Orbitz Blog

Articles Tagged ‘Hotel’

Top 10 summer vacation destinations

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Hotels If you're thinking about planning your summer vacation, here's good news: You'll find cheaper hotel rates this year compared to 2008 in some of the most popular summer vacation destinations.

Orbitz compared rates for hotel rooms booked on its site for stays from June 1 through August 31, 2009, to rates during the same period in 2008 and found savings of as much as 40% for 2009 summer vacations.

Mexico vacations can be cheaper — with Cancun hotels running 19% less this year than in 2008 and Riviera Maya hotels about 9% cheaper. Las Vegas hotels are nearly 42% cheaper this summer, and Chicago hotels are about 24% cheaper. Even a Hawaii vacation can cost less, with average daily rates for Oahu hotels about 23% less than last year.

Check out the full list:

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Top 10 budget spring break vacation destinations

Friday, March 6th, 2009

Spring-break-vacation It's that time of year when everyone is getting ready for their spring break vacations. If you haven't booked your hotel yet, don't worry. There are plenty of last-minute deals to be found.

In fact, whether you're looking for a Caribbean vacation or want to try a new Las Vegas hotel, rates in many popular spring break vacation destinations are significantly lower this year than they were last year.

Orbitz compared average daily hotel rates for 2009 versus 2008 during the popular spring break vacation period of March 1 – April 15. We found 2009 rates in key destinations to be anywhere from 34% to 72% cheaper. The top 10 locations — both for 3-star and 4-star hotels — are listed below.

Here are the spring break trips with the biggest year-over-year savings on 3-star hotels:

Destination Avg. Daily Rate 2009 Savings over 2008
1. Barbados $89 72%
2. Banff, Canada $56 55%
3. Las Vegas, NV $48 54%
4. Puerto Rico $106 52%
5. Taos, NM $70 51%
6. Dominican Republic    $151 48%
7. Winter Park, CO $84 48%
8. Whistler, BC $160 36%
9. St. Lucia $197 34%
10. Turks & Caicos $254 34%

For a bit more luxury, these spring break trips show the biggest year-over-year savings on 4-star hotels:

Destination Avg. Daily Rate 2009 Savings over 2008
1. Puerto Rico $130 61%
2. Nassau, Bahamas $121 55%
3. Bermuda $137 54%
4. Barbados $328 53%
5. St. Kitts $148 52%
6. Biloxi, MS    $91 46%
7. Jamaica $137 45%
8. Las Vegas $87 43%
9. Jackson Hole, WY $169 39%
10. Crested Butte, CO $250 39%

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New Los Angeles hotels, entertainment spice up a California vacation

Friday, February 13th, 2009

Los angeles hotels By Lena Katz

Recession whah-huh? That isn’t a word that crosses the lips of restaurateurs, nightlife impresarios and hoteliers in SoCal. No matter what else might happen, people expect the newest, best and the most out of a Southern California vacation — and that’s what they’re getting.

The current “biggest, best-est thing” in Los Angeles shop-dine-tainment news is L.A. Live, a downtown development that brings together big-name restaurants, entertainment venues, hotels and residences.

If anything could truly be the heart of the sprawled-out, mysterious downtown district, this would be it.  STAPLES Center pre-dates LA Live, but it also justifies its existence: it was built to provide food, drink and fun for stadium crowds pre- and post-event. Key venues include the reinvented Conga Room, the GRAMMY Museum, Nokia Theater and Lucky Strike Lanes. Restaurants range from Fleming’s to Rock ‘n Fish to Trader Vic’s (coming soon).

Doors open at new Los Angeles Hotels

The setting couldn’t be more different than the Laguna original, but the new Montage Beverly Hills is nonetheless a fitting follow-up to its sister hotel. From the grandiose marble-outfitted lobby to the elegant hush-hushed bar to the distinctive dining venues, this hotel impresses without ever crossing into ostentatious.

If you like to be in the center of the biggest splash, opt to stay at SLS Hotel at Beverly Hills, a new luxury Los Angeles hotel located on one of Beverly Hills’ most trafficked thoroughfares. It’s owned by nightlife impresario Sam Nazarian. Famed for his tough velvet ropes and celeb-packed night spots, Nazarian seems to be going for a similar vibe at his first-ever hotel.

Over on Sunset, a former ‘80s rocker hangout has turned into the artsy-chic Andaz. Don’t ask what the name means — just know it’s under the Hyatt umbrella, and still a Hyatt hotel underneath the glass walls and art installations.

There are new players on the L.A. restaurant and bar scene, too. Check back next week for that story.

