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Articles Tagged ‘airports’

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.

Orbitz Insider Index: Busiest airports for Thanksgiving travel

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

If you’ve booked your flights and are planning to travel this Thanksgiving, here’s some information to help you stay in the know and on time when you go.

The Orbitz Insider Index has identified the airports expected to be the busiest this Thanksgiving, based on airline ticket sales for travel between November 22-30. Las Vegas McCarran International Airport has taken the top spot, pushing former number-one Chicago O’Hare down the list. And it looks like more people have booked Thanksgiving flights to Miami and Seattle; this is the first year those cities’ airports are on our busiest list.

Top 10 busiest airports for Thanksgiving 2008
1.Las Vegas, NV — McCarran International Airport (LAS)
2.New York, NY — LaGuardia Airport (LGA)
3.Chicago, IL — Chicago O’Hare International Airport (ORD)
4.Los Angeles, CA — Los Angeles International Airport (LAX)
5.San Francisco, CA — San Francisco International Airport (SFO)
6.Dallas, TX — Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport(DFW)
7.Newark, NJ — New York Newark International Airport (EWR)
8.Miami, FL — Miami International Airport (MIA)
9.Denver, CO — Denver International Airport (DEN)
10.Seattle, WA — Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA)

As for the best days to travel, here’s our list:

Least busy:

  • Tuesday, November 25
  • Monday, November 24
  • Saturday, November 29

Busiest:

  • Sunday, November 30
  • Wednesday, November 26
  • Sunday, November 23

No matter when you travel, trust OrbitzTLC to keep you up to date with travel news and flight delays. You can sign up for Orbitz TLC Alerts to have information delivered directly to your phone, computer or PDA. And Orbitz Traveler Update
has parking and transportation tips — even up-to-the-minute
information about security wait times — from fellow travelers to help make your trip easier.

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JetBlue’s new JFK terminal opens October 22

Monday, October 20th, 2008

business travel
By Joe Brancatelli

Just days before it was due to open on October 1, JetBlue Airways pushed back the opening of its new terminal at New York’s Kennedy Airport. The three-week delay was apparently due to issues with the terminal’s 55,000-square-foot retail plaza. It will encompass 22 dining locations and 25 retail shops. A much-anticipated feature is the ability to order meals from special computer terminals at the departure gates and have food delivered to you. A new parking facility and JFK’s AirTrain service is accessible from covered walkways. However, a connection to JFK’s iconic Terminal 5, which once housed TWA, won’t be ready until the airport authorities renovate Eero Saarinen’s masterpiece. … United Airlines is pulling out of Palmdale, a Los Angeles-area airport that has been trying to build passenger service. United launched service from Palmdale in June 2007, and received financial considerations for using the airport for 18 months. It will depart on December 6, as soon as the financial support ends. No other airline currently operates from Palmdale. … A shop dedicated to the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver has opened at Vancouver Airport in British Columbia, Canada.

INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

Big Six dribble out new overseas service: As they continue to cut flights domestically, the Big Six airlines are pinning their fading hopes for profit on new international service. Continental Airlines, for example, says it will launch seasonal flights between its Houston hub and Rio de Janeiro on December 17. It has also scheduled a March 26 launch for its Newark-Shanghai nonstops. The daily service will operate with Boeing 777-300s. Meanwhile, American Airlines and Delta Air Lines are targeting Brazil and the Caribbean. Over at American, there’ll be five weekly flights between Chicago and Montego Bay, Jamaica, beginning January 31. And effective November 2, it will add flights from its Miami hub to three Brazilian cities: Belo Horizonte; Salvador de Bahia and Recife. Delta adds weekly flights from New York/Kennedy to Bonaire on December 20. A day earlier, it launches flights from its Atlanta hub and Manaus and Recife. The Recife flight will then continue on to Fortaleza. … Watch for American Airlines to use two-class Boeing 757s on some trans-Atlantic routes. The airline is currently reconfiguring 18 of them with the carrier’s newish business-class chairs. There’ll be 16 seats in business class and 166 seats in coach. … Turkish Airlines is resuming its Istanbul-Baghdad route after an 18-year hiatus. The flights, which ended during the 1991 Gulf War, will operate three times a week. Service restarts on October 26.

