Showing posts with label five star luxury hotel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label five star luxury hotel. Show all posts

12.08.2008

New York luxury hotels | The Plaza


The Plaza is perfectly located at the southeast corner of Central Park, and its recent $400 million renovation has created a stunning five star luxury hotel in midtown Manhattan. The old 59th Street entrance is now reserved exclusively for apartment owners. Hotel guests enter on the Fifth Avenue side of the building (as do patrons of the Palm Court restaurant and the Oak Bar). The public spaces of the hotel are impressive, and the Palm Court has a beautifully reconstructed stained glass ceiling, a feature of the original property that was removed by a previous owner.

Room selection is critical at the Plaza. A room with a lot of natural light is highly desirable because the gilded furnishings look overdone in artificial light, so do work with a luxury travel consultant when booking the Plaza New York. You will want to be blocked into a room with full-length windows and a view preferably to the east (Fifth Avenue) or the north (Central Park). In the summer months — when the sun is high in the sky — courtyard view rooms have plenty of natural light.

For discounted rates and special amenities including a Full American breakfast for two in the Palm Court and a $100 F&B credit, book your room at the Plaza New York through a Virtuoso luxury travel consultant.

Plaza, New York (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.
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9.10.2008

low business class fares to Europe

Joe Bracatelli is the publisher of Joe Sent Me, one of the most informative travel websites out there and well worth the annual subscription. He has alerted me to a special 4-Day Sale, New York-Amsterdam, on OpenSkies. Fly business class from $1,609 roundtrip, taxes and fees included, and enjoy a 6-foot long 180º flatbed. You must book by September 12, but you can travel anytime between October 15, 2008 and March 31, 2009 with a three-day minimum stay.

Want an even lower price to Europe? Eurofly has $399 round-trip fares in coach to Italy (inclusive of fuel surcharges, but about $90 in taxes are additional). Book by September 12, and fly JFK to Rome, Naples, Palermo, or Bologna on selected flights in September and October.

After you book your flights, contact your Virtuoso travel consultant to fill out your itinerary with some great values at the world's finest five star luxury hotels.


Virtuoso travel consultant (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.
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8.11.2008

guaranteed US Dollar rates in Europe


Upscale travelers look forward to staying in five star hotels with beautifully landscaped lawns, ornate lobbies, exquisitely furnished guestrooms, and incomparable service. They also expect to pay a small fortune to enjoy such luxury, especially with the sad state of the weak US Dollar.

So this offer is quite a value. Spend five nights at two or more of five Orient-Express hotels, and enjoy a flat rate of only $480 per night with daily buffet breakfast for two included. This rate is guaranteed in US Dollars (and is equivalent to about 322€).

1. Reid's Palace, Madeira (pictured above) is high on my wish list of places to stay. The island of Madeira is in the Atlantic Ocean, some 535 miles from Lisbon. It was discovered by Portuguese sailors in the early 15th century and, with a pleasant year-round climate, is a popular tourist destination for European travelers. Reid's Palace is a beautiful and gracious resort located on 10 acres of botanical gardens on a cliff top overlooking the waters of the Atlantic.

2. The Hotel Ritz, Madrid is one of the grand old hotels of Europe. It is located right across the street from the Prado Museum, one of the must-see attractions of Madrid. Convenient to museums, galleries, and shopping, and offering an elegant Afternoon Tea service, the Ritz is a storied and elegant hotel in the heart of Madrid.

3. Hôtel de la Cité, Carcassonne. Find yourself in a fairytale... reads the headline on the hotel's brochure. Carcassonne is an ancient walled village set in the wine country of Southwest France. Part of a medieval citadel, the Hôtel de la Cité has magnificent gardens on property and offers you the opportunity to make your home for a few days in this part of French history.

4. La Residencia, Mallorca is located on an idyllic island in the Mediterranean Sea. With hot summers and mild winters, La Residencia is a luxury hotel and spa on the northwest coast of the island, set in the midst of a grove of olive and citrus trees. The hotel was created from two 16th and 17th century manor houses and offers spectacular views of the sea.

5. Lapa Palace, Lisbon is set on a hilltop with beautiful gardens in the center of Lisbon, overlooking the river and the city itself. Originally built as a private residence, Lapa Palace offers an oasis in the midst of a busy city.

I would especially recommend this package to travelers planning to visit Spain + Portugal, or Portugal + Madeira this year. Conditions apply, but this is an incomparable value at several of the world's finest five star hotels.

five star 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.
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7.09.2008

the importance of a great first impression

My clients give me all kinds of feedback on their hotel stays (I am a luxury travel consultant). Sometimes I get an email sharing an extremely positive impression of a stay: my client was surprised with an upgraded room I was able to arrange; the concierge offered great recommendations and went the extra mile in making reservations; the room was beautiful, and every need was anticipated.

Other times I hear that a hotel has fallen short of meeting a guest's expectations. I've gotten several of those reports in the past few weeks, and there was an interesting common denominator to the stories that were told to me: things fell apart from the very beginning of their stay.

The first five seconds of a guest's stay at a luxury hotel are absolutely critical. In recent weeks, clients have mentioned doormen who stood there and did not offer to take their luggage from the trunk of their car or taxi ... and who then left them to carry their own luggage in to the front desk. I was told of a valet parker who greeted my client with a curt, "Going to be here long?" What these guests experienced was an indifferent greeting.

Don't get me wrong. Not all guests want this service. Many guests prefer to get their luggage out of the car themselves and roll it to their room themselves. But staying at a luxury hotel means being given the choice.

When you think about it, a doorman or valet parker is perhaps the lowest paid employee in an entire hotel. It seems like such unglamorous work — opening doors, parking cars, carrying luggage. But if a hotel wants to be known as providing smooth-as-silk service, these are perhaps the most important members of the hotel's staff. They are entrusted with creating the first impression that every guest will have. A warm, sincere, and helpful greeting at the front door ... and at the front desk ... is the single most important facet of a great stay at a five star hotel.

The Peninsula Hotel in Hong Kong is known as one of the world's greatest hotels, offering superb service. To sit in the lobby having Afternoon Tea, you get the chance to experience the reason why. There are two uniformed — and well-trained — doormen at every door (pictured above). They open the doors for each visitor and welcome them to the Peninsula with a smile.

Four Seasons is known as one of the world's greatest hotel companies. Every time I go into a Four Seasons hotel — whether in Bangkok, New York, Paris, or San Francisco — I am greeted with the same words: "Welcome to the Four Seasons." Though the doormen wear different hats (a pith helmet in Bangkok, for example), the greeting is warm and sincere.

Nobody experts perfection, 100% of the time. We are all human beings, prone to making mistakes, doing the wrong thing, or saying the wrong thing. There are some people we click with and other people with whom we don't. No hotel will ever make 100% of its guests happy, 100% of the time. Take a look at tripadvisor.com sometime. Read the negative impressions some reviewers give of some of the best five star hotels in the world, and you'll know what I mean. But here's my theory of luxury hotel service: if you get the first five seconds of a guest's experience right ... that's the foundation of a great stay. (Hotel managers take note: here's where to invest your time and resources in recruitment, training, and compensation).


luxury travel consultant (search here on Google)

copyright (c) 2007 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.
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