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Articles Tagged ‘Denver hotels’

Denver to launch bike-sharing program

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

Explore the best of Denver this summer at no cost to your wallet or the environment.

Denver B-Cycle, a free bike-sharing program is scheduled to start this summer. A total of 500 bikes will be available at 30 to 40 stations throughout the city. Visitors can swipe their credit card to get a bike, and rentals are free as long as the bike is returned to the same station by 10 a.m. the next day.

Bike stations will be located within three or four miles of downtown, situated near light rail stations, Denver hotels and popular attractions like museums and the convention center.

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Top Oktoberfests across the United States

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

Cincinnativacation
By Ted Alan Stedman

If fall is in the air, Oktoberfest can’t be far behind.

The original Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany, began with a wedding and a surplus of beer. In October 1810, Crown Prince Ludwig of Bavaria declared a 16-day celebration in Munich to commemorate his marriage. And in the German spirit, there was plenty to celebrate with. In old Germany, fall was the time to drink up last season’s beer before the new brewing season started. This tough job spawned the popular Oktoberfest tradition celebrated in epic fashion each year in Munich, the largest beer festival in the world where some 7 million people convene and consume about 7 million liters of beer.

But this side of the Pond isn’t left high and dry. Oktoberfest has blossomed throughout the United States, including these 10 exceptional American incarnations offering a lot more than beer, sauerkraut and oompah.

Boston, Massachusetts

Yeah, Beantown takes its beers seriously. So seriously that the odes to Oktoberfest actually begin in September (Septemberfest?). Enterprising suds quaffers who’ve not yet seen their fill at the earlier Samuel Adams Oktoberfest and Boylston Schul-Verein Oktoberfest can belly up at the Harpoon Brewery Oktoberfest (Oct. 3, 4), hosted by the largest craft brewery in the region. Besides great beer, three stages of live German oompa bands and the infamous chicken dance await revelers. And finally there’s the Harvard Square Oktoberfest (Oct. 12), a single-day event playing homage to the best of German culture with international foods highlighting the ethnic diversity in this area of Boston. Bavarian brews, music, parades and crafts round out this year’s 29th annual event.

Charlotte, North Carolina

Held at Memorial Stadium, the Charlotte Oktoberfest (Sept. 27) is a specialty beer lover’s paradise, with at least 82 breweries and locally made homebrews offering "unlimited" samples of over 300 craft beers (translation: admission price covers all sampling). For its 10th season, organizers have scheduled a killer entertainment line-up that includes bands Southern Culture on the Skids, Sons of Ralph and U-Phonik.

Cincinnati, Ohio

North America’s largest Oktoberfest takes over downtown Cincinnati during the Oktoberfest-Zinzinnati, (Sept. 20, 21 ). Held since ‘76, the outdoor festival attracts a half-million revelers annually, including many repeats who’ve participated in past events like the World’s Largest Chicken Dance, a Guinness Book record at 48,000 dancers. Beaucoup beers, German music and celebratory frivolities? Natch. But what draws huge praises is the massive culinary staging for grazing Germanophile gourmets. Past examples of gluttony tally 64,000 sauerkraut balls, 56,250 sausages and 1,875 pounds of German potato salad.

Snowbird_ski_vacation
Snowbird, Utah

The Snowbird Oktoberfest
(weekends through Oct. 5) is the most scenic celebration going, with a
beautiful ski resort location in gorgeous Little Cottonwood Canyon that
can’t be beat. All the Oktoberfest frivolities are here –- beer, brats,
strudel, music, entertainment, local vendors peddling crafts and wares.
But what’s truly unique is the ski area’s Tram Rides, Alpine Slide,
Bungee Trampoline, and ZipRider that carries adventurers 1,000 feet
down a suspended cable.

