that the good times will continue. But the race to build or convert dusty properties into modern lodgings already has sparked a debate about whether the additional rooms can be absorbed without putting downward pressure on hotel-room rates by next year.The number of hotel rooms in Manhattan is expected to rise about 10% to more than 90,000 by the end of 2014, says Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels, which tracks hotel projects planned and under way. Manhattan's expected lodging growth tops the U.S. by a wide stretch and is more than double the rate of the next fastest-growing major markets, Miami and Washington, according to forecasts from Lodging Econometrics.

The surge in new Manhattan properties—ranging from luxury names such as the SLS Hotel New York to limited-service brands like Best Western—is part of a broad revival in the hospitality industry. It also reflects New York's pull as a global business center and tourism mecca that is recovering from the economic downturn faster than most cities. While many luxury retail companies are willing to pay among the world's highest rents for a prime spot on Fifth Avenue, hotel companies view landing a Manhattan showpiece as important for promoting themselves, lodging analysts say. Hyatt Hotels Corp. H -0.84% and a partner, for example, are spending about $375 million for New York's first Park Hyatt, the company's top-of-the-line brand. It is slated to open in 2014 in the lower 20 floors of a luxury Midtown condominium across the street from Carnegie Hall. "That location will help grow the Park Hyatt brand and enable the company to get more hotel management contracts over the next 20 years," says Ryan Meliker, a hotel analyst for MLV & Co.

New York attracted more than 52 million visitors last year, and the city's tourism office is projecting an increase to 55 million by 2015. The average hotel occupancy rate this year through August was around 84%, which is above precrisis peak levels, according to Smith Travel Research. Daily room rates also continued to rebound, averaging $238 in the eight-month period, a 4% rise from the same period last year. Richard Born, principal of BD Hotels, which owns and operates 25 hotels in New York, says he likes the city's long-term prospects but worries that the wave of new supply could put a damper on the market. He sees occupancy falling beginning next year because hotel supply is expanding 6% to 8% a year, while city tourism is rising at a slower rate of around 4% to 5%.

"That could put downward pressure on daily rates or cause new hotel construction to slow," he says. Others are more optimistic. Mr. Meliker says that a better gauge for hospitality is the city's employment growth, which continues to look positive and will drive more business travel, he says. That means room rates can continue to climb even if occupancy stays the same, Mr. Meliker adds. A number of projects are joining the Park Hyatt on or around Manhattan's 57th Street, creating a burgeoning hotel row within sight of Central Park. The area, which sprouted hotels 50 years ago ahead of the city's 1964 World's Fair exhibition, is witnessing its biggest replenishment in decades. Barry Sternlicht, who created the boutique W Hotel brand for Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, HOT -0.08% is developing two new hotel brands near 57th Street for his real-estate investment firm Starwood Capital: the five-star hotel and luxury condo Baccarat Hotel & Residences and 1 Hotel, which he says is a more energy-efficient hotel.

The 1929 Buckingham Hotel has been completely made over as a 208-room luxury hotel called the Quin. Developed by Alan Kanders, a former Lehman Brothers managing director in the hotel group, the Quin opens next month with a rotating program featuring contemporary artists. In an unusual move, the 240-room Viceroy New York changed hands last month only weeks before its opening this Wednesday. A real-estate investment trust agreed to pay $148.5 million to ARK Partners for the hotel. "We wanted to be on 57th Street," says Nicholas Schorsch, chief executive of American Realty Capital, ARCP -0.41% which sponsored the REIT that bought the hotel. Despite the attention on new luxury projects, much of Manhattan's hotel growth is coming from more-modest, limited-service hotels that have been popping up in the city after years of skewing to the suburbs. Brands include Hilton Garden Inn and Courtyard by Marriott. "We haven't seen this much supply of select-service hotels in the past," says Jeffrey Davis, a hotel broker for Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels.

