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Articles Tagged ‘Boston’

Parties and pints: Top 3 cities for St. Patty’s Day

Tuesday, March 8th, 2011

The dyeing of the Chicago River on March 12 ushers in the city's St. Patty's Day celebrations. Credit - Tripp-

By Valerie Moloney

Back in the day, when U2′s Joshua Tree was on constant rewind and playback on my cassette machine, little did I know that my life would be forever changed by an Irishman—and no, his name isn’t Bono. In the 12 years that I’ve spent with my husband, a Croom, Co. Limerick native, I’ve learned this about the Irish: 1)That they can play music with spoons. 2)That black and white pudding are equally strange and delicious. 3)A night at the pub always ends better with a snack box, a perfectly packaged meal of plump chips and fried chicken.

This St. Patrick’s Day, I’ll be joining the rest of America in celebrating my adopted Irish pride at my favorite downtown Chicago Irish bars. A note to out-of-towners: Many Chicago hotels are located near the parade route, making it even easier to combine your pub crawl with a stroll to see the infamous Chicago River being dyed green on March 12. Check out these Chicago hotels, plus a few more in Boston and New York that set the Celtic mood way before March 17. (more…)

Top 5 cities for 4th of July fireworks

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

By Whit Honea

Fireworks over Brooklyn, New York. Credit: Howard_N2GOT.

Fireworks over Brooklyn, New York. Credit: Howard_N2GOT.

July 4th travel is all about one thing: fireworks. If you’re looking to put some bang! in family vacations for the 4th of July holiday, look no further than these Top 5 Places for Fourth of July Fireworks:

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Go green at Boston’s St. Patrick’s Day parade

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Boston 1By April Cafiso

Massachusetts is known as Ireland’s 6th county. So if you want to really get into the spirit of St. Patrick’s Day, book a Boston hotel room and be there for the big event: Boston’s St. Patrick’s Day parade.

Southie (South Boston) hosts one of the largest St. Patrick’s Day parades in the nation, with more than 60,000 people attending each year. This year’s parade is Sunday, March 14, starting at 1 p.m. The parade winds through the neighborhoods where you’ll see every house trying to out-decorate the next. Residents take their place on the stoop with relatives and friends, while passers-by stroll the streets with baby carriages decked out in green and their babies in Aran sweaters, hats, mittens and blankets. People prepare for months for St. Patrick’s Day to celebrate Irish heritage — even if they’re not Irish. (more…)

Airlines add service from Boston

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Airline tickets
By Joe Brancatelli

ROUTE MAP

A Three-Airline War Erupts in Boston: After months of promising to launch flights to Chicago, Virgin America has bailed, claiming that it couldn't find gate space at O'Hare Airport. Instead of Chicago, Virgin America says it will try Boston. The 18-month-old carrier says it will begin twice-daily flights from Boston to both Los Angeles and San Francisco on February 12. That announcement drew an immediate response from JetBlue Airways, which has emerged as the new power player at Boston's Logan Airport . After abandoning its nonstops from Boston to both San Francisco and nearby San Jose in September, JetBlue says that it will restore a seasonal summer service to San Francisco beginning on May 1. JetBlue has continued flying its Boston-Oakland route and it also flies from Logan to Long Beach near LAX. And American Airlines has its own Boston plans. It will launch a daily nonstop to San Diego on April 7 and resume seasonal flights to Paris/CDG on May 1. American is also adding frequencies on its existing routes to Los Angeles, its Dallas/Fort Worth hub and London/Heathrow.

HOTEL HOT SHEET

Recession Be Damned, The New Hotels Keep Coming: The global hotel industry is melting down — an industry analyst said this week that a record number of new lodging projects are being abandoned — but there are still lots and lots of properties in the pipeline. And not a day passes when a new one doesn't open. The latest crop: The Doubletree Guest Suites Fort Shelby has debuted inside the shell of the long-abandoned Fort Shelby Hotel in downtown Detroit. It's the second high-profile opening in Detroit this fall. Westin recently brought the Book-Cadillac back to life. … Fairmont has a 150-room hotel in the Battery Wharf district of Boston. It's the second luxury hotel opening in Boston this fall. The Mandarin Oriental opened in Back Bay in October. … Marriott has opened a 648-room hotel near Hong Kong's International Airport. The SkyCity Marriott is in the SkyCity development near the AsiaWorld Expo. It's a 25-minute train ride from Central. … The former Atlantic hotel in Nice, France, has been renovated and reopened as the Boscolo Exedra Nice. The 113-room property, which dates to 1913, is operated by the Boscolo chain of Italy.

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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.

