Showing posts with label Luxury. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Luxury. Show all posts

HomeAway Launches Luxury Rentals

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Culling the inventory for a high-end getaway on HomeAway—a vacation rental company that lists more than 775,000 properties in 171 countries—just got a little less overwhelming. The Austin-based company has launched Luxury Rentals from HomeAway, a curated collection of villas, estates, and the like geared to customers looking for a more deluxe experience.



HomeAway has tapped the luxury travel publication Andrew Harper’s Hideaway Report to evaluate existing listings using a 75-point screening process, which ranks everything from location to the linen thread count. So far, more than 900 rentals in 40 countries on the site qualify for the new luxury label, mostly in the U.S. and Europe. As of now, you can only book 92 online and 163 accept online payments, which means travelers still have to communicate directly with the managers or owners to confirm reservations.


Brooke Porter
Brooke Porter is an Associate Editor at Travel + Leisure. Follow her on Twitter at @brookeporter1.


Photo courtesy of HomeAway

The Ritz-Carlton's Plan for World Domination

Ritz Carlton Almaty


By now, we’re used to hearing the big news that Trip Advisor has acquired some smaller company—it seems to happen about once a week. But the past couple months, we’ve also been hearing big news almost every week from a very different type of company: the Ritz-Carlton.


The luxury hotel company has unleashed a flurry of new properties on the world in the past couple months, opening three in October (Chendgu and Tianjin in China, and Bangalore, India) and two in November (Almaty, Kazakhstan and Aruba), with another on the way mid-December (Herzliya, Israel).



The timing of this unprecedented pace is coincidental, said Ed French, the company’s new Chief Sales and Marketing Officer (who sounded remarkably calm over the phone with everything that’s going on); after all, these are no pop-up hotels—they’re years in the planning, and lots of factors can influence the opening date. But the focus on developing markets is very much on purpose. The luxury travel market is growing, and some of the biggest growth is in technology centers like Bangalore.


So yes, these new properties are “business hotels,” but aimed to appeal to leisure travelers as well, said French. Herzliya, just north of Tel Aviv, may be a business and technology center, but the hotel’s spot in a quiet marina overlooking the Mediterranean says “unwind.”


Interestingly, this hotel is the company’s first in Israel (and Bangalore is its first in India) and, not surprisingly, opening in a new country is what French called a “great endeavor.” But the launch of any hotel with a reputation like the Ritz-Carlton’s is a huge undertaking. Employees are groomed years in advance, and the opening itself involves a formal (and, one would guess, frantic) 10-day “countdown.”


The start-to-finish process isn’t just about maintaining standards; making a connection to the destination is essential, too, said French. That means hiring locals, working with local businesses, and connecting to the new area through design. Horses and apples, for example, are important in Almaty, the largest city in Kazakhstan (the surrounding area is thought to be the apple’s ancestral home), so the hotel features both (the horses are in the artwork; the apples are for eating).


Whatever its formula for opening new hotels, the company will be using it plenty—20 more new properties are planned by 2016. It’s one that’s been working for a long time. I’ll never forget my experience at the Ritz-Carlton in Kuala Lumpur, where I stayed not long after it opened in late 1997. I had been on assignment for another magazine, following hunter-gatherers around Borneo for a week, and didn’t have time to change my clothes before flying to KL. I showed up at the hotel covered—caked, actually—in mud. Amazingly, no one blinked an eye: not the white-gloved bellman when he hoisted my muddy backpack, and not the front-desk staff when they heard my still-squishing waterlogged hiking boots.


It wasn’t meant to be a test of their new staff, but it turned out to be a pretty good one. The “exceptional guest”…hm…it’s a role I may just have to reprise at some of these new hotels.


Rich Beattie is Travel + Leisure's Executive Digital Editor.


Photo courtesy of The Ritz-Carlton

Insider Travel News From Day One of the ILTM Summit


This week, travel industry leaders descend on Cannes, France for the International Luxury Travel Marketplace (ILTM). The networking event is one of the largest of the year for the travel market; it's estimated that more than 57,000 meetings will take place between hotel groups, destinations, tour operators, travel agents and the media, including Travel + Leisure editors. In the interview chair? Jill Taylor and Lindsey Woodcock of Jet Set World Travel and Royal Monceau Raffles Paris general manager Omer Acar.


