Orbitz Blog

Articles Tagged ‘airport’

Delta, Northwest to merge frequent flier programs

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

airline tickets By Joe Brancatelli

MILEAGE METER

Delta Lining Up SkyMiles and WorldPerks Before the Mileage Merger: Delta Air Lines, which gobbled up Northwest Airlines this year, is moving to absorb Northwest’s WorldPerks program into Delta’s SkyMiles plan, too. The official mileage merger won’t hit until late next year, but a few changes become effective immediately. Most notably, SkyMiles will allow members to qualify for elite status with segments as well as miles. Silver Medallion will require 25,000 miles or 30 segments; the Gold level will require 50,000 miles or 60 segments; and Platinum will need 75,000 miles or 100 segments. Meanwhile, WorldPerks will adopt a three-tier award structure that mimics the SkyMiles award chart. And both SkyMiles and WorldPerks will offer a minimum of 500 miles for each segment flown. … Holders of American Express cards tied to the Hilton HHonors and Delta SkyMiles programs take note: Amex has changed how it awards points and miles for many purchases. The result? Lower earnings for most non-travel categories.

AIRPORT REPORT

More Perks, More Amenities, More Greenies: A pay-per-visit lounge called reLAX has opened in the Bradley International terminal at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX). The entry fee ($10-$35, depending on length of stay) covers club access; snacks and beverages; and free Internet. … Heineken has opened its first bar in the United States at Newark Airport. The so-called Heineken Lounge is located in Terminal C. … Starwood Preferred Guest and Clear, the sputtering airport-security "line cut" program, have struck a deal. Platinum level members will receive a free year of membership and other members will receive three free months if they enroll in the $199-a-year Clear plan. … A 169-room Hilton Garden Inn has opened at the airport in Liberia, Costa Rica. Liberia is the closest airport to the increasingly popular Guanacaste Peninsula.

CAR TALK

Car Sharing is the New Car Rental: Everyone’s heard of Zipcar, the urban car-sharing service — and so has Hertz, the world’s leading car-rental company. Hertz is beginning its own car-sharing club in New York, London and Paris. The program, Connect By Hertz, has an annual membership fee and hourly rental rates start at about $8.50. … Speaking of Hertz, the car-rental giant has changed its refueling policy. Instead of the old plan — the market rate for the gasoline plus a flat $6.99 service fee — Hertz has reverted to a much-disliked policy: charging as much as $7.50 for each gallon it pumps into the vehicle you’ve just returned. The best way to avoid the high price? Fill up at a nearby station outside the airport before you return your car. … Advantage Rent-A-Car has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and closed almost half of its locations. … The mixed-blessing of "consolidated rental facilities" — one big building that houses all car rental firms at an airport — has been gaining ground in recent years. But the trend has run smack into the financial realities of the credit crunch. The first casualty? Seattle/Tacoma has suspended work on its $400 million consolidated rental center. … The Internal Revenue Service has set the 2009 per-mile driving rate at 55 cents. That means you can deduct 55 cents for each mile of business-travel driving you do.

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Joe Brancatelli is editor and publisher of JoeSentMe.com, a non-commercial Web site for business travelers. Copyright 2008 by Joe Brancatelli. Licensed by contract for Orbitz use.

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Winter travel tips for fliers

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

Wintertraveltips When the snow starts drifting down, you want to be relaxing by the fireplace, perhaps sipping hot chocolate in a mountain ski lodge — not stranded in a cramped airport corridor because of a delayed flight.

There’s nothing like overcrowded terminals, impossibly long delays, harried airline workers and the dreaded airport sleepover to ruin your travel experience.

But a little planning will go a long way toward helping you avoid those winter travel travails. The more prepared you are, the easier it will be for you to get through the airport and start your vacation.

That preparation includes monitoring weather reports and checking the Flying Forecast, where Orbitz air-traffic analysts provide round-the-clock updates on flight delays at major airports across the U.S.