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Lena Katz lives on the Left Coast and writes about tropical islands, beach clubs and food, but her heart belongs to NYC.

Family vacation: Water parks offer close-to-home getaways

Monday, January 19th, 2009

Family-vacation-2 By Samantha Chapnick

While a family vacation may sound great right about now, those who can't get away do have a reasonable alternative. A plethora of indoor water parks are ready to give staycationers a warm-weather escape without a trip through airport security.

Most waterparks have these features:
•    A 50,000- to 175,000-square-foot space, with air kept at either 82 or 84 degrees
•    A big main interactive “playground” that is topped by a bucket that dumps water every 7-25 minutes; includes smaller slides, stairs, rope climbs, water cannons.
•    Water games like basketball or giant lily-pad leap frogging across the water
•    Small or large wave pools
•    Kid-friendly hot tubs, (lower temperature, bigger)
•    Zero entry pools, slides for younger children
•    Chaise lounges and tables
•    Plenty for kids to do when they are finished with the water, including arcades. The resorts and larger parks also have shows, kid spas and indoor theme parks.

Most are concentrated in the Northeast where the weather gets coldest and water is relatively plentiful. Elsewhere, the Wisconsin Dells, which bills itself as the "Waterpark Capital of America," may possibly be the most densely populated area for indoor water parks, with other tourist-centric areas rapidly nipping at its heels including Niagra Falls, Minnesota and Canada. Although there isn’t one good site listing all the water parks in the U.S., I’ve made a map of indoor water parks I found for this article.

The three biggest names in indoor water parks are Great Wolf, CocoKey and Kalahari. 

Great Wolf offers an immersive resort experience that is great for a family vacation over a short or long weekend. The main advantages include:
•    The rustic Northwoods is the theme here, and all the rooms are made to follow this theme. My daughter loved her “Wolf’s Den” cabin that included a “log cabin” style room within our larger room with a bunk bed and her own TV.
•    Disney-esque resort experience: The entire lodge is focused on kids, with themed characters and decor, a kid spa (ice-cream pedicures and manicures were popular in our family), an animal-filled tree that comes to life in the lobby (and has a show), an arcade, and a do-anytime electronic scavenger hunt requiring kids to wander around hunting out clues and picking up rewards with a magic wand.
•    Only Great Wolf guests are allowed to use the water park to keep from overcrowding.
•    Filled with kid-friendly restaurants and an ice cream parlor.

Places like the CocoKey chain are ideal for a day trip or overnight visit. Its theme is 100% tropical Key West, with colorful signage and murals making the Caribbean just a glance and some imagination away. Where Great Wolf has gone all out for kids, CocoKey is more about balancing the comfort of adults and kids. They partner with a value-priced attached hotel that offers packages that include water park tickets.

Family-vacation-1 The one we stayed at in Waterbury, CT, was absolutely perfect for a quick inexpensive weekend from New York. The water park is just big enough to keep the kids busy for a few hours, but not so big that I was nervous about losing them. The Holiday Inn Waterbury far beat our expectations. After a $7 million renovation, the rooms were impeccably clean, the service was better and friendlier than what we’ve had at several five-star hotels, and there were features most adults would have ignored that the kids adored — especially the indoor balconies.

CocoKey features:
•    VERY affordable option; can either stay at attached value-priced hotels, or just get a day pass
•    Locals can get annual passes
•    Better for younger kids (under 10), much more manageable for parents
•    Hotels often offer Kids Eat Free (2 kids per paying adults)

Kalahari is the Vegas of the water park world. With 173,000 square feet, it offers amenities few others can, for a family vacation with some truly unique elements:

•    Private cabanas with flat-screen TVs
•    A Boogie Boarding “school”
•    A super-fast raft uphill water rollercoaster
•    Swimming lessons
•    Bigger rides like the “Swahili Swirl” — a giant toilet bowl-type ride that rotates you in a bowl until it sucks the tube and you down into the colder waters below
•    Animal-safari themed rooms and activities

Related Orbitz resources:

Samantha Chapnick is a New York writer who scours international destinations looking for what hasn't been found.

Mall of America vacation offers much more than shopping

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

By Amy Carey

The Minneapolis area, with its renowned Mall of America®, is an easy place to cure — or feed — retail fever. For travelers who want a pure shopping experience, there are plenty of hotels close to the mall. Or, visitors can choose to stay in one of the downtown Minneapolis hotels and take advantage of the city’s restaurants and cultural attractions.