Frankenmuth, Michigan

With the nickname "Michigan’s Little Bavaria," it’s a given that the sights, sounds, taste and traditions of the original Munich Oktoberfest rule in Frankenmuth. They do. Experience the best of Bavarian heritage at the Frankenmuth Oktoberfest (Sept. 18-21), the first Oktoberfest outside of Munich to be sanctioned by the Parliament and the City of Munich. Look for German polka, contemporary local music and entertainment, rib-sticking German cooking and … ahh, wiener dog races. Sure, there’s beer — scores of German styles along with standard go-to brews that’ll appease any and all tastes.

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Conventions fill flights, hotels in Denver, Twin Cities

Monday, August 18th, 2008

Ontheroad
By Joe Brancatelli

Denver and Minneapolis fill up with politicos: You might as well
cross Denver and Minneapolis-St. Paul off your route maps for the next
few weeks. Why? The political conventions. The Democratic Party will
meet in Denver between August 25 and August 28. That means rooms will
fill up a few days before. The Republican Party will meet in the Twin
Cities between September 1 and September 4. Airline seats will also be
tight. And remember: Denver is an air hub for both United and Frontier
airlines. Minneapolis-St. Paul is the hub of Northwest Airlines.

THE AUTUMN OUTLOOK

Don’t worry about a shortage of seats: Too many so-called "experts" are bloviating about the impending seat shortage we’ll face when the airlines make their deep schedule cuts immediately after Labor Day. But the hard facts tell a completely different story. As the economy slows, airlines are actually having a harder time than ever filling the seats they are flying. According to the July statistics, traffic is falling both domestically and internationally. Southwest Airlines, for example, saw its load factor (the number of seats occupied) fall 5.1 points in July compared to July 2007. US Airways’ load factor dropped a more modest 1.1 points. At American Airlines, load factors at the mainline operation fell 2 points while American Eagle, the commuter airline, experienced a 6.5-point drop. Systemwide load factors dropped 2.3 points at United Airlines and its Pacific service suffered a 5.8-point decline. The passenger loads at JetBlue, Frontier, Northwest and Delta were essentially even year-over-year, but Midwest Airlines’ load factor fell 4.3 points and Continental Airlines‘ loads were down by 2.2 points. The only carrier to be in positive territory this July compared to last year was AirTran Airways. Its system grew by about 10 percent and its passenger traffic increased by 14 percent. That resulted in its load factor increasing to 89.2 percent compared to last July’s 86 percent.

IN THE LOBBY

The new hotels just keep on coming: Travel demand may be slowing, but the new-hotel pipeline continues to gush with new properties. Hilton has opened three new properties overseas, for example. Two are in Beijing — the 235-room Hilton Wangfujing Beijing and a 547-room Doubletree Beijing — and the 155-room Hilton Garden Inn is near London’s Luton Airport. … At home, InterContinental has opened two new properties: a 75-unit Candlewood Suites on the outskirts of downtown Sheridan, Wyoming, and a 92-room Hotel Indigo near Ontario Airport in California. … Hampton Inn opened more than a dozen new hotels last month. Most notable: a 105-room hotel at Oakland Airport and a 123-room property in downtown Saratoga Springs, New York. … Meanwhile, there’s also been another burst of hotels tied to the Starwood Preferred Guest program. There are newly built Sheraton hotels in St. Paul, Minnesota, and Quebec City, Canada, and another new aloft property in Charleston, South Carolina.

MILEAGE METER

Delta restores a SkyMiles perk: Delta Air Lines slapped restrictions on its unrestricted-level awards late last year. But now Delta is restoring last seat award availability, although the perk now comes at a very high price. Delta’s new frequent-flier program will has three levels: a heavily restricted tier that is almost identical to the old SkySaver category; a somewhat less-restricted tier that is priced at about the same as the old unrestricted SkyChoice awards; and the new last-seat-availability, unrestricted award level. The domestic prices: 60,000 miles for a coach seat; 100,000 miles for a first-class seat; and 90,000 miles in coach and 180,000 miles in first class to Hawaii. Internationally, an unrestricted business-class seat to Europe will cost 350,000 miles and an unrestricted business-class seat to Asia will cost 370,000 miles. At the same time, however, Continental Airlines has announced that it would put restrictions on EasyPass awards, the formerly unrestricted level of its OnePass award. Unless you are an elite members, all Continental award now come with capacity controls and other restrictions.

