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Hotel Equities Celebrates Groundbreaking of New Towneplace Suites by Marriott in Tehachapi, California

Hotel Equities Celebrates Groundbreaking of New Towneplace Suites by Marriott in Tehachapi, California

 Hotel Equities (HE) announced construction is underway on the new TownePlace Suites by Marriott in Tehachapi, CA. Hotel Equities will manage the hotel, developed and owned by California-based H2H Asset Group. The hotel site, located on Magellan Drive in Tehachapi, is part of a planned business park situated just one block from Adventist Healthcare in Tehachapi. The hotel site has easy access from Exit 149 on Highway 58. “We are proud to progress into the next phase of development for the TownePlace Suites Tehachapi,” said Greg Presley, vice president of business development for HE. “We initially entered the California market a number of years ago and have delivered tremendous results. Those high-performance results for great owners, like our partners at H2H Group, have resulted in our continued growth out west. We’re proud to work alongside Ajay Anand, managing partner of H2H Asset Group, to open this hotel to guests in Summer of 2021.” Upon opening, the hotel will feature the well-known Marriott brand’s latest design. TownePlace Suites by Marriott provides guests with a comfortable place to relax during their long-term visits. The brand offers studio and one-bedroom suites with fully equipped kitchens, as well as separate living/working and sleeping areas. The suites include adjustable workspaces with built-in shelves and lighting, large flat screen televisions and flexible storage and closets. On-site food options include outdoor Weber grills, a 24-hour In a Pinch market and coffee service. Other amenities at the new TownePlace Suites include an indoor swimming pool, fitness center, meeting space, laundry facilities and free Wi-Fi and copying, faxing and printing services. “We were intentional in selecting Hotel Equities as the operator and manager of our hotel assets as they are known for their ability and skillset to add value from project inception, development and operations,” said Managing Partner of H2H Group, Ajay Anand. “Our goal is to provide our guests with best-in-class accommodations with quality service, offer career opportunities and add value to the Tehachapi community.” “We’re always excited to work with partners like H2H Group and Hotel Equities, who bring a significant level of commitment and expertise to all of their projects. While this is our first new construction project together to break ground, the pipeline of 6 more in California is particularly remarkable,” said Adrienne Jubb, Vice President, MSB Development, Marriot International. “This project will be a welcome new addition to the Tehachapi market, and we expect an even bigger celebration upon opening.” Tehachapi’s location mid-way between Bakersfield (36 miles away) and Lancaster (45 miles away) attracts travelers visiting both major cities. The Tehachapi economy is largely based on wind and solar farms in the area and also benefits from expansions at nearby Edwards AFB. TownePlace Suites by Marriott® is designed for extended stay travelers who want to feel at home and stay productive. To appeal to these guests seeking authenticity, personality and a seamless experience, the concept infuses local flavor into a quiet neighborhood setting, complete with the added comfort, service and quality of an all- suite hotel. For more information about TownePlace Suites by Marriott, visit towneplacesuites.marriott.com .

Create: Dec 7, 2019     Edit: Dec 7, 2019     International News
Airbnb adds 'cooking', a new category of bookable experiences