Flexibility pays

If it looks like weather might become an issue, remember that your carrier may let you change your airline tickets without paying a change fee. Airlines increasingly do that when bad weather sets in. So if you’re flexible, and you know a storm is coming, contact your airline to see what its waiver policy is.

One way to limit the risk of snow-related delays is to schedule flights early in the day, when equipment is more likely to be at the gate and ready to fly, and before the flight cancellations accumulate and airlines start scrambling to rebook passengers.

Preparation applies to packing, too. Since you may not have access to your checked baggage if you get stuck at an airport hub, make sure you put everything you’ll need over the next 24 hours — clothing, medication, toiletries (in 3-ounce travel sizes in keeping with the TSA’s 3-1-1 policy) — in your carry-on.

Also make sure you set up OrbitzTLC Alerts, which provide free updates about gate changes, flight delays and cancellations. Get these alerts by phone, on your computer or PDA. Plus, you can sign up 6 others to receive your alerts, such as the person picking you up at your destination or a colleague waiting for your arrival to start a meeting.

What’s the holdup?

Heavy snow, of course, is typically the biggest offender when it comes to flight delays, as poor visibility, along with plowing and treating of runways, limits the number of planes that can land every hour.

Even if snow is light, a combination of wind and snow can severely hamper visibility.

Another key factor is plane deicing, which happens when there’s a mixture of freezing temperatures and fog or precipitation. Delays can last at least 30 minutes or longer, depending on how well prepared an airport is for deicing measures.

The same goes for snow. Just because you’re flying into or out of an airport that’s more likely to see snowy conditions doesn’t necessarily mean you’re more likely to see delays. In fact, some of those airports may be better equipped to handle a snowstorm and send planes on their way.

And even if your airports aren’t affected by the weather, that doesn’t mean you won’t feel a ripple effect. If there’s a major storm in the East, for example, be prepared across the country for possible delays and cancellations.

So go ahead and book the flights for your winter vacation. Just be flexible and take advantage of the resources available to help make your travel easier.

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New, renovated hotels open in Beverly Hills, Miami

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

Beverly Hills hotels
By Joe Brancatelli

HOTEL HOT SHEET

Montage, a luxury resort in Laguna Beach, California, has opened a second property in Beverly Hills. The 201-room hotel is the first newly built property in Beverly Hills in more than a decade. … The Fontainebleau has reopened in Miami Beach after a $500 million renovation. The 22-acre resort, famous for its curvy, Morris Lapidus design and as one of the locations of Goldfinger, now has 1,500 rooms and a dozen restaurants and bars. … Among the baker’s dozen of new properties that Hampton Inn has opened in the last few weeks, the most notable are the 146-room property near the Empire State Building in Manhattan and a 119-room branch in downtown Little Rock, Arkansas. … Holiday Inn Express has opened branches in Taichung City and Taoyuan, Taiwan. … Aloft, the newest brand from Starwood, has opened a 186-room outpost in the Haidain district of Beijing. … The Hotel Des Indes in The Hague, Netherlands, is now part of the Luxury Collection. … The once-prestigious Hotel Ambassador on the Boulevard Haussmann in Paris‘ 9th arrondissement, most recently known as the Millennium Opera, is switching to the Radisson flag. It becomes the Radisson Ambassador Hotel on December 31. … Hilton Garden Inn continues to grow in Italy. Its two newest properties are at Malpensa Airport in Milan and in the San Lazzaro di Savena district on the outskirts of Bologna. That makes five Garden Inns now open in Italy, with three more on the way in the next year

AIRPORT REPORT

New Runways, New Hotels, New Dining Options: Alaska Airlines says it will add a Portland (Oregon)-Long Beach route on February 8. … Mexican food fans take note: La Casita, the much-admired tamale house in Denver, has opened a branch in the Concourse C Food Court at Denver International. … Free, advertising-supported WiFi service is now available at Oakland Airport. … Just in time for the plunge in traffic, new runways opened at Seattle-Tacoma, Chicago/O’Hare and Washington/Dulles airports. … Meanwhile, a $10 million renovation has converted the former Four Points at Newark Airport into the Crowne Plaza Newark Airport. … American Airlines now offers boarding passes on mobile devices. The paperless trial begins at its Chicago/O’Hare hub as well as Los Angeles and John Wayne/Orange County airports.