SECURITY WATCH

Southwest adds priority security lanes at seven airports: The lanes, available to the airline’s Business Select and A-List customers, are opening in Baltimore-Washington, Dallas/Love, Phoenix Sky Harbor, John Wayne/Orange County, Denver, San Francisco and Los Angeles. The so-called FlyBy lanes are due to expand to several more airports next month. … Clear, the security line-cut program, has opened at Atlanta Hartsfield Airport. That is the 20th airport in the country with a line-cut program operated by Clear or one of its competitors. Clear, which once promised substantial security-screening bypass as part of its benefits, is also raising its price to $199 a year on October 15. It currently charges $128.

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Joe Brancatelli is editor and publisher of JoeSentMe.com, a non-commercial Web site for business travelers.

Airlines up prices for standby, baggage, blankets

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Ontheroad
By Joe Brancatelli

All sorts of new fees and charges keep coming: Get out the scorecard
because that’s the only way you’ll be able to keep track of all the new
fees that the carriers are inventing (or increasing). Along with
Continental Airlines, Delta Air Lines continues to offer all travelers one free checked bag. But Delta says that it has upped the second-bag charge to $50. … Frontier Airlines
has eliminated its free standby travel. Travelers looking to stand by
will receive a confirmed seat if available, but will have to pay any
applicable fare difference. Frontier’s ticket-change fee will also rise
to $150. … Hawaiian Airlines will now charge $10-20 for
tickets purchased by phone and $25 for airport ticketing. It will also
charge $15 for the first checked bag on flights
to and from the mainland, although the first checked bag will remain
free on inter-island flights. And, of course, you have heard that JetBlue Airways
has eliminated free blankets and pillows. On flights longer than two
hours, you can now buy a $7 eco-friendly kit that includes a blanket, a
pillow and a $5 coupon that can be used at Bed, Bath and Beyond.

ROUTE MAP

Midwest Airlines makes big cuts in Milwaukee: After Midwest Airlines
said a few weeks ago that it would retire about a third of its fleet,
we knew big cuts were coming. Effective September 8, its primary hub in
Milwaukee will shrink dramatically. Gone will be flights
to Fort Lauderdale and Fort Myers, Florida; San Diego; Los Angeles; and
Seattle. And Orlando will only be served on a seasonal basis. Also gone
will be commuter flights from Milwaukee to eight cities: Baltimore;
Hartford, Connecticut; Louisville, Kentucky; Muskegon, Michigan;
Raleigh/Durham; St Louis; San Antonio; and Wausau/Stevens Point,
Wisconsin. … It didn’t take long for Midwest’s competitors to fill
some of the gaps. AirTran Airways, which tried to buy Midwest
last year, will add Milwaukee-Fort Lauderdale flights. And Northwest,
which bought a minority interest in Midwest last year, will launch
nonstops between Milwaukee and Los Angeles.

INTERNATIONAL AGENDA

OpenSkies adds a destination and dumps a class: For a tiny subset of a gigantic airline, OpenSkies, the British Airways boutique carrier, is certainly making a lot of news. This month it announced its second route: New York/Kennedy-Amsterdam, which is due to launch on October 15. (The carrier currently flies JFK-Paris/Orly and its new subsidiary, L’Avion, flies Newark-Orly.) Then it announced a major change in its in-flight configuration. It is dumping coach and concentrating on its business class with lie-flat beds and prem+, a near-business-class product with reclining leather chairs that offer 52 inches of legroom. The airline’s Boeing 757s will now offer 64 seats, 24 in business and 40 in prem+. … The oil-fueled airline crisis isn’t just affecting U.S. carriers. Smaller international airlines are also suffering. Malev, the Hungarian carrier, is killing its only two routes across the Atlantic. The Budapest-Toronto route ends September 21 and the Budapest-New York service disappears on October 25. Air Berlin, which took over LTU, is dropping one of LTU’s signature international routes. The airline is closing down its New York/Kennedy-Dusseldorf run. … Israir is permanently dropping its Kennedy-Tel Aviv service. The Israeli carrier has been on and off the route for several years, but now is blaming high fuel costs for the definitive end of the flights.