Airbnb adds 'cooking', a new category of bookable experiences

We’re unveiling Cooking on Airbnb Experiences – a new category of bookable experiences that unlock the hidden culinary traditions of families all around the world. From learning grandmas’ recipes to traditional Uzbek home-cooking, guests can now get access to 3,000 unique recipes that are usually reserved for friends and family in over 75 countries globally. Through Airbnb Cooking Experiences, we are presenting a new way to understand culture through food. Unlike typical cooking classes, which can feel intimidating or time-consuming, at the heart of every experience is human connection; people coming together to make and share a meal. Hosted by families, farmers, pastry cooks and more, local hosts can now highlight the deeper meaning behind the food you eat, teaching traditional recipes and sharing stories in intimate settings around the world. To protect the personal nature of each recipe, each experience has been vetted against guidelines inspired by Slow Food, a grassroots organization whose mission is to prevent the disappearance of local food cultures and traditions. Through this vetting process, we have verified that each host of an Airbnb Experience communicates the unique essence of every dish through their personal stories and has proven a deep knowledge of the heritage of the cuisine that they share. Celebrating the launch of Airbnb Cooking Experiences – and to find the next wave of culinary treasures – we are calling on the world to apply or nominate their favorite home cook so that we can treat them to a once in a lifetime trip to Italy. There, they will learn to refine their family recipe and cement their legacy in an Airbnb cookbook, planned for 2020. The top 100 applicants will get to study alongside experts including chef David Chang and his mom, Sherri, during one of the four, specially-organized five-day courses at Slow Food’s University of Gastronomic Sciences, located within a UNESCO world heritage site in Pollenzo, Northern Italy. Alongside workshops, tastings, field visits and lessons from UNISG professors, there will also be hands on lessons from one of the most booked hosts on the platform, Nonna Nerina, who has earned over $150,000 just by welcoming travelers to the Roman countryside to learn about her and her family’s love of pasta-making. With hosts like Nonna, it’s no wonder bookings of Airbnb’s food and drink Experiences have been growing at a rate of 160 percent year-over-year since 2018. Our new Cooking category brings together the very best of our platform with brand new Airbnb Experiences, united by new principles that ensure an authentic, local experience in intimate settings and small groups. “Ever since the very first guests travelled with Airbnb, we have realized that sharing a meal is the key that unlocks culture and fosters connection. Through Airbnb Cooking Experiences, we want to bring back the tradition of people coming together to make and share meals, and through this help preserve unique recipes that are shared within family kitchens around the world,” – Brian Chesky, Airbnb CEO and Co-Founder. Building on our partnership, Slow Food is also introducing 15 special Airbnb Cooking Experiences that perfectly align with its principles of good, clean and fair – including Walk Cook & Eat in the Amalfi Coast and ‘Let’s Rescue Food’ in Cartagena, Colombia. “It’s really encouraging that Airbnb looked to us for guidance on how to help people preserve their family recipes and become quality and sustainability advocates,” said, Paolo Di Croce, Slow Food Secretary General. “Airbnb Cooking Experiences represent a great opportunity to spread our urgent call for sustainability standards and food biodiversity protection across the globe, reaching new audiences and inspiring change in the entire food and tourism sector. We have a long-term commitment to ensure that travel experiences remain authentic and help travellers learn about local communities and raise awareness about sustainable food practices.”

Create: Dec 4, 2019     Edit: Dec 4, 2019     International News
As cycle nears end, benchmarking required to be reborn