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 Sarah Spagnolo is special correspondent new media editor at Travel + Leisure.

Travel Trends from Day Two of ILTM Summit in Cannes


Day Two of the International Luxury Travel Market was a busy one for the almost 3,000 exhibitors and attendees roaming the Palais des Festivals, in Cannes. We checked in with a handful of industry leaders, including A-List agent Jack Ezon of Ovation Vacations and T+L's editor-in-chief, Nancy Novogrod, for their thoughts on this year's travel trends.


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Sarah Spagnolo is special correspondent new media editor at Travel + Leisure.

Luxury Rental Clubs Inspirato and Portico Combine

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Big news in the world of destination clubs: former competitors Inspirato and Portico have recently become one, operating under the name Inspirato with American Express. The combined club—perhaps best described as Inspirato’s absorption of Portico—will give all members access to 500-plus luxury properties in more than 100 destinations, 34 of which will be new to Inspirato’s portfolio (including Bora Bora, London, Jackson Hole, and Kauai).



Existing members of Portico will have the option of joining Inspirato with American Express without paying an initiation fee. At the end of their current year, they can then renew with the combined club, upgrade their membership, or walk away. Annual dues start at $2,700 ($200 more than Portico’s current fee).


As part of the combination, Exclusive Resorts—which founded Portico in 2012—is acquiring a minority stake in the company, giving Exclusive’s 4,200 members the opportunity to join Inspirato without paying an initiation fee (a $17,500 value).


Brooke Porter
Brooke Porter Katz is an Associate Editor at Travel + Leisure. Follow her on Twitter at @brookeporter1.


Photo credit: Inspirato Signature Residence- Punta Cana, Dominican Republic

Experience a Food-Lover’s Provence with T+L and Cox & Kings

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In this special installment of T+L's promotional partnership with luxury adventure operator Cox Kings, readers can join Luke Barr, Travel + Leisure Features Director and author of PROVENCE, 1970: M.F.K. Fisher, Julia Child, James Beard, and the Reinvention of American Taste, for a once-in-a-lifetime epicurean journey to Provence, France.


In his new book, Barr—the grand-nephew of legendary food writer M.F.K. Fisher—tells the behind-the-scenes story of a seminal moment in the history of American gastronomy.


The Highlights:


• A tour of the farmer's markets, bakeries, and charcuteries described in the book, including those where Julia Child once shopped; a visit to the Fragonard perfume workshop; and a historical tour of Nice


• A visit to La Roquette village, lunch in Moulin de Mougins garden, admission to the Picasso Museum, and a cooking class with a Michelin-starred chef in Nice


• A visit to Saint Paul de Vence, the Matisse Museum, and a 14th-century wine cellar in Vence; a Provençal cooking class at La Pitchoune, on Simone Beck's former estate, in Nice


• Tastings at two vineyards, including Domaine Tempier, followed by a sommelier-led wine dinner in Aix-en-Provence


• Olive oil and wine tastings, a tour of Roman sites and the Les Halles market, and dinner at the iconic Hiely Lucullus, in Arles



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The limited-size group journey includes:
• 4 nights at the Hôtel La Pérouse in Nice
• 2 nights at Hôtel La Pigonnet in Aix-en-Provence
• 2 nights at Grand Hôtel Nord-Pinus in Arles
• Daily breakfast, 4 lunches, and 4 dinners; full itinerary; all entrance fees; private transfers


Travel Date: September 12-20, 2014.


The Details: 9 days and 8 nights, from $9,995 per person.*


SPACE IS LIMITED


Want more information? Click here.


T+L Trips are presented to our readers through a promotional partnership with Cox Kings.


**Advertised rates are in U.S. dollars, per person, based on double occupancy subject to availability. Airfare to France is not included. For complete terms and restrictions, visit coxandkingsusa.com. California CST# 2105853-50.


Photo credit: Cintract Romain/Hemis/Corbis (top)