Delta, JetBlue add international, Caribbean flights

Friday, November 21st, 2008

Business_travel
By Joe Brancatelli

Delta Keeps Expanding Its Overseas Presence: Since its 2005 bankruptcy, Delta Air Lines has slashed its domestic network and remade itself as an international carrier. And the new routes keep coming. Next June, it plans to launch nonstop flights to Paris from two new cities: Raleigh and Pittsburgh. The five weekly Raleigh flights start on June 2; the five weekly Pittsburgh flights begin the next day. Also next June, Delta will launch a new route to Africa: Atlanta-Cape Verde Islands-Monrovia, Liberia. Flights will operate weekly. … US Airways will bulk up its international network in May. From its hub in Philadelphia, it will add seasonal flights to Oslo and Birmingham, England. … Thai Airways has changed its mind again and will keep operating its Los Angeles-Bangkok nonstop flights. The service was due to end on October 31, but now will survive at least through January 31. … JetBlue Airways is branching out in the Caribbean. On December 18, it launches daily flights between Fort Lauderdale and San Juan. On February 1, it will add two daily flights from Fort Lauderdale to Nassau, Bahamas, and a daily flight from Orlando to Nassau. And beginning February 14, it will begin Saturday-only service between Boston and St. Maarten.

AIRPORT REPORT

Little Changes Mean a Lot: Continental Airlines and US Airways are trimming the size of allowable carry-on bags to 45 linear inches. Most U.S. carriers are already at 45 inches for carry-ons. … Global Entry, the Customs and Immigration Service’s trusted-travel program, had expanded to four more airports: Atlanta, Chicago/O’Hare, Los Angeles and Miami. The program launched earlier this year at New York/Kennedy, Washington/Dulles and Houston/Intercontinental. It permits returning U.S. travelers to skip passport-control lines. … Travelers who carry a Chase credit or debit card tied to the Continental OnePass program are now permitted to check one bag for free and are not charged the airline’s $15 first-bag fee. … Delta Air Lines, which merged with Northwest Airlines last month, has lined up the two carriers’ checked-luggage fees: $15 for the first bag, $25 for the second.

HOTEL HOT SHEET

Economy Be Damned: Another Burst of New Hotels Opens: If you thought the rocky economy would slow down the pace of new hotel openings, forget it. There are so many new properties in the pipeline that they just keep gushing forth. So get out your scorecard for these new outposts of your favorite brands. … In Boston, there’s a new 72-room Holiday Inn Express on Friend Street, across from the TD Banknorth Garden where the Celtics and Bruins play. … Sheraton has opened a 161-room property in the posh Chicago suburb of Northbrook, just 14 miles from O’Hare Airport. … Marriott has opened a 106-room TownePlace property in downtown Albany, the capital of New York State. … A former newspaper building has been converted to an 81-suite Candlewood Suites hotel in Terre Haute, Indiana. … W Hotels has opened its first hotel in Hong Kong. The 393-room property in Kowloon has a spa, fitness center, swimming pool and two restaurants. … Two new limited-service hotels opened in the Soho District of New York this week: The 150-room Four Points on Charlton Street and the 160-room Hampton Inn on Watts Street. … The former Radisson in Hampton, Virginia, has become a Crowne Plaza after a $4 million renovation. … Shangri-La has opened a 548-room hotel in Futian, in the Shenzhen province of China. … And there has been plenty of new action in the luxury sector, too. In the last few days, Four Seasons opened a 147-room property in Seattle; the Philippe Starck-designed SLS Hotel in Beverly Hills opened as part of the Starwood Luxury Collection; St. Regis opened a 120-room resort in Punta Mita, Mexico; and Inter-Continental turned the key on the 257-room Montelucia Resort, a swanky 34-acre spread in the Paradise Valley area of Scottsdale, Arizona.

ROUTE MAP

Southwest Introduces Something New in Minneapolis: Southwest Airlines, which already said that it would enter the Minneapolis market, has now launched something new to Northwest’s fortress hub: low fares. Southwest said this week that it would begin eight daily roundtrips between Minneapolis and Chicago/Midway on March 8 and the one-way fare is $69. That’s the 21-day advance-purchase price, of course, but consider that Northwest’s (and American’s and United’s) lowest one-way fare on the Minneapolis-Chicago/O’Hare route had been $426. The carriers’ cheapest fare before Southwest arrived was $376 roundtrip. Northwest isn’t sitting idly by, however. It is adding a few flights to its MSP-Chicago/O’Hare route. Northwest will operate about 20 flights a day in the market by February.

MILES & POINTS

More Cuts (and Upgrades) in the Major Frequent Travel Plans: Marriott Rewards couldn’t wait to tell folks that it was eliminating blackout dates on its hotel awards beginning on January 15. And Marriott was excited as all get out to say that the bonuses for Platinum Elite members would rise to 50 percent from the current 30 percent. But what it didn’t announce, much to the annoyance of sharp-eyed members, was that capacity controls on awards will remain, essentially negating the benefit of having no blackout dates. Also, the program added an eighth, and much more expensive, tier of hotels. The eighth tier includes more than a dozen of the most desired properties in major cities around the world. And the price of a popular choice of very frequent Marriott Rewards members, the 7-night-stay award, was raised. … And some good news: American has quietly dropped the $5 fee for claiming an AAdvantage frequent flier award. And Delta Air Lines and Northwest Airlines have eliminated fuel surcharge on award tickets. … On the other hand, United Airlines has increased the cost of some of its awards by as much as 40 percent. It has also switched its policy on upgrade awards: International tickets purchased at any fare can are now eligible for mileage upgrades. But the upgrades come with stiff cash co-pays of as much as $500.