Source : online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304441404579121911381744056.html

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Hotels In Carolina|"This Turkish Hotel Won A “Hospitality Innovation Award” For Protecting Protestors From Tear Gas & Police"

Source             :     qz.com
Category        :    Hotels In Carolina
By                  :    Simone Foxman
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Hotels In Carolina
International hospitality awards usually go to hotels with the most creative design, impeccable service and attention to amenities like ultra-plush bathrobes. But the winner of the latest “hospitality innovation award” from PKF hotelexperts was selected on entirely different criteria. The German hotel consultants awarded the honor to Divan Hotels’ flagship property in Istanbul in recognition for its offering refuge to protesters fleeing police tear gas. The hotel is adjacent to Gezi Park’s Taksim Square, the site of protests last May and June. During some of the most tense moments, the Divan Hotel’s management took in people protesting against the government of Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan, to the chagrin of officials.

Adding insult to injury, the hotel staff rebuffed police forces by asking whether they had a reservation at the hotel, according to Han Le, an American who observed the protests. Unsurprisingly, the police did not, and the staff—at least temporarily—prevented them from entering and arresting protesters camping out inside. The Financial Times reports (paywall) that the decision to take in protesters was initially made by the hotel’s management, but supported by the hotel’s parent company. The chain of 11 Divan Hotels is owned by Koç Holding, a conglomerate owned by the wealthy Koç family, which says it generates 9% of Turkey’s GDP. The hotel’s parent company’s holdings also include Turkey’s only refinery and some joint ventures with Ford and Fiat. The government has singled out Koç Holding, engaging in a “witch hunt” to pass off blame for the country’s struggling economy, according to an anonymous investment banker cited in Der Spiegel.  In June, ErdoÄŸan accused the hotel of “harbor[ing] criminals.” Then, in July, tax investigators raided 77 offices of  Koç Holding’s energy subsidiaries.  The company was later named in a lawsuit alleging that it was part of a 1997 coup. In late September, it lost a government contract to build six warships.

While the Koç family may the government’s scapegoat du jour, the tensions between the company and the government are characteristic of the animosity between Turkey’s old capitalist elite and the ErdoÄŸan administration. ErdoÄŸan has also taken aim at the financial services industry, accusing the “interest rate lobby” of fanning unrest in order to speculate on the economy. Unsurprisingly, German businessmen don’t share ErdoÄŸan’s feelings. “Divan Hotels and Koç Family has showed solidarity and courage during Gezi Park protests and proved how important hospitality is during crisis situations,” PKF chair Michael Widman told Hurriyet Daily News.

Source:qz.com/133063/this-turkish-hotel-won-a-hospitality-innovation-award-for-protecting-protestors-from-tear-gas-and-police/

Monday, October 7, 2013

Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach|"Killarney Hotels Ltd Sinks Into The Red"

Source             :     independent.ie
Category        :    Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach
By                  :    Gordon Deegan
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach

A hotel group that operates two five-star hotels in Co Kerry plunged deeper into the red last year to record pre-tax losses of €36.97m.Killarney Hotels Ltd operates the award-winning, five-star The Europe Hotel & Resort and the five-star, 102-bedroom Dunloe Castle Hotel, along with the four-star Hotel Ard na Sidhe. Now, accounts recently filed by the Swiss-owned firm to the Companies Office show that the firm recorded the loss after writing down its property by €28m. The latest loss is more than three times the pre-tax loss of €11m in 2011. And it comes despite revenues at the company increasing by 26pc to €10.69m in the 12 months to the end of December last.

However, costs also increased by 8pc, from €15.3m to €16.6m. According to the directors' report, they "consider the performance of the company to be unsatisfactory, although in line with expectation". The figures show that the company recorded an operating loss in 2012 of €5.9m and this followed an operating loss of €6.9m in 2011. The accounts include a depreciation charge of €8m.The average numbers employed by the group increased from 121 to 125 with wage costs increasing from €4.87m to €5.6m. In their directors' report, they state that "though the Irish tourism sector is experiencing a revival, there continues to be challenges in the hotel industry in Ireland. "Although the company made a loss for year of €35.7m, the directors have continued to prepare the statements on a going concern basis as they have received assurances from the company's parent, Liebherr Hotels AG, that it will provide the company with funds as and when required to enable it to continue trading for the foreseeable future," the report said.