As cycle nears end, benchmarking required to be reborn

The thinking and analyses of benchmarking continues to dominate hotelier discussion, and the industry’s most nimble minds are not satisfied the terminology, emphasis and focus have reached any type of apex. MANCHESTER, England—Hoteliers are in no doubt benchmarking has been one of the major, if not the most major, catalysts of the last decade helping fuel hotel performance, and the data is only getting better and more involved, according to sources. Now hoteliers are considering how benchmarking might change as the industry reaches what many consider the end of a cycle. Speakers on a panel at the recent Annual Hotel Conference titled “Sitting on the bench or pressing it” indicated one goal is the analyses of rooms benchmarking, not just around the primary sale, but all the way through the profit and loss account. That changes depending on the operating business model, sources said. “At the core is the transparency of data, and doing something with it. It is output rather than the input,” said Jonathan Walker, managing director of the 40-room No. 15 Great Pulteney in Bath, England, and a former director of hotel performance and operations support, Europe, at InterContinental Hotels Group. “It is not cash from benchmarking, but the cash you are missing if you do not have it, and the ability to articulate that to stakeholders,” said Kym Kapadia, chief commercial officer at Aprirose Real Estate Investment, which in 2017 bought from Bain Capital the 26-asset QHotel portfolio for £525 million (at the time equivalent to $706 million). “We’re seeing a shift in relevance of the historic data. It is now about looking ahead, monitoring pick-up and pace and about the business on the books,” said Steven Cote, product manager at Forward STAR, a division of STR, the parent company of Hotel News Now. Nick Turner, managing director at Owners Management Group International, a hotel-management company in the lifestyle and boutique space, said even more importance has to be placed on getting the competitive set right. “Otherwise it is rubbish in and rubbish out. It has to be right on an asset-by-asset basis, and it starts with the right comp set,” Turner said. “No one understands the business better than the GM on the ground, and it takes analysis and experience and talking to people,” he added. Sources said hoteliers now are focused on analyses of revenue-generation indices, comparing individual revenue per available room with that of the comp set and seeing how that metric changes for individual hotels when the market changes. Kapadia said keeping on top of the numbers has changed enormously as the number and range of stakeholders have increased. “It can be subjective in terms of the numbers of layers of ownerships and their opinion, and you have to look at the unemotional numbers,” she said. She said hoteliers still need to understand what they are and where they want to go before they get deep into the arithmetic. “Learn from best in class and overtake them, and remember there always are a cycle and an exit,” Kapadia said. “It is so important to have feasibility on any acquisition and investment. Yes, the forward-looking data is huge for the cycle, business plan and exit. Who knows, but with some insight and rationality, you’ll have a good guess.” Hoteliers who are not part of large portfolios or multi-brand platforms still are being nimble in what data they want and how to get it. “You have to have a vision as to where the product will be pitched,” Walker said. “We do a lot of research on product we might not know. We look at location, style, size, the obvious things, but also a few extra things … the quality side, being aware and curious as to what else is happening in your market.” Unlocking potential Hoteliers need to keep up to date, as third parties certainly are doing so, Walker said. “Last year, we were looking to open a hotel in Bristol, and we had a really awkward two-hour meeting, as (the other party) knew far more than we did. Benchmarking has to be ingrained, as a deal will only be passed to the bank if all the steps are passed,” he said. Cote said third-party collaboration of data and aggregating portfolios against one can provide more comfortability. One problem with performance data is the obsession with RevPAR. “All is more advanced in the rooms product. There is a need to be more clever in the rest of the building,” Aprirose’s Kapadia said. Cote said taking meaningful information from net RevPAR, with distribution costs subtracted from rooms revenue, is difficult in a country such as the United Kingdom, where “about 70% of revenue comes in from rooms … and there is no definite statement as to what net RevPAR is.” The meaning of net RevPAR also needs standardization, Cote said. “You have to have a benchmark, which is why it is currently more blurry due to the variation of definitions. Someone has to take a stance. After all, someone must have come up with RevPAR? I do not know who or when that happened?” Kapadia said. Turner added the industry has to continue to be supportive of the data and the terminology of it, and that thinking has to be adopted by universities and hotel schools. Walker said he does not believe the franchise model will change quickly because it remains very focused on RevPAR. Paralysis Sources also said there is a danger of “analysis paralysis” due to there being perhaps too many tools to look at. “Who is to say we should at any time be happy with our current state? And then how do we turn it into an actionable strategy, especially when you have multiple stakeholders to talk to?” Kapadia added. Owners Management Group International’s Turner, who also manages the Laura Ashley hotel and tearoom brand, said metrics on leisure clubs—membership rates, attrition, cost of acquisitions—and F&B remain in their infancy, if they exist at all. He added one shortcoming is that this operational excellence often comes at the expense of creativity and communicating with customers. “A broad view is necessary, on consumer data not historical,” Turner said. “I know what is good or not good for my business. It’s easy to look at the stats and the relevant costs, but it is not good enough only to look at the lowest costs. (One also must look at) the quality and what is right for the guest,” No. 15 Great Pulteney’s Walker said.

Create: Dec 3, 2019     Edit: Dec 3, 2019     International News
Accor to open first Raffles in Bahrain

Accor to open first Raffles in Bahrain

Accor has announced plans to debut its luxury Raffles brand in the Kingdom of Bahrain. It will see the conversion of the luxury Al Areen Palace and Spa, pictured above, though a timeline has not been given. Accor and hotel operators GFH Financial Group said that property alterations would include the refurbishment of 56 one-bedroom Desert Pool Villas and 22 two-bedroom Royal Pool Villas. Two more dining options will be added to the current four and the 10,000 sqm spa will be renovated. Nearby venues include the Bahrain International F1 Circuit and the new Bahrain Exhibition and Convention Centre. Raffles currently has two properties in the Middle East, in Dubai and Mecca. Another is set to open in 2021, in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Its other hotels are in the Cambodian cities of Phnom Penh and Siem Reap; the Chinese cities of Hainan and Shenzen; the Indonesian capital Jakarta; the Philippine capital Manila; Praslin in the Seychelles; Meradhoo Island in the Maldives; and Paris, Warsaw and Istanbul in Europe. The original Raffles hotel in Singapore, which opened in 1887, is set to reopen on August 1 following a two-year renovation. Eight new destinations are scheduled to join the brand’s portfolio in the coming years, including Udaipur in India and Boston in the US. “We are delighted to partner with GFH Financial Group, one of the leading investment houses in the Gulf region, to debut the Raffles brand in Bahrain, a destination which has emerged as a sophisticated option for discerning travellers from the Gulf and all over the world,” said Mark Willis, Accor’s CEO for the Middle East and Africa. “This continued growth signals a remarkable new chapter in the success story of Raffles, a revered global luxury brand with an illustrious history and a reputation for extraordinary properties in the world’s best cities and most sought after resort locales; the Kingdom is a natural fit for the exclusive Arabia-meets-Asia palatial retreat experience that we have planned.”