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Joe Brancatelli is editor and publisher of JoeSentMe.com, a non-commercial Web site for business travelers. Copyright 2008 by Joe Brancatelli. Licensed by contract for Orbitz use.

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International airlines launch premium-economy class

Friday, November 14th, 2008

Business travel
By Joe Brancatelli

Hotshot Indian Carriers Get a Dose of Reality: Jet Airways and Kingfisher Airlines, two hotshot Indian airlines with global ambitions, have been forced to face the harsh realities of the nasty economic times. Kingfisher’s flights between San Francisco and Bangalore, expected to launch this past summer, have been permanently shelved. And no wonder: Kingfisher’s new service between London and Mumbai has averaged only a few dozen passengers per flight. On the other hand, Jet will dump its San Francisco-Shanghai-Mumbai flights in January after just a few months of operation. The two privately owned airlines, which have won raves for their sybaritic service, have now concluded a wide-ranging alliance this week. It includes code-sharing and other cost-saving measures–and all but ends the spare-no-expenses competition between Kingfisher’s flamboyant boss, Vijay Mallya, and Jet chieftain Naresh Goyal. … Emirates has moved its flights to the United States into Terminal 3 at its hub in Dubai. … And there’s always change at London’s Heathrow Airport. British Airways says it will move its Atlanta-London flights away from Gatwick and into Heathrow next March. Meanwhile, Air France and Delta are giving up on their joint service from Los Angeles to Heathrow. The flights were launched in the spring with great fanfare.

CLASS ACTS

Do You Know About Fourth Class? OpenSkies, the boutique airline owned by British Airways, now flies on two routes: New York-Paris and New York-Amsterdam . The most notable advantage: the carrier’s wonderful prem+ cabin, which is the latest and greatest iteration of "premium economy," which offers some of the perks of business class for the cost of full-fare coach. Prem+ on OpenSkies offer seats configured 2×2 with 52 inches of legroom for about $1,500 roundtrip. A business-class seat can cost as much as $8,000. Icelandair is launching a premium economy cabin on transatlantic flights, too. The service began on November 1, although Icelandair’s premium economy class isn’t quite as lavish. Japan Airlines and Qantas have also introduced full-blown premium-economy cabins this year. Virgin Atlantic, All Nippon Airways, EVA, British Airways, Air New Zealand and SAS Scandinavian also sell versions of premium economy.

NEED TO KNOW

On-the-Road Intelligence to Help You Travel Smarter: Clear, the security line-cut program, opened at Terminal A at Boston/Logan Airport. Terminal A is Delta’s new home at Logan. … American Express platinum cardholders are losing a perk: The domestic free companion airfare program ends on November 15. … Bay Area diners take note: the new Michelin guide for San Francisco gives three stars to one restaurant — The French Laundry in Yountville – and awards two stars to six other dining rooms: Aqua, Coi and Michael Mina in San Francisco; Cyrus in Healdsburg; Meadowood in St. Helena; and Manresa in Los Gatos. … Korean Air has changed its free checked-baggage allowance. Effective November 1, coach passengers can check two bags weighing 50 pounds each. Business- and first-class fliers continue to receive a 70-pound-per-bag allowance. … Almost 15 months after it launched, Virgin America is finally allowing redemptions in its Elevate frequent flier program. A quick look at its award chart, which is based on the retail cost of a ticket, not mileage levels, shows that awards require about 45-50 points per fare dollar. A ticket selling for $149, for example, costs 6,930 Elevate points.

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Joe Brancatelli is editor and publisher of JoeSentMe.com, a non-commercial Web site for business travelers. Copyright 2008 by Joe Brancatelli. Licensed by contract for Orbitz use.

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