Showing posts with label Four Seasons Las Vegas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Four Seasons Las Vegas. Show all posts

11.27.2012

Four Seasons Las Vegas | renovated rooms!

newly designed guest room at FS Las Vegas

When I first visited the Four Seasons Las Vegas several years ago, these words came to me. The experience was one of being in Las Vegas but not of Las Vegas.

Las Vegas is a very hectic place, and that is part of the attraction for many. Vegas is city that never sleeps. There's always action somewhere. Casinos are open 24/7, and you can always find someplace to get a drink or something to eat. And, as everyone knows, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas.

If you want to escape the noise and lights at the end of the day, there's the Four Seasons Las Vegas. From the moment you enter the hotel's serene lobby, you are in a sanctuary of quiet and dignity. You will experience a quality of attention and service that a 1000-plus room luxury hotel can never hope to offer.

Four Seasons Las Vegas will have refurbished all 424 guest rooms and suites by mid-December, and judging by the photo above, they have done a wonderful job. While I won't be in Vegas to do a site inspection until next August (for Virtuoso Travel Week), I'm looking forward to actually being in the renovated space. 

Be sure to book through a Four Seasons Preferred Partner for value-added amenities including Full American Breakfast for two daily, a $100 spa credit, and an upgrade if available upon check-in.


Four Seasons Las Vegas (search here on Google)

copyright (c) 2012 by David Ourisman LLC. All rights reserved. If you have comments on this column, or questions about booking travel, email me or visit my website.

8.25.2008

Las Vegas | a tale of two lobbies


These are not the greatest photos — my iPhone has severe photographic limitations — but these images of two lobbies in Las Vegas luxury hotels convey two very different paradigms of luxury travel.

Pictured above is the Bellagio, a mega-hotel with nearly 4,000 rooms and suites. The Bellagio is prototypical of what Las Vegas has to offer. A lobby decorated with 2,000 hand-blown glass flowers. A casino open 24 hours a day. Twice-nightly shows of Cirque du Soleil's "O." Exceptional restaurants including Le Cirque, Michael Mina, and Picasso. An art gallery with a collection of French Impressionist paintings. A "lake" in front of the hotel reminiscent of Lake Como, Italy, the site of the picturesque village of Bellagio from which this casino hotel gets its name.

Bellagio embodies the outrageous excess that makes Las Vegas one of the most popular destinations in the world.


The Four Seasons Las Vegas offers a very different paradigm of luxury travel. It is a hotel within a hotel, occupying the top five floors of Mandalay Bay. With its own separate entrance, guests enter a quiet and serene lobby decorated with simple floral displays reminiscent of the creative arrangements seen in the George V in Paris. With 424 rooms and suites, this property is large by Four Seasons standards. Yet at 10% the size of the Bellagio, the Four Seasons can provide the kind of gracious and personalized service that Bellagio can only dream about. It can take half an hour to check into your room at Bellagio; there should be no wait at the Four Seasons. If you try to phone the concierges at Bellagio, you can wait on hold forever; service is immediate at the Four Seasons.

There's not even a casino in the Four Seasons (but, not to fear, the Mandalay Bay offers shows and games just steps outside the connecting doors). My impression? Borrowing a phrase from the Gospel of John, Four Seasons is in Las Vegas but not of Las Vegas.


Which hotel offers the better luxury experience? I can't answer that question for you. It depends on what kind of luxury you are looking for. Do you seek non-stop excitement, entertainment, and over-the-top glitz and glamor? Choose the Bellagio. Would you rather experience a quiet and serene oasis in the midst of the hectic city? Four Seasons would be your choice.

P.S. Both hotels are part of Virtuoso
, and special rates and amenities are available to you through a Virtuoso luxury travel consultant.


Las Vegas luxury hotels (search here on Google)


copyright (c) 2008 by David J. Ourisman. All rights reserved. If you have comments on this column, or questions about booking travel, email me or visit my website.
.