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Articles Tagged ‘Heathrow airport’

American Airlines adds frequent-flier fee

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

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

LOBBY LIFE

More interesting hotels in interesting places:
Notwithstanding the softening in the market, new, renovated and
reflagged properties in the pipeline continue to open with breathtaking
speed. In Dallas, for example, the former National Bank and SPG
building has been opened as The Joule. The 129-room hotel’s
most notable feature: a rooftop, cantilevered pool that hangs over the
building. The hotel is part of the Starwood Luxury Collection. …
Speaking of Starwood, the old Sheraton Atlanta at Colony Square has
been transformed into the W Atlanta-Midtown. The property has 466 rooms and typical frivolous flourishes familiar to W guests.

In Chicago, the old City Centre hotel has been reborn as the Doubletree Chicago
after a $21 million renovation. The 500-room property’s public areas
aren’t totally done, but it’s not a total loss: There is an Einstein’s
Bagel shop at street level. … In New York, the city’s overpriced
lodging landscape gets two new competitors. An old standby across from
Lincoln Center, the Empire, has been renovated and reopened with 413 rooms. And the newly built, 24-story Holiday Inn-Manhattan
has opened in the Chelsea neighborhood. … And nearly three years after
Hurricane Katrina devastated the Mississippi Gulf Coast, the old
Gulfport Beachfront Hotel has reopened as the Courtyard by Marriott Gulfport. The property now has 148 rooms

AIRPORT REPORT

BA finalizes schedule for its Heathrow T5 move: British Airways
is still recovering from the disastrous opening of Terminal 5 at
London/Heathrow in late March. But it passed its next test, when
flights from New York and Phoenix moved on June 5. According to a new
schedule posted by the airline on its Web site, most of the rest of its
Heathrow service will switch to T5 by the end of the year.
Washington/Dulles, Chicago/O’Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth and Toronto
flights, for example, move to the new facility on September 17.

Two new airport hotels of note: a 320-room Crowne Plaza has opened
at Changi Airport in Singapore. The property is connected to Terminal 3
by covered walkways. And a 168-room Holiday Inn has opened at Accra
Airport in Ghana. The 7-story property is newly built. … The Z Market
has opened at Dallas/Fort Worth near Gate 33 at Terminal B. The
operation is being touted as a combination convenience store and
upmarket deli. It sells take-out food created by Tim Love, best known
for his Fort Worth restaurants Lonesome Dove, Duce and Love Shack. … In
the midst of the cutbacks at Alaska/Horizon, there is an interesting
new route to report: a daily nonstop between Billings, Montana’s
largest city, and Helena, the state capital.

MILES & POINTS

American adds a fee for almost all AAdvantage Awards:
Effective June 21, the "free" award ticket is essentially dead at American Airlines. That’s when the carrier imposes a $5 "processing"
fee for claiming an American AAdvantage award ticket online. Only
Executive Platinum members are exempt. (If you claim a ticket by phone,
the cost is $20.) The airline claims that the online fee is being
imposed to offset the cost of technology upgrades. Meanwhile, American
is also bumping up the cost of many award seats. Most increases are
modest, in the 5,000-10,000-mile range, although a few premium
international awards as up as much as 20,000 miles. The mileage changes
are effective on October 1. … Porter Airlines, which flies to the
United States from a hub at Toronto’s City Island Airport, has launched
the VIPorter frequent flyer program.

NEED TO KNOW

Why NyLon matters: There’s lots of fallout on the New-York London route.
All three all-business airlines on the so-called NyLon run have now
folded (Maxjet last December, Eos in April, SilverJet last week). American Airlines is dumping its New York/Kennedy-London/Stansted route and the airfares paid on the remaining service from the British (Virgin Atlantic and British Airways) and U.S. carriers (American, Delta and Continental) are dropping. Of course, if you don’t travel
between New York and London, you might wonder what all the hubbub is
about. Well, here’s what it is about: According to Britain’s civil
aviation authorities, about 1.4 million passengers flew between the
United States and the United Kingdom in March. Almost 25 percent of
them (349,000) flew between New York’s two airports (Kennedy and
Newark) and London’s three facilities (Heathrow, Gatwick and Luton).
With that amount of market concentration, it’s no wonder everyone
obsesses over NyLon.

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.

On the Road with Joe Brancatelli

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

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

INTERNATIONAL ITINERARY: Get ready for the Heathrow land rush

British Airways opens Terminal Five at London/Heathrow Airport on March 27, just two days before the U.S.-E.U. Open Skies treaty becomes effective. The result? An unprecedented land rush at Heathrow. As British Airways begins a month-long effort to consolidate most of its flights at Terminal 5, U.S. carriers once shut out of Heathrow will pile in.

Beginning on March 29, Continental will launch Heathrow flights from its Newark and Houston/Intercontinental hubs; Delta Air Lines will add flights from hubs in Atlanta and New York’s Kennedy Airport; US Airways will launch from Philadelphia; and Northwest will fly from its Detroit and Minneapolis/St. Paul hubs.

Meanwhile, Air France and Delta will code-share on new service between Los Angeles and Heathrow, and United Airlines will add new flights from its Denver hub. But that’s not all. By the end of April, American Airlines will shift its Dallas/Fort Worth and Raleigh-Durham flights from London/Gatwick. Also moving from Gatwick to Heathrow: BA’s DFW and Houston flights. And in case you didn’t have enough Heathrow options, Northwest says it will launch flights from Seattle in June. Meanwhile, back at Heathrow’s Terminal 5, British Airways says its flights from Miami, Los Angeles and San Francisco move on that March 27 opening day. The other BA flights from the United States will switch to Terminal 5 from Terminal 4 on April 30.

FARE FINDER: Bargains and bank-breaking destinations this month
The best bargains on the route map late this month are likely to be in Florida and the Caribbean. Now that the weather is finally warming up nationwide, U.S. travelers begin abandoning their dreams of flights to sunnier climes. Right after the Easter and Passover holidays, watch for falling airfares to Florida and the Caribbean. And pay attention to hotel and resort deals as hoteliers offer room-rate reductions and value-added packages to keep their properties full. The best bargains will last until about late June.

The last of the winter fare sales to Europe (and especially London) will dominate the international landscape during the next few weeks. Prices won’t be as low as they were in dreary February, of course. And the airlines may not give much notice of sales — the lowest prices may only be available for purchase a day or two at a time–but the bargains will be the best you’ll see until November. And beware of promotions for an "April in Paris" getaway. The lyrics of the popular song notwithstanding, it’s actually chilly and rainy in the City of Light in April. But that doesn’t stop some travel packagers from selling the melodic fantasy of "chestnuts in blossom" and "holiday tables under the trees."

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