Mall of america
Mall of America® is located in Bloomington, Minnesota — only 15
minutes from downtown Minneapolis and St. Paul — and an easy
light-rail ride from the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. As one of the most visited tourist destinations in the world, Mall of America® features something for everyone, with approximately 520 stores, 50 restaurants and attractions galore. Here are some highlights.

Nickelodeon Universe: This number-one entertainment spot for kids in the middle of Mall of America® features seven acres of unique attractions and entertainment. This is a great place for children to have fun during the cold winter months.

Indoor Playground: The nation’s largest indoor amusement park features more than 24 remarkable rides and the largest underground aquarium in the country, and it was named “Best Shark Encounter” by the Discovery Channel. Kids of all ages may enjoy building towers or another unique creations at Lego®.

Fashion: The mall is home to the kings of couture, like Armani, Chanel, Prada, Gucci, Fendi, and the Spades — both Kate and Jack. Well-heeled clientele can stroll over to Manolo Blahnik and Jimmy Choo for fashionable footwear. (Shopaholics will appreciate the extra savings that comes from having no sales tax on shoes or clothing!)

Dining: Visitors will not go hungry with the more than 50 restaurants offering adult and kid-friendly choices. Find food-court favorites as well as sit-down restaurants, like Rainforest Café, Wolfgang Puck Express and Napa Valley Grill.

Hotels near Mall of America®

  • Le Bourget Aero Suites a French-inspired, all-suite hotel. It offers free shuttle service to the Mall of America — just a quick seven-minute ride from this Bloomington hotel.
  • For those who want a mid-economy hotel across the street from Mall of America®, Ramada Mall of America-Airport is a good choice. The hotel recently completed a renovation of all of its guestrooms, and guests can enjoy the pool after a day of shopping.
  • Sofitel offers luxury and comfort away from home, with large modern European rooms that offer walk-in rain showers, plasma televisions and broadband Internet access.

Minneapolis hotels
Downtown Minneapolis hotels

Downtown Minneapolis offers great shopping, dining, accommodations and activities. Visitors can explore the historic State and Orpheum theaters, visit the Guthrie Theater or the Walker Art Center, or catch the latest event at the Target Center or Metrodome.

  • Hyatt Regency Minneapolis has great rates for a luxury hotel. The hotel is located on Nicollet Mall, in the heart of downtown and features a heated indoor pool, two whirlpools and sauna.
  • Graves 601 is a sleek new hotel in the heart of the theater, financial and warehouse district, in the new Block E complex. The hotel features specially designed beds with etched glass headboards. Cosmos Restaurant and Lounge and Minneapolis’ hottest new nightclub, Infinity, are nearby.
  • Radisson Plaza Hotel has a central downtown location within walking distance of shopping, dining, sports, theater and nightlife, and (very important during the winter months) it is directly connected to the city’s climate controlled skyway system.

Related Orbitz resources:

Amy Carey is a Market Manager at Orbitz and has many fond childhood memories of Mall of America®. She traveled all the way from Chicago to find her prom dress at Mall of America®.

New Miami hotel ups ante with boutique chic

Monday, December 15th, 2008

Miami hotels A new Miami hotel has arrived on the scene — upping the ante in the competition for cool.

EPIC Hotel is in downtown Miami, where the Miami River meets Biscayne Bay. It takes full advantage of its waterfront location, with a private marina and rooms that offer dazzling views of the water and the city.

EPIC, with 411 rooms and suites, bills itself as a cool boutique hotel with the amenities of a resort. And the list of amenities is long: Private balconies in all rooms, flatscreen TVs, hydrotherapy air bath tubs, Wi-Fi and a complimentary, 24-hour fitness center to name a few. Plus, the hotel features a full-service spa, and two outdoor pools with a 15,000-square-foot wraparound pool deck and private cabanas — all on the hotel’s 16th floor, with sweeping views.

EPIC has services and amenities for guests of all kinds. Business travelers can take advantage of the hotel’s 24-hour business center, full concierge and business assistant services. Families will appreciate that in-room safety kits (with outlet covers, etc.) and cribs are available during their stay, and that the hotel offers lists of kid-friendly activities and referrals for accredited babysitters. And if you’re a pet lover, bring your furry friend along. EPIC is a pet-friendly hotel and even offers some services and amenities for pets.

The EPIC Hotel’s downtown location makes it convenient to business and leisure destinations. And if you don’t want to make your own transportation arrangements, the hotel offers complimentary car service to Brickell Business District and South Beach.