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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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Denver trades Old West image for urban cool

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

16thstreetmall2
By Ted Alan Stedman

I don’t know if  the 2008 DNC spotlight had something to do with it, but a major travel magazine’s Denver profile recently declared the Mile High City has finally shed its "cow town" image.

Well, thanks for that news flash. (Note to writer: you’re 15 years late).

Granted, Denver’s roots are its western heritage. But I’ve yet to hear a single "Yee-ha" or "Howdy pardner" since I gladly traded LA for Denver in ‘94. Spend some time downtown and I guarantee it’s the Vespa scooter brigades, tragically hip bike messengers, notebook-wielding urbanites, weekend revelers and too-fit-for-their-own-good Coloradans that’ll stick in your mind. The gleaming high-rises framed by the chiseled Rocky Mountains aren’t bad, either.

Denver visitor information gives the skinny on most of the sites and events visitors would want to check out, including action-packed downtown districts, cultural arts centers, pro sport facilities, recreational trails, Denver International Airport, the city’s public transportation, lodging and so on.

Here’s my take on what not to miss when you visit Denver:

Mount an urban safari. There are three pedestrian-friendly downtown districts that beg exploration in this compact city. Hit Larimer Square’s specialty boutiques, trendy restaurants and sidewalk cafés, along with great bars and a comedy club. Lower Downtown, or LoDo, is Denver’s boomtown, and you can put in miles exploring the renovated warehouses that have morphed into 90 brewpubs, sports bars, restaurants and coffeehouses, as well as Coors Field. Downtown’s centerpiece is the 16th Street Mall, a 16-block pedestrian and transit mall that’s the city’s retail core lined with shops, bars, eateries, bookstores, theaters, Denver Pavilions, the Tabor Center –- you name it. The mall’s shuttles are free, and so is the public Wi-Fi Zone.

Denvercoorsfield
Play ball
. Denver’s a gonzo sports town (having eight pro teams does that) that hosts pro games year-round. The ultra-modern Pepsi Center, right downtown, is best known as the home of the NBA Denver Nuggets and NHL Colorado Avalanche. Flanked by hip watering holes and being easily accessible, it’s also a workhorse event center that hosts world-class concerts –- and the 2008 Democratic National Convention. In LoDo, Coors Field is home to baseball’s Colorado Rockies, the National League Pennant winner in 2007. The stadium has the nostalgic feel of a classic ballpark mixed with state-of-the-art technology (and the Sand Lot Brewpub –- only one of its kind), and you won’t find a prettier ball field anywhere. On the edge of downtown, the sprawling INVESCO Field at Mile High is where the NFL’s Denver Broncos hang their hallowed helmets. Denver goes certifiably nuts when the Broncos play (a.k.a. "Broncomania"). And there’s no doubt when it’s game day, when the city is saturated in the team’s trademark orange, blue and white colors.

Find culture. The striking exterior of the Denver Art Museum is a hint of what lies within: exhibit after exhibit of amazing visual art presented in equally striking display space. Cruising DAM’s locale is just as cool. It’s part of the Denver Civic Center Cultural Complex, where world-class productions and premieres are staged regularly at The Denver Center for the Performing Arts, such as the Colorado Symphony Orchestra, Opera Colorado, Colorado Ballet, Best of Broadway productions and more. And those enormous figures towering outdoors? The giant-sized broom and dustpan (The Big Sweep), the humongous Scottish Calf and Cow, the gigantic sculpture known as Dancers, and monstrous bear leaning on the Colorado Convention Center? More examples of whimsical contemporary public art in Denver.