Create: Jul 21, 2019     Edit: Aug 2, 2019     International News
Booking Online Reservation

Booking Online Reservation

Booking.com was formed when bookings.nl, founded in 1996 by Geert-Jan Bruinsma, merged in 2000 with Bookings Online, founded by Sicco and Alec Behrens, Marijn Muyser and Bas Lemmens, which operated as Bookings.org. The name and URL were changed to Booking.com and Stef Noorden was appointed as its CEO. In 1997, Bruinsma wanted to post an ad in De Telegraaf, the Dutch newspaper with the highest circulation. The ad was rejected since De Telegraaf only accepted ads with the phone number, not with a website. In 2002, Expedia refused to buy bookings.nl. In July 2005, the company was acquired by Booking Holdings (or Priceline Group, as it was named at the time) for $133 million, and later it cooperated with ActiveHotels.com, a European online hotel reservation company, purchased by Booking Holdings/Priceline for $161 million. In 2006, Active Hotels Limited officially changed its name to Booking.com Limited.[7] The integration successfully helped its parent improve its financial position from a loss of $19 million in 2002 to $1.1 billion in profit in 2011. This acquisition was praised by some social media as “the best acquisition in Internet history” since no other acquisition in the digital travel market had been shown to be as profitable. Darren Huston was appointed as Chief Executive Officer of Booking.com in September 2011 by its parent company, and also served as President and Chief Executive Officer of Booking Holdings since 1 January 2014 until his resignation on 28 April 2016 after an at-work relationship was revealed. CONTACT  Bookingcom  Bookingcom  Bookingcom  Booking.com  Support@Booking.com

Create: May 30, 2019     Edit: Jun 9, 2020     International Hotel Online Reservations
Canopy by Hilton Venice City Centre Announced for 2021

Canopy by Hilton Venice City Centre Announced for 2021

Hilton is set to introduce its upscale lifestyle brand, Canopy by Hilton, to Italy with the arrival of a new hotel planned in Venice. The news follows a management agreement between Hilton and Marseglia Group, owners of Hilton Molino Stucky Venice. Patrick Fitzgibbon, Senior Vice President, Development, EMEA, Hilton, said, "Hilton has enjoyed a presence in Venice for more than a decade with Hilton Molino Stucky Venice. During that time, we have been focused on delivering exceptional guest experiences, creating meaningful employment and making a sustainable contribution to the local economy - a legacy that is set to continue with the arrival of Canopy by Hilton. The new hotel will contribute to the ongoing urban regeneration of the local neighbourhood of Cannaregio and create a vibrant meeting place for guests and local residents alike." Gary Steffen, Global Head, Canopy by Hilton, Hilton, said, "Canopy by Hilton is rooted in the local neighbourhood, and we're particularly excited to incorporate and celebrate the unique cultural, culinary and artistic influences of Cannaregio area in Venice. Canopy by Hilton Venice City Centre will be a stunning addition to our growing lifestyle portfolio in Europe, which already includes trading hotels in Reykjavik and Zagreb." Leonardo Marseglia, President of Marseglia Group said, "This is an important project for the relaunch of the historical city centre of Venice, revitalising a part of the city currently in a state of neglect and degradation and unlocking a new and vibrant neighbourhood where local residents and visitors can enjoy the best of Venetian hospitality in the new Botanical Gardens. We are proud to be continuing our partnership with Hilton on this spectacular new project." Canopy by Hilton Venice City Centre will join more than 30 Hilton hotels trading or under development across Italy when it opens in 2021. The hotel will be incorporated within the redevelopment of the existing buildings of the Venetian Botanical Gardens which date back to the 19th century. Canopy by Hilton hotels are thoughtfully curated to appeal to travellers seeking a locally inspired experience, with unique interiors that are influenced by the culture and history of the neighbourhood. Guests are welcomed by friendly Enthusiasts with expert local knowledge and recommendations and are invited to immerse themselves with local food and drink tastings and use of the complimentary Canopy by Hilton bicycles to explore the city. The introduction of Canopy by Hilton in Italy follows plans announced earlier this year to welcome guests at two new hotels in France, in Bordeaux and Paris. The new Canopy hotels join spectacular European properties in Reykjavik and Zagreb, with a further hotel under construction in London.

