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Articles Tagged ‘Paris’

Europe vacation: Finding family fun in Paris

Saturday, March 27th, 2010

By Patrick O’Neil

Over Bastille Day in July, my wife and I took our girls – then ages 6 and 8 — on a 10-day Europe vacation to Paris. We chose to stay in the 17th arrondissement because it was comfortable and near the food markets on Rue Cler. We found the kids had many more entertainment and play options than expected. We had great times at Champ du Mars, Tuileries, L’Orangerie, and Luxembourg gardens. Here are some photos of our Europe vacation with the kids.

Europe vacation

Bastille Day fireworks near Champ du Mars

 

Photographer captures passion of Paris

Friday, February 12th, 2010

By Elina Fuhrman

Kissing in ParisThere is something distinctively soulful and romantic about Paris. No matter how much I travel I find myself longing to be back in the City of Light. From the first time I wandered the Champs-Élysées on Valentine’s Day in 1993 until a recent visit in October, my heart cannot but leap at the sight of romance on every corner, embracing me like a long-lost love returned home. Each time I visit, I discover a new street, a new boutique or a new bistro, but I mainly like observing people. A hug, a laugh, an attitude can be illuminating.

I still can’t decide whether kissing in public is a French thing, or just something you feel like doing more of in France. Either way, passion comes easy no matter where you stroll, whether along the Seine that winds through the heart of the city, or beneath its arches and monuments — like awnings to the brightness that drenches the city, even on a rainy day.

I feel passion in everything in Paris. Passion for beauty, passion for style, passion for food. People just love this city and I can really see what they love about it. But mostly I see how living life’s everyday moments to its fullest creates a vibe of its own. Paris is full of these spirits and all of its spaces and coveted places are just a stage for the art of living.

The photographs I chose are simply pictures I like. I hope they inspire you to travel to Paris and discover its beauty on your own. And if you end up falling in love with the city, pick up a camera and look through its lens.

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Elina Fuhrman is an intrepid traveler based in Los Angeles. She grew up in Russia but knew before she was 10  years old that she would spend her life exploring the world.  She is now a contributing editor to Travelgirl and JEZEBEL magazines. Her work has appeared on CNN, in The New York Times, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Conde Nast Traveler, InStyle and other publications.  Fuhrman’s photos often accompany her stories. To see more, visit her website www.elinafuhrman.com.

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.

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.