The company's fixed assets are valued at €63.8m and in a note attached to the accounts, it states that "while there is little specific evidence to support property values at present, the directors have considered a number of factors in order to confirm and approve the carrying value of properties at December 31, 2012". The directors state that they believe The Hotel Europe and Resort has long-term value, reinforced by a recent refurbishment. The hotel was winner of the Best Resort Hotel in 2012. The figures show that the group generated €10.1m of its revenues through its hotels and €585,882 through the operation of a 200-acre farm. The accounts show that the company's parent, Liebherr Hotels AG, loaned the firm an additional €9m during the year to bring to €44m owed by the firm to Liebherr Hotels.

Source:independent.ie/business/irish/killarney-hotels-ltd-sinks-into-the-red-with-3697m-pretax-loss-29641542.html

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach|"Time For Superstorm Sandy Evacuees To Check Out Of Hotels"

Source             :    npr.org
Category        :    Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach
By                  :    Joel Rose
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach
Almost 300 Sandy victims are still living in hotel rooms on the taxpayers' dime — but not for long. City officials say the program is expensive, and it's time for those remaining Sandy evacuees to move out. This week, the displaced families living in hotels got a letter from New York City officials telling them they will not pay for those rooms after Friday. This was the message they sent back on Wednesday: Heck no, we won't go! At a press conference outside City Hall, several dozen evacuees protested for more time. "Normal people, normal citizens, we had jobs, we go to school. We just basically want to get back to where we were, to the lives that we have," says Shawn Little, a home health care worker who lived in Far Rockaway, Queens, before the storm. Little says she's close to doing that. She's signed a lease on an apartment, she says, and hopes to move in soon. But many other Sandy evacuees still have nowhere else to go. "A lot of these people are going to end up homeless," says Judith Goldiner with the Legal Aid Society. "We did not focus our resources after Sandy on making sure the people who were most harmed by Sandy were taken care of, and that's the real tragedy here."

City officials dispute that. Michele Ovesey is New York's commissioner for homeless services. She says the city went above and beyond, sheltering as many as 3,000 households in hotels over the past year. "It's a very generous program. We essentially allowed anyone in who knocked at our door," Ovesey says. "We have to have some kind of end date for the program." The city tried to end the hotel program back in April, but the Legal Aid Society sued to keep it going. A federal judge issued an injunction but lifted it last week. Now the city says it will stop paying for hotel rooms. Goldiner says the city is overlooking one of the biggest problems facing all New Yorkers — but especially low-income Sandy evacuees."In New York City, we have about a 1 percent vacancy rate, and it's lower — much lower — for affordable housing apartments," Goldiner says.

City and federal officials created a voucher program to help evacuees find apartments they can afford. But Goldiner says some of those vouchers were issued in just the past few weeks, leaving her clients in limbo. "They are literally waiting for city bureaucracy to dot the i's and cross the t's and they can move in. But unfortunately, the city isn't willing to wait for them," she says. Ovesey concedes that not everyone in the hotels will find alternative housing by Friday. But she says the hotel program has helped 1,400 households move into permanent housing since the storm. "We made every effort to keep as many evacuees in the hotel program frankly as long as we could, and I think we've done a tremendous job," Ovesey says. Ovesey says the hotel program hasn't been cheap, either. It's cost taxpayers more than $70 million. FEMA is picking up that bill, but it won't reimburse any more hotel stays. At the same time, Irwin Redlener at Columbia University's Earth Institute points out that there are billions of dollars in federal recovery funding that have yet to be spent. "We're battling against a very disorganized federal outgo of resources, so the cities are left holding the bag," Redlener says. "And even worse than that, the families are left holding the bag." Some of those evacuees may try to stay in the hotel rooms and take their chances in court, while others may have to check into homeless shelters Friday night.