More Miami hotel news:

It’s worth mentioning that the Fontainebleu Miami Beach has reopened after a $1 billion — yes, billion — renovation. What does that kind of money buy? The hotel now has 1,500 rooms and suites — including two new all-suite towers — and each room features a personal 20" iMac computer. There’s a 40,000-square-foot spa, restaurants by internationally-recognized chefs including Alfred Portale of New York’s Gotham Bar and Grill, and the pool area includes six pools and ultra-luxe private cabanas (Wi-Fi, flatscreen TV, butler service).

Related Orbitz resources:

Delta adds flights to Europe, Asia, Africa

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008

flights
By Joe Brancatelli

ROUTE MAP

Another Huge International Expansion by Delta: You have to wonder what Delta Air Lines sees that no one else does in these depressing economic times. Even granting that Delta is now mixing and matching Delta and Northwest aircraft and hubs, the airline’s announcement it would add more than a dozen new international routes next year seems extremely aggressive. It’ll be intriguing to watch to see if this tranche of the expansion is an air bridge too far. Across the Pacific, Delta will link its Salt Lake City hub to Northwest’s Tokyo  hub for the first time. Delta will also launch a New York /Kennedy-Tokyo  route, which essentially reinstates the JFK-Tokyo run that Northwest dropped several years ago. Across the Atlantic, Delta will add flights from its Kennedy hub to Valencia, Spain; Gothenburg, Sweden and Prague. Also new: a seasonal Kennedy-Zurich flight. But the big boost comes in Africa, where Delta will add new flights from its Atlanta hub to Nairobi, Kenya; Cape Town, South Africa; Monrovia, Liberia; Abuja, Nigeria; Luanda, Angola; and Malabo, Equatorial Guinea. The airline is also adding a Kennedy-Lagos nonstop and an Atlanta-Johannesburg nonstop. This is all atop the previously announced new flights to Paris from Pittsburgh and Raleigh-Durham. But some routes are being cut, however. Northwest’s Seattle-London/Heathrow flights are gone effective January 9, just six months after the launch. Also going next year: Northwest’s Detroit-Paris  and Detroit-Osaka nonstops.

HOTEL HOT SHEET

Guess What? More Hotels Are Opening: The sharp fall in business travel is driving down occupancy rates and nightly rates at hotels around the world. But the hotel industry, which has a huge number of new properties in the pipeline, has no choice but to keep pumping out new locations. This week’s notables include an 1,190-room Hilton on the San Diego  waterfront and the 92-room Four Points across the street from the Philadelphia Convention Center. Meanwhile, Hampton Inn has opened a 108-room branch in Mexico City, located in a 19th-century landmark overlooking the Centro Historico. And Shangri-La has opened a 316-room hotel in Tainan, Taiwan. … On the reflagging front, the 222-room Beachside Resort in Key West is adding the Marriott brand beginning on December 15. It was once known as the Holiday Inn, but do not confuse it with the current Holiday Inn in Key West, which is located across North Roosevelt Boulevard from the Beachside.

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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.

Related Orbitz resources:

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.

Caribbean vacation: New, renovated resorts boast fabulous amenities

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

By Lena Katz

Thinking about planning a Caribbean vacation for the holidays? With hotels opening all over the islands, increased flights to popular destinations, and a slew of promos and specials designed for tighter budgets, the Caribbean is as tempting as ever … and possibly not as out-of-range as you think.

Caribbean vacation Right in time for Christmas crowds, St. Lucia’s Calabash Cove opens with a Far East-inspired flourish. Eschewing typical Caribbean décor for an exotic Indonesian aesthetic, this property shoots right to the top of our list because of its “Swim Up” suites — not over-ocean as you’d see in the Maldives, but instead poolside, which is more prosaic but a whole lot safer in the hurricane-prone Caribbean. Big spenders can separate themselves from the splish-splash of the common pool area by booking a cottage suite with its own private pool.

As always, much to report on new developments in all-inclusive resorts: This fall couples-only Sandals Resorts debuted Sandals Resorts PGA Golf School in Jamaica, plus over-the-top Millionaire Suites at Sandals Regency La Toc in St. Lucia. At Beaches Turks & Caicos Resort, classic Mediterranean glamour meets Caribbean chic — guests can photo-op it up at the Italian Village, a newly unveiled $125 million addition, and then splash down at the expanded Pirate’s Island Waterpark.

Grenada’s lovely LaSource has all sorts of sophisticated soirees and festivities on the holiday calendar for its grownup (age 16+)  clientele. Practically every day from December 21 onward brings a special program. Christmas morning kicks off with an eggnog party on the beach (only in the Caribbean!), and December 31 sees out the old year with a cocktail party, a poolside gala, fireworks and live music.