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Cool summer vacation spots for families

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

Steamboatkidsclub
By Drew Miller

There are so many fantastic family travel destinations in the U.S. to cool off when the heat starts to get you down. Here are a couple of my favorites:

Steamboat Springs, Colorado — For a great Western town with low off-season prices, you can’t beat Steamboat Springs. A ski town with a huge lodging base, Steamboat is a bargain in the summer, when the mountains and grasslands of the Yampa Valley shine emerald green. There is a family vibe in Steamboat and plenty to keep everyone busy. It’s a real ranching town, so it’s probably one of the best places to teach your kids (and maybe yourself!) to ride horses. Steamboat also offers excellent single-track mountain biking. The Gondola will take you to the top of the top of the mountain and you can ride back down, if you’re lazy like me! Steamboat also has a great program called Kids Adventure Club, which allows kids from 3-12 to enjoy each other’s company and age-appropriate activities in a safe and fun environment if you need a little parent time.

You can fly into Hayden and make the short drive by rental car to "Ski-town USA" or fly into Denver and enjoy a breathtaking 3-hour drive. There are lots of family-friendly condominiums — many of which are luxurious enough to make you want to move in permanently — and everyone in the family will enjoy the extra space!

ZipriderparkcityPark City, Utah — For tons of activities that will thrill grade-schoolers though high-schoolers check out Park City. Fly into Salt Lake City and after less than an hour’s drive, you’ll be nestled in-between 3 world class mountain resorts. Park City Mountain Resort has cornered the market on thrill attractions. Among their summer offerings are a zip-line adventure (flying through the air tethered to a small wire), an Alpine Slide (think bobsled, but on wheels) and an Alpine Coaster (like a roller coaster on a track).  Nearby Deer Valley delights with its free concert series where gourmet picnic baskets are available if you pre-order. They also have a great kids’ day program called Summer Adventure Camp. Last but not least, The Canyons offers many classic mountain activities like hiking, biking, fly-fishing, river rafting and disc golf. For the experience of a lifetime, consider booking a hot-air balloon trip.  The early morning will be one you’ll never forget!

Where am I heading to cool off this year?

We’re heading up to Maine, to Bar Harbor and Acadia National Park. We can’t wait to spend a few days in the beauty of the Northeast. We’ll go sailing, take a sea-kayak tour and spend lots of time hiking and riding horses among the secluded trails of Acadia. And we really can’t wait to enjoy the quaint town of Bar Harbor … and eat lobster.

Have a great summer!

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When he’s not at the Orbitz office, Drew Miller is an attentive dad, avid skier, and globe-trotting traveler.

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Best baseball stadiums for sports travel

Monday, March 31st, 2008

Wrigleyfield
By Jim Cohn

Baseball enthusiasts wanting to travel to see some of the great ballparks in the U.S. are wise to wait until summer. Sure, tickets are harder to come by than they are in April, but if you’ve ever been to Progressive Field in Cleveland (where it snowed last April), Wrigley Field, PNC Park in Pittsburgh or a long list of stadiums that stretch from Chicago to Boston in the spring, you run the risk of having to dress for a football game instead of a baseball game. And let’s face it — baseball is meant to be enjoyed in shorts and flip flops, complemented by a cold beverage. Not in a parka sipping hot chocolate. 

Sports travel continues to gain in popularity, and traveling to see one, if not a number of classic baseball stadiums is certainly a terrific focal point of a vacation. So where to go? There’s not enough space to hit all of the great ballparks, but here some of my favorites, in no particular order:

Wrigley Field, Chicago. This is an absolute must for any baseball fan. In my opinion, there is no better place to see a baseball game, and if you go to Wrigley, try to take in a day game. Night games are fun but there’s something about the daytime atmosphere that adds to the Wrigley experience. It has a neighborhood atmosphere that is truly unique in sports today and impossible to replicate. From the manually operated scoreboard and jam-packed rooftops across the street to the myriad of bars and restaurants within blocks of the ballpark, some literally right across the street, you can arrive early and stay late and have a great time without ever leaving the Wrigleyville neighborhood. But Wrigley Field itself is the crown jewel, built in 1914 and the second oldest stadium in baseball. A new Harry Caray’s bar just opened across the street, Murphy’s is a popular hangout directly across from the bleachers and you’ve got to love the fans who spend hours on bordering Sheffield and Waveland Avenues with gloves in hand waiting for home run balls — both during batting practice and the game itself. Tip: If you’re looking for a party, sit in the bleachers. If you really want to watch the game, go for box seats. Parking is possibly the worst in sports, so take public transportation — the El stops right at Wrigley (about a 20-minute ride from most downtown Chicago hotels). And definitely bring your camera for this one. Even players will tell you when the sun is shining, there’s no better venue in baseball.

Fenway_park
Fenway Park, Boston.
Like Wrigley, a no-brainer, and tickets to see the World Champion Red Sox are just as hard to come by. Your best bet is to try to go during the week and see a less-popular team. Don’t try to go to a Yankees series unless you have the money to pay a steep ticket price. When the Sox are hot, as they’ve been in recent years, this is a very tough ticket. And once you get to Fenway you’ll see why. Built in 1912, it is the oldest stadium in baseball, edging out the Cubs’ Wrigley by two years. Like Wrigley, it has a manually operated scoreboard and urban neighborhood atmosphere that allows fans to be at a bar/restaurant right next door and walk steps to or from the ballpark. The concourse along Yawkey Way has been converted into a huge beer garden where you can literally hang out outside the brick walls to the park but still inside the fence. Like the ivy-covered walls at Wrigley, Fenway’s Green Monster is one of a kind, and the recently added seats atop baseball’s highest outfield wall are spectacular, although pricey. Do yourself a favor and spend some time walking around the ballpark to see the different views from different parts of the stadium.   

Orioleparkatcamdenyards
Oriole Park at Camden Yards, Baltimore
. The folks who designed Camden Yards were the first ones smart enough to realize how much baseball fans like tradition. Camden was the first "throw back" retro design when it opened in 1992. Since it was built, many have followed with similar design schemes, featuring brick exteriors and designs more reminiscent of the ’20s, ’30s and ’40s as opposed to the ’80s or ’90s. The Camden Yards complex also includes the Baltimore & Ohio Warehouse, which is the longest building on the East Coast. And some little-known trivia for baseball buffs — the stadium sits just a couple of blocks from the birthplace of Babe Ruth. This is a great ballpark, and there is not a bad seat in the house. Go to Wrigley or Fenway, and there’s a chance you can get stuck with an obstructed-view seat stuck behind a steel support beam in the grandstands or terrace reserved. The sight lines at Camden are perfect no matter where you are. There’s not the neighborhood atmosphere you have at Wrigley or Fenway, but Baltimore has done a great job of building up the area around the ballpark to make it fan friendly — and it is a must see if you can travel near the D.C./Baltimore area.

Coorsfield
Coors Field, Denver.
Talk about a Rocky Mountain High. It was worth the wait for the two years when the then expansion Rockies had to play in the Broncos Mile High Stadium. Coors Field is a postcard stadium, built along the lines of Camden and other parks, but with a perfect twist to fit the landscape of Denver and the neighboring Rocky Mountains, which are clearly visible in the backdrop beyond the outfield walls. Yes, it’s got an urban downtown setting along Blake Street, but if you’ve ever spent time in Denver and experienced some of the outdoor cafes and nearby downtown taverns, this is a terrific baseball setting in a great city. Coors Field is a combination of a modern stadium loaded with amenities, with the atmosphere of an old-time park. It even has a heating system under the field that melts snow the minute it hits the ground. Concession stands in the concourse are laid out so that a fan can walk 360 degrees around the stadium and never lose sight of the field. Rumor has it the ball flies farther in the higher altitude, so pick up some seats in the Rock Pile, the best bargain in baseball for as little as $4 per ticket, and maybe you’ll get a souvenir if someone really gets a hold of one –- like 500 feet.

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