Source : npr.org/2013/10/03/228910696/superstorm-sandy-evacuees-hotel-rooms

Friday, October 4, 2013

Hotels In Carolina|"New Hotel Coming To Syracuse Inner Harbor"

Source             :    syracuse.com
Category        :    Hotels In Carolina
By                  :    Tim Knauss
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Hotels In Carolina
Andrew Cuomo visited Syracuse today to announce plans for a 130-room hotel at the Inner Harbor, the first new building in what is expected to be a $350 million development of the waterfront along the former state Barge Canal. "Today is a new era for Syracuse,'' Cuomo said. Starwood Hotels and Resorts, the owner of Sheraton and other hotel brands, plans to establish an Aloft Hotel at the southern edge of the Inner Harbor. Aloft, a brand Starwood introduced two years ago, aims for a hip, urban ambience and moderate room rates designed to appeal to young adults. The $18 million hotel would be the first step in a plan by COR Development Co., of Fayetteville, to develop 32 acres of former state lands around the harbor. COR Inner Harbor, an affiliated company, plans to build a mix of commercial buildings, townhouses and apartments, a community boathouse and other structures. After trying for decades to get the area developed, Syracuse officials in 2012 picked COR to develop the area after reviewing three competing proposals. COR has already cleared 18 acres along the western shore and removed more than 100,000 cubic yards of contaminated dirt.

COR's 10-year project has been picked to receive $4.5 million in state assistance to help with environmental remediation and infrastructure development. The company has applied for an additional $1.5 million to help relocate the historic freight house, remove three buildings and construct two mixed-use buildings.The hotel will be developed with all private money, said John Salvatore, senior director of development for Starwood Hotels. Construction is scheduled to begin in March or April of 2014, and Starwood plans to open the hotel about 12 months later. COR President Steve Aiello said the hotel will be financed with a combination of commercial loans and private equity. COR will own the hotel as a franchisee and hire a Starwood-approved management company. Aiello said COR has not assessed whether the project will require property tax relief from the city, in the form of a payment in lieu of taxes. "It's hard to say at this point,'' he said. Starwood has opened dozens of Aloft hotels around the world. In Upstate New York, the only other Aloft under development is at the Buffalo airport, scheduled to open in May 2014, according to the company web site.

"We want our young people to see us building, see the future here," Cuomo said at a press conference at the harbor. Starwood is "coming into Syracuse in the Inner Harbor. That's a vote of confidence. . . . They are betting on our future," the governor said. Starwood also operates the University Sheraton in Syracuse. The company's other hotel brands include Westin, St. Regis, Le Meridien, Element, Four Points and The Luxury Collection.

Source:syracuse.com/news/index.ssf/2013/10/cuomo_new_hotel_coming_to_syracuse_inner_harbor.html

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach|"Hotel Recovery That Has Hugged Coasts"

Source             :    nytimes.com
Category        :    Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach
By                  :     KRISTINA SHEVORY
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach
Skittish developers have delayed new hotels across much of the country until the economy returns to health, and financing does, too. But in Austin, developers aren’t that wary. A $300 million JW Marriott hotel, the biggest JW Marriott in the country and the city’s biggest hotel at 1.2 million square feet, is under construction on a full block near the Capitol. Developers broke ground on a Westin over the summer and a $350 million Fairmont will be going up a few blocks away. Eight hotels containing almost 4,000 rooms are scheduled to open across Austin within the next three years, making the Texas capital one of the most active markets in the country for new hotel construction. White Lodging, a private hotel developer and manager responsible for about a third of those rooms, is betting big on Austin. Although the Indiana firm has put up and managed mostly midmarket hotels near the airport or in the Austin suburbs for the last two decades and currently owns or manages 23, White Lodging is gambling its two new downtown hotels, the JW Marriott and Westin, will be worth its more than $400 million investment.

