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Articles Tagged ‘San Jose hotels’

Smaller-city hotel options for business travel

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

The Four Points by Sheraton San Rafael offers value for business travel and an ideal location near San Francisco and Napa
By Lena Katz

I’m all for cities — the bigger, the better. But the problem with obvious big-city business destinations (Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New York, etc.) is that they’re pretty much guaranteed the corporate dollar, and the hotels sting business travelers accordingly every time. Smaller cities, on the other hand, are just like the Avis ad campaign: they try harder. The hotels are better value, the service can be nicer, and they just seem happier to have you. They may not be in the heart of the action, but it’s usually just a few minutes away. Here are a few recently opened properties that I’d recommend to meeting planners or solo road warriors.

Instead of a San Francisco hotel, try …

Four Points by Sheraton, San Rafael

The City by the Bay has a permanent reputation for being hip, fun, and ghastly expensive no matter what time of year. In business trip terms, this means $400 a night for a Lombard/downtown/Union Square hotel with excellent views of crazy, sign-wielding Armageddon-preaching homeless people. Awesome! Next time, take yourself and your meeting a half-hour north to this new luxe business hotel in a busy tech-powered mini-city. A reputable brand in all locations, Sheraton has done a particularly good job with this property, even installing a fine dining restaurant. Plus the location has the unspoken but major secondary benefit of being about 15 minutes from Napa, land of 600 wineries.

Instead of a San Jose hotel, try …