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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

TSA brings back secondary screening at gate

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

Ontheroad
By Joe Brancatelli

Boy, we sure could live without this: Just when you thought
it might be safe to go back to the airport, the Transportation Security
Administration
has gone back to the future and revived one of its
least-liked practices. The TSA has reintroduced secondary screening at
the gate. The program appears to be selective rather than nationwide –
"These checks are not announced in advance and can occur at any gate,
at any time," the TSA thundered on its Web site — and not in response
to any particular security threat. … The Inspector General of the
Homeland Security Department says that low morale among front-line
screeners may be compromising security. The 29-page report from
Inspector General Richard Skinner says screeners are frustrated and
distracted and TSA efforts to address the problems have been
inadequate. The TSA wasn’t pleased to hear this. It claimed that
Skinner’s report had "flawed conclusions." … The TSA has adjusted its
policy for members of Clear and other registered traveler programs. Once RT members exit their proprietary lanes, they may
proceed directly to the tables where travelers are removing shoes and
laptops. RT members can no longer jump that line and go direct to the
X-ray machines and magnetometers.

HOTEL HOT SHEET

In Toledo, another contender for the King of Velcro: You have
surely heard the term "Velcro Hotel," a reference to lodgings that
constantly change their chain affiliation. The brand signs on the
buildings, say hotel wags, change so frequently that they are affixed
with Velcro. Among the current contenders for the title of the King of
Velcro are the current Hotel Pennsylvania in New York and the
InterContinental Kansas City. Both hotels have had myriad brand names over
the years. Two up-and-comers: the current LaQuinta in Stamford,
Connecticut, and a Marriott on Sutter Street in San Francisco, both of
which have had at least five names each. Now the latest challenger: The
14-story hotel on Summit Street in Toledo, Ohio. The property opened in
1985 as a Sofitel. Three years later, it became the Marriott Portside.
In 1994, it became the Holiday Inn Crowne Plaza, then shed the Holiday
Inn name when Crowne Plaza became a separate brand. Four years later,
it became a Wyndham. In 2005, the building was sold and the 241-room
hotel was renamed the Toledo Riverfront. A new owner purchased the
building 15 months ago for $7.5 million and hired a new management
company. This month, after $6 million of renovations, the hotel became
the Crowne Plaza Toledo.

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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

New hotels, airport clubs open in U.S., overseas

Saturday, July 12th, 2008

Ontheroad
Joe Brancatelli is editor and publisher of JoeSentMe.com, a non-commercial Web site for business travelers.

HOTEL HOT SHEET

Here comes another bushel of new hotels:
Hotel occupancy has slowed noticeably in recent months, and you may
even have noticed your nightly rate dropping a bit. Normally, that
would mean putting the brakes on hotel expansion. But buildings take
years to plan and build, so there is lots of inventory still in the
pipeline. Here’s what has opened recently. Four Seasons has added a 117-room property in Florence.

The hotel spans a pair of 15th and 16th-century buildings situated
on 11 acres on the edge of the centro storico. … Four Seasons has
also opened its second hotel in Istanbul. This one is a 166-room property on the European banks of the Bosphorus. And Staybridge Suites has opened a 132-suite hotel in Liverpool, England.

AIRPORT REPORT

Airport clubs come and airport clubs go: United Airlines has opened a new Red Carpet Club at Chicago O’Hare Airport. The club is located at Gate B18, not far from the existing Red Carpet lounge. … Singapore Airlines has opened a new lounge for premium customers in Bangkok. It is located on Level 3, Concourse A. … Unfortunately, US Airways will close its clubs at Baltimore-Washington and Raleigh-Durham airports and shutter its arrivals lounges in Munich, Rome and Zurich.

Speaking of O’Hare, the Federal Aviation Administration says
that it will lift slot restrictions at the nation’s most important
airport effective November 1. … Tri-partite TSA "self-select lanes"
have opened at Seattle-Tacoma Airport. … The first two hotels branded
with the "aloft" name have opened and both are near airports. One is at
Montreal Airport and the second has opened in Rancho Cucamonga,
California, close to Ontario Airport. Aloft is the latest name from Starwood Hotels.
… Speaking of airport hotels in California, Hampton Inn has opened
two of them. One is at Burbank Airport, the other is the second Hampton
near the small airfield in Bakersfield. … Hilton Garden Inn has also
opened another airport hotel. This one, a 137-room property, is near
Gulfport-Biloxi Airport in Mississippi.

Read more "On the Road with Joe Brancatelli" at
roadwarrior.orbitz.com.

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Copyright 2008 by Joe Brancatelli. Licensed by contract for Orbitz use.