“We’re big believers in Austin,” said Deno Yiankes, president and chief executive of White Lodging’s investments and development division in Indianapolis. “Austin’s employment growth is second to none and you can’t say that about the coastal markets. This is not a blip; it’s one of our strongest markets.” Austin’s booming tech industry, from start-ups to offices for Dell, Samsung and Apple; universities; and its location as the world headquarters for Whole Foods help make White Lodging’s gamble seem sound. Much of the new hotel construction nationwide, aside from Austin, has been on the coasts and in large cities like New York. Few new hotels are going up elsewhere because construction financing has been tight and developers have been leery to invest. There were 2,744 hotel projects in construction or planning around the country in August, the same as last year, according to STR, a hotel market research firm. “Austin is the anomaly of anomalies. What new construction is in the pipeline is no-frills operations,” said Scott D. Berman, principal and industry leader, hospitality and leisure, at PricewaterhouseCoopers in Miami.

While the recession crimped demand and hotel operators’ appetite for erecting new buildings, more business and leisure travelers are returning to the road, leading to increased occupancy levels and higher rates. Analysts expect rates to further increase when group travel rebounds. Occupancy climbed to 69.2 percent in August, about two percentage points higher than last year. The average revenue per room rose nearly 7 percent, to $77.59 this year, according to STR. “As goes the economy, so goes lodging demand,” said Art Adler, Americas chief executive of the hotels and hospitality group of Jones Lang LaSalle, the commercial real estate brokerage firm. “Because the stock market is doing well, 401(k)’s are perking up and people feel wealthier and they’re traveling.” With rising demand and restricted supply, the market bodes well for investors — if they have the nerve to build on their own. White Lodging in Indianapolis is one such steely investor. The company says it has invested more than $800 million in nine hotels under construction around the country — the largest development pipeline in its nearly 30-year history.

“We have owners willing to take risks. If you are, you get rewarded for it,” said Mr. Yiankes of White Lodging. The pickup in travel has caught the eyes of real estate investors this year. Through August, domestic hotel sales climbed 51 percent to $13.38 billion over 2012, according to Jones Lang LaSalle. Although two large portfolio deals increased numbers, the brokerage firm expects sales to finish the year 10 percent higher than last year, at $17.5 billion. Stimulated by low interest rates and investor hunger, hotel prices are also climbing. In the first half of the year, the average selling price per room hit $130,119, a 15 percent increase over the end of 2012, according to Lodging Econometrics, a lodging industry consultancy in Portsmouth, N.H. Despite the uptick in prices, Loews Hotels and Resorts is moving apace to expand beyond its 21-hotel portfolio. The New York hotelier has two hotels under construction, and it has bought three in Los Angeles, Boston and Washington in the last 18 months. By the end of 2015, the company expects to have 30 to 33 hotels open worldwide. “We plan to continue to be active in this cycle,” said Paul Whetsell, the president and chief executive of Loews Hotels and Resorts. “When you consider supply fundamentals, they look pretty darn good. We have the wind at our back and will continue to acquire and hold.”