The Riu Palace Tropical Bay, an impressive reinvention of a classic all-inclusive Negril resort, opens in early December after a $25 million renovation that took four months to complete. Also in Jamaica, Couples Tower Isle (formerly Couples Ocho Rios) has deferred its original December 2008 reopening date to March 2009…but, to keep the anticipation level high, has revealed that property enhancements include a spa with 10 treatment rooms, a floating dock, two new swimming pools (one with a swim-up bar), and a new juice bar.

The Dominican Republic will attain true “Golfers’ Paradise” status when the Golden Bear Lodge & Spa opens in early December. Inspired and helmed by the legendary Jack Nicklaus, this property overlooks the Las Iguanas and Punta Espada golf courses. And to entice its greens-minded guests, it’s offering 2-for-1 greens fees at Punta Espada with a five-night stay. Book by December 15.

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Top chefs join forces at Vegas’ Taste America

Sunday, October 19th, 2008

Lasvegashotels1
By E.C. Gladstone

Las Vegas is no stranger to superlatives — tallest, fastest, most expensive, most lavish — but when it comes to our restaurant scene, it seems as if all the praise isn’t nearly enough. Paying tribute to Vegas as America’s fastest growing fine dining destination, The James Beard Foundation (arguably the most prestigious organization in America’s gourmet world) has organized the Taste America: Weekend of Winners event for October 24-25.

This is not just going to be one of those sample-station parties. This is the kind of thing you want to get on the treadmill to prepare for! No less than six of Las Vegas’ JBF-winning chefs will be participating, along with other top Vegas chefs, and a dozen additional JBF winners from across the country. Here’s the line-up:

Friday, October 24

Seven "signature dinners" with very special menus will take place at some of the Strip’s finest restaurants, including WYNN‘s Alex (Chef Alessandro Stratta) and Bartolotta Ristorante Di Mare (Chef Paul Bartolotta), The Venetian ‘s Valentino (Chef Luciano Pellegrini), The Palazzo‘s Restaurant Charlie (Chef Charlie Trotter), MGM Grand‘s Fiamma (Chef Carlos Buscaglia with Fiamma NYC’s Fabio Trabocchi), Rao’s at Caesars Palace (Chef Carla Pelligrino), and Simon at Palms Place (Chef Kerry Simon with Dressing Room’s Michel Nischan).

Lasvegashotels2
There will also be a special event at Bellagio‘s Tuscany Kitchen demonstration suite this evening, where you’ll see Picasso’s Chef Julian Serrano, Sensi’s Chef Martin Heierling and Bellagio pastry chef Jean-Phillipe Maury create your dinner in front of you!

Are these bargain meals? Not really, but they promise to be one-of-a-kind culinary adventures (many of the menus are already posted online, and Chef Pellegrini, whose Valentino dinner will feature rare white truffles, tells me it’s actually  "a very, very good deal!" (cocktail receptions, wine pairings, tax and gratuities are included). And if you enjoy the process of cooking as well, the Tuscany Kitchen experience will be unforgettable (The worst part about it is you’ll only be able to experience one!)

Saturday, October 25

If you haven’t booked your flight and hotel room yet, the Taste America Gala at the Palazzo promises to be even more momentous. All the aforementioned Chefs will either be participating or attending, alongside many more JBF-recognized chefs from around the country such as Bobo’s Patric Connolly, Herbsaint’s Donald Link, and Jardiniere’s Traci Des Jardins. The chefs will be preparing a variety of four course dinners in selected teams; A cocktail reception, wine pairings, dessert reception and silent & live auctions will round out this incredible evening.

Earlier in the day, true foodies will also want to check out a free panel discussion featuring Chef Bartolotta and JBF-awarded critics Alan Richman and Jeffrey Steingarten, 10 a.m. at the University of Nevada (801 E. Flamingo Rd.). And at 4 p.m., amazing patissier François Payard will give a chocolate demonstration at his Caesars Palace boite ($20). You’ll find me at both.

And come Sunday? I suggest you join me at one of our finest spas (Venetian‘s Canyon Ranch? Qua at Caesars? Drift at Palms Place? Hard to decide…) for a little recovery pampering.

Insider Tip: Vegas may pretend to be a fantasy land, but the hotels know times are tight—so expect to start seeing some amazing deals on rooms very soon. Four star hotels for well under a hundred a night? Believe it.

Related Orbitz resources:

Las Vegas hotels

E.C. Gladstone is a former editor for AOLVegas, and interviews top
Strip entertainers, restaurateurs, moguls and behind-the-scenes
players for VEGAS Magazine. Like many Las Vegans, he sleeps only when
absolutely necessary.