Create: May 13, 2019     Edit: May 14, 2019     International News
Ascott Limited Hotel

Ascott Limited Hotel

The Ascott Limited is a Singapore company that has grown to be one of the leading international lodging owner-operators. It has more than 58,000 operating units in key cities of the Americas, Asia Pacific, Europe, the Middle East and Africa, as well as over 42,000 units which are under development, making a total of more than 100,000 units in over 660 properties. The company’s serviced residence and hotel brands include Ascott, Citadines, Somerset, Quest, The Crest Collection, lyf, HARRIS, FOX HARRIS, YELLO, POP!, Préférence and HARRIS Vertu. Its portfolio spans more than 170 cities across over 30 countries. Ascott’s properties can be found in cities including New York, London, Paris, Brussels, Berlin and Barcelona in Europe; Singapore, Bangkok, Hanoi, Kuala Lumpur, Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai, Beijing and Hong Kong in Asia; Melbourne and Perth in Australia, Bangalore and Chennai in India; Dubai, Doha and Manama in the Middle East as well as Ghana in Africa. Ascott, a wholly owned subsidiary of CapitaLand Limited, pioneered Asia Pacific’s first international-class serviced residence with the opening of The Ascott Singapore in 1984. In 2006, it established the world’s first Pan-Asian serviced residence real estate investment trust, Ascott Residence Trust. Today, the company boasts over 30 years of industry track record and award-winning brands that enjoy recognition worldwide. Ascott’s achievements have been recognised internationally. Recent awards include DestinAsian Readers’ Choice Awards 2019 for ‘Best Serviced Residence Brand’; World Travel Awards 2018 for ‘Leading Serviced Apartment Brand’ in Asia, Europe and the Middle East; TTG China Travel Awards 2018 for ‘Best Serviced Residence Operator in China’; Business Traveller Asia-Pacific Awards 2018 for ‘Best Serviced Residence Brand’; Business Traveller UK Awards 2018 for ‘Best Serviced Apartment Company’ and Business Traveller China Awards 2018 for ‘Best Luxury Serviced Residence Brand’. For a full list of awards, please visit https://www.the-ascott.com/ascottlimited/awards.html. As an employer, The Ascott Limited is proud to be recognised by Tripartite Alliance for Fair & Progressive Employment Practices (TAFEP) as a Human Capital Partner (HCPartner), and commended for our efforts in investing in human capital development and adopting fair and progressive workplace practices. Ascott’s parent company, CapitaLand is one of Asia’s largest real estate companies. Headquartered and listed in Singapore, it is an owner and manager of a global portfolio worth over S$100 billion as at 31 December 2018, comprising integrated developments, shopping malls, lodging, offices, homes, real estate investment trusts (REITs) and funds. CapitaLand's market capitalisation is approximately S$13 billion as at 31 December 2018. Present across more than 180 cities in over 30 countries, the Group focuses on Singapore and China as core markets, while it continues to expand in markets such as Vietnam, Europe and the U.S.    CapitaLand’s competitive advantage is its significant asset base and extensive market network. Coupled with extensive design, development and operational capabilities, the Group develops and manages high-quality real estate products and services. It also has one of the largest investment management businesses in Asia and a stable of five REITs listed in Singapore and Malaysia – CapitaLand Mall Trust, CapitaLand Commercial Trust, Ascott Residence Trust, CapitaLand Retail China Trust and CapitaLand Malaysia Mall Trust.loyalty program was known as Radisson Rewards. CONTACT  FourSeasons  FourSeasons  Ascott.The.Residence  The-Ascott.com

Create: May 7, 2019     Edit: Jan 12, 2020     International Hotel Chains


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