The Blackstone Group, the largest owner of hotel rooms in the country, has been on a buying spree of late. In May, the buyout giant was involved in one of the biggest deals this year when it bought Apple REIT Six, a real estate investment trust with 66 hotels nationwide, for $1.2 billion. Blackstone was also responsible for one of last year’s big hotel deals when it paid $1.9 billion for the Motel 6 chain. Initial public offerings, another sign of investor interest, have also emerged this year, with 14 in exploration during the first half of 2013. Last month, Blackstone filed for a $1.25 billion initial public offering for Hilton Worldwide Holdings and in July, it filed for an I.P.O. for Extended Stay America. The firm is also investigating a sale or I.P.O. of its La Quinta hotel chain. “With no cranes and little capital being allocated, we’ll continue to have multiple years of improving fundamentals,” said A.J. Agarwal, senior managing director of Blackstone Real Estate Partners. “We were able to buy rooms at discounts. Whenever you can buy an asset at less cost to build, that’s a good deal.” The Rockpoint Group, a private equity firm in Boston, has also been busy, picking up some of the most expensive hotels in the last year. As it is for many private equity firms, Rockpoint’s strategy is to buy hotels, fix what’s wrong and sell them. Real estate investment trusts typically hold their assets longer and take fewer risks. Over the last four years, the firm has bought hotels with almost 10,000 rooms for nearly $2 billion. As investors move in, large hotel operators are selling their properties to focus more on management. Over the last five years, Starwood Hotels and Resorts, which has nine brands of hotels, including the St. Regis, Westin and Sheraton, sold 20 hotels for about $1.5 billion to real estate investors. In 2012, Starwood sold more than $500 million in hotels and may sell the same amount this year. The hotelier now operates almost 1,200 hotels, of which about 40 are owned. “Owning hotel real estate is a very local, local business,” said Simon Turner, president of global development at Starwood. “As a publicly traded company, real estate is not earnings-friendly. It’s more volatile than our fee business. We think it’s in our shareholders’ interest to be asset-light.”

Source:nytimes.com/2013/10/02/realestate/commercial/as-travel-picks-up-hotels-gain-allure-for-investors.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0#h[]

Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach|"Second Avenue Hotels Get Height Variance"

Source             :    durangoherald.com
Category        :    Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach
By                  :     Jim Haug 
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach
After listening to residential neighbors who feared the loss of privacy and incompatible development, Durango city councilors voted 3-2 Tuesday night to approve a height variance for a six-story complex of two hotels, a restaurant and parking garage on the East Second Avenue block from Fourth to Fifth streets. Councilors Dick White, Christina Rinderle and Keith Brant were for the variance, but councilors Dean Brookie and Sweetie Marbury said they opposed the project’s height. “Six-story-tall is too much for me,” Marbury said. A resident of the area, Jon Westrup, said he resented the potential intrusion on private lives, saying hotel guests could be staring into the homes of East Third Avenue from their hotel windows, balconies and terraces. “There’s bedtime stories here, people dressing and undressing. People have a right to privacy here,” Westrup said.

He compared the controversy to the ongoing debate over accessory dwellings. “Imagine if the debate was not about accessory dwellings, but if your neighbor could build an accessory hotel or two in your backyard. It gets absurd,” Westrup said. Michael Todt objected to the “sheer size.” The hotels would have a six-story facade, which includes lower-level parking. “It’s really huge,” he said. But city staff members felt it was the best deal considering the block already is zoned for commercial development and the developer is well within his rights to build a hotel there. “We have nothing to say about it if they meet the guidelines, and that’s the problem,” Brookie said. “The council has no latitude whatsoever,” City Attorney David Smith said. Scott McCallister, the developer and owner of adjacent Best Western Rio Grande Inn, is trying to lessen the impact to the East Third Avenue neighborhood by putting the density of the new buildings along East Second Avenue. The U-shape design would have terraces in the middle, which would face the alley between East Second and East Third avenues. Plus, there would be a cutout or open space between the two hotels on the northern and southern sides of the property.

City planners feared a worse configuration of buildings. By rights, McCallister could build a 35-foot wall of hotel rooms along the alley, said Nicol Killian, a city planner. Brookie said another design could be “architectural Whack-A-Mole.” “I don’t know what to do,” Brookie said. To make his plan work, McCallister got approval to build up to 66 feet tall on a low-lying, southwestern corner of the block. The neighborhood has a 55-foot height limit. This southern hotel would have 125 rooms. The northern hotel would be a boutique with 58 rooms. The city also agreed to give up some right of way on East Second Avenue and Fourth Street for the development. To address concerns, the city also asked the developer to limit terrace hours from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Vegetation would be used to screen the terraces. “I will control the environment,” said McCallister, who has 30 years of experience in the hotel experience. Guests could go back to the restaurant during late hours, too.