NEED TO KNOW

On-the-Road Intelligence to Help You Travel Smarter: Remember all that crowing US Airways did earlier this year after it padded its schedule and shot to top of the on-time ratings? You are now cordially invited to forget it. The airline slipped to tenth among the 19 carriers in the Transportation Department’s on-time ratings for September. Also tumbling down the chart after a few months of improved operations: United Airlines, which finished 17th. Overall, the government says 84.88 percent of all flights arrived on-time (which is defined as within 15 minute of schedule). … United Airlines now wants to sell you luggage-shipping service. The airline’s new Door to Door service promises overnight delivery of luggage for prices that start at $149 a bag. But United isn’t stupid: The luggage will be shipped by FedEx, not United. … Detroit’s Book Cadillac, the hotel that once feted the kings of the car industry, has finally reopened. After a two-year, $200 million restoration, the hotel is now known as the Westin Book Cadillac. It originally opened in 1924, was one of Motown’s most notable hotels through the 1960s, fell into disrepair as Detroit cratered in the 1970s and tumbled into bankruptcy and closed in 1984. It stood empty, a blight in the heart of downtown Detroit, until reopening with a gala bash for charity last week.

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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.

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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Top Fourth of July fireworks displays

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

Fireworksjuly4 Whether you’re on the road or staying close to home, it just ain’t American to miss fireworks on the Fourth. So to help you fulfill your patriotic duty, here’s a look at some of biggest and best fireworks extravaganzas across the United States.

Washington, D.C.: What could be more patriotic than celebrating Independence Day in the nation’s capital? A parade kicks off at 11:45 a.m. at Constitution Avenue and 7th Street NW. The National Archives
celebrates all day, with appearances by historical characters including
George Washington, and much more. Then head to the West Lawn of the  Capitol at 8 p.m. for a concert featuring Huey Lewis & the
News, Hayley Westenra and more. The fireworks show over the Washington Monument begins around 9:20 p.m.

New York City:
Macy’s calls its July 4 fireworks display the biggest in the United
States, with more than 120,000 bursts soaring as high as 1,000 feet
over the East River after sundown. FDR Drive is closed from 14th to 42nd streets for
public viewing.

Boston: The renowned Boston Pops help celebrate the Fourth with a concert starting at 8 p.m. at Hatch Shell at The Esplanade. Fireworks start around 10:30. (Note that if you’re watching the concert from the Oval, you won’t have a good view of the fireworks. The docks at Community Boating are the recommended spot for fireworks viewing.)

Philadelphia: The city celebrates the Fourth all day long with Party on the Parkway, a parade, and the
Sunoco Sweet Sounds of Liberty Concert & Fireworks
at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Chicago: The city’s main celebration — in conjunction with Taste of Chicago — is July 3 in Grant Park. The Grant Park Orchestra kicks things off with a concert at 8 p.m.; then the fireworks display over Monroe Harbor starts around 9:30. On July 4, Taste of Chicago will put on another fireworks display simultaneously with a display set off from Navy Pier.

San Francisco: Head to Fisherman’s Wharf to enjoy food, music, kids’ activities and more leading up to the fireworks, which launch from the foot of Municipal Pier and barges north of Pier 39. Prime waterfront viewing spots include the Cannery, Ghirardelli Square and Pier 39.

Atlanta: Centennial Olympic
Park
is the top spot for watching fireworks In downtown Atlanta, while the other big show is in Buckhead, home to
the 49th annual 4th of July at Lenox Square. MARTA public transit offers easy access to
both events.

New Orleans: You would expect great food and great music in this town, and that’s what you’ll get on the Fourth of July. Musicians perform at four different locations along the Mississippi River, and many restaurants and merchants will offer special discounts. The fireworks show over the river is choreographed to patriotic music and starts at 9 p.m.

Orlando: Downtown Orlando puts on a fireworks and laser light show around Lake Eola. And if you’re planning a Disney World vacation, the resort has fireworks displays at Downtown Disney (11 p.m.), Epcot Center (10 p.m.), the Magic Kingdom (9 p.m.) and Disney’s Hollywood Studios (9 p.m.).

San Diego: The best spots for viewing the fireworks over north San Diego Bay include Shelter Island and Harbor Island. The show starts at 9 p.m. SeaWorld and LEGOLAND also put on their own displays. Or you can enjoy the fireworks at the San Diego County Fair in Del Mar.

Seattle: The WaMu Family 4th starts at noon at Gas Works Park with food and activities. The fireworks — described as one of the top fireworks displays in the country — start around 10 p.m.

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