Source:durangoherald.com/article/20131001/NEWS01/131009933/-1/taxonomy/Second-Avenue-hotels-get-height-variance-

Monday, September 30, 2013

Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach|"Revealing The 2013 Fodor's 100 Hotel Awards Winners"

Source             :    fodors.com
Category        :    Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach
By                  :     Fodor's Editors
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Affordable Hotels In Carolina Beach

We are bursting at the seams with excitement—today is the day we reveal our carefully selected picks for our annual Fodor's 100 Hotel Awards! Chosen by our trusted travel experts on the ground and our Fodor's editors, these 100 hotels represent 2013's biggest global hospitality trends. This year, we chose eight unique categories—including Enduring Classics, Culinary Gems, Sleek City Addresses, and more—touching down in 43 different countries.

This list covers every corner of the globe, from Amsterdam to Zambia, and every type of hotel experience from sleek design-y hotels to exotic, secluded hideaways. From the best stays in perennial favorites like The Peninsula in Hong Kong and the Hyatt Union Square in NYC, to choice sleeps in new and emerging destinations, like Casa San Agustin in Colombia and Uma by COMO, Punakha, in Bhutan, this list not only spans the globe but speaks to all manner of themes and travelers' desires.

As Arabella Bowen, Fodor's Travel executive editorial director, remarks: "At Fodor's, hotels are more than our lifeblood—they're our passion." Since we're constantly researching and updating more than 7,500 destinations, we see new openings as they happen and trends as they emerge.


Our founder, Eugene Fodor, believed that "you don't have to be rich to travel well." We take that mantra seriously. There's something for every budget here, from great values to once-in-a-lifetime splurges. Pick any of our Fodor's 100, and you will travel well.

Source : fodors.com/news/revealing-the-2013-fodors-100-hotel-awards-winners-7156.html

Hotels In Carolina|"Smokers Tokers Light Up Hotel Owner's Occupancy Rates"

Source             :    crainsdetroit.com
Category        :    Hotels In Carolina
By                  :    Valerie Vande Panne
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC


Hotels In Carolina

The Howard Johnson franchise on 28th Street in Grand Rapids has seen occupancy soar since owner Bob Sullivan made a seemingly unfashionable business decision: accommodate smokers. And not just the tobacco variety. Sullivan caters to marijuana smokers, as well. Twenty rooms already have been renovated to accommodate smokers. And by the time Sullivan's done, 60-80 of the hotel's 155 rooms will allow smoking -- accommodating medical marijuana patients as well as tobacco smokers. Michigan legalized medical marijuana in 2008, and Grand Rapids decriminalized marijuana last year -- making possession of a small amount a civil infraction, similar to a parking ticket. Occupancy at the Howard Johnson has seen an increase every weekend, Sullivan said. "Every weekend, every one of those rooms is sold." 

Sullivan, who himself does not smoke cigarettes or marijuana, estimates occupancy is up 50 percent since he started renovating the rooms. Renovations have included opening up each room with sliding doors and installing a patio with a tall fence around it to provide privacy -- "a little smoking area for each room right at the door," Sullivan said. "Otherwise, people have to go outside the lobby doors. "If you're a marijuana smoker, it's nice to have that privacy, wouldn't you say so?" Under the state's Smoke-Free Air Law, which went into effect in May 2010, tobacco smoking is prohibited inside places where people work, including hotels, bars and restaurants. But the law doesn't apply to smoking outside -- hence the patios. The law also doesn't mention cannabis smoke. "The tobacco-free act does not ban any other substance other than tobacco," said Steve Yencich, president and CEO of the Michigan Lodging & Tourism Association. "It's an interesting quandary. It's an interpretation of the statute that probably raises more questions than answers."

Sullivan doesn't aggressively market his smoking accommodations. Still, The Grand Rapids Press ran an article about the hotel's renovations and Sullivan has a large sign in front of the hotel welcoming smokers. Although nowhere does he advertise that marijuana smoking is permitted, Sullivan speaks candidly about it, word is out on the street and a medical marijuana group meets regularly at the hotel, he said.  Howard Johnson doesn't seem to mind Sullivan's approach to filling rooms. "As a franchise organization, each hotel within our brand's portfolio is independently owned and operated and required to comply with all local, state and federal laws," said Rob Myers, public relations manager of Wyndham Hotel Group, Howard Johnson's parent company. While no hard numbers exist on the growth of hotels catering to marijuana smokers in particular, Betty Aldworth, deputy director of the National Cannabis Industry Association, said "marijuana-related tourism is the fastest-growing sector of the marijuana industry."

Said Janet Korn, vice president of marketing for the Experience Grand Rapids tourism bureau: "We market all hotels in Kent County, and we let consumers choose where they stay. Our focus is on promoting the destination, not individual hotel amenities." Aldworth noted that 30 states still have not legalized medical marijuana. This makes states with both medical marijuana laws and a flourishing health care industry -- such as Grand Rapids -- destinations for ill people to legally use medical marijuana. Renee Monforton, director of communications for the Detroit Metro Convention and Visitors Bureau, said she had not heard of any hotels in metro Detroit marketing friendliness to medical marijuana use. At 83, Sullivan has a reputation around Grand Rapids as a man who does as he pleases. He started a rug-cleaning company at age 18. From there, he got into the carpet business and now owns Sullivan's Carpet & Furniture, as well as the former Radisson hotel, which he renamed the Riverfront Hotel. He was the owner of the Holiday Inn in downtown Grand Rapids until he sold it recently. 

Source:crainsdetroit.com/article/20130929/NEWS/309299981/smokers-tokers-light-up-hotel-owners-occupancy-rates

Hotels In Carolina|"Work Begins On New Exit 7 Hotel"

Source             :    tricities.com
Category        :    Hotels In Carolina
By                  :    Frances Leate
Posted By     :    Hotels Carolina Beach NC

Hotels In Carolina
Site work is Junderway for a new Hilton Garden Inn near Interstate 81’s Exit 7, and it is expected to open in late 2014. Workers are currently digging out the site for the building’s foundation on land directly adjacent to the Cracker Barrel Old Country Store at The Village at Exit 7. Construction was originally expected to begin during the summer, said owner Prakash Patel of Bristol Hotels Inc. “It took us a little while to go through all the red tape you have to go through, but we’ve started moving dirt now,” Patel said. “We have to put other material in there, do the foundations and – if the winter cooperates – we’re targeting 12 to 14 months to open the hotel up. So we’re looking at fall or winter 2014.” To attract the Hilton flag, the city previously agreed to divert $380,000 back to the hotel’s owners from usage taxes after the facility opens. That offsets the purchase price of the land.

The hotel will be five stories with 104 guest rooms and include a restaurant, lounge, 3,500-square-foot banquet facility, indoor pool and fitness center. It becomes only the second business to locate on the hilltop site, which was heralded for many years as a prime spot for development. “It’s very exciting. It took longer to start the project and we’re ready to go forward and open in the Bristol market,” Patel said. “We’re trying to work with all the local businesses to let them know the project has started. Cracker Barrel is very excited they’ve got a neighbor. They’ve been very lonely for a number of years. It will help Cracker Barrel and Cheddars.” Thomas Builders, of Athens, Tenn., a firm specializing in hotel construction, will build the 78,000-square-foot facility, which is The Hilton Garden Inn. It’s expected to employ about 35 people. “It is drawing a lot of interest,” he said. “I’ve heard others are looking to possibly do something on Village Circle.”

Source : tricities.com/news/local/article_d6a0e77c-2975-11e3-a372-001a4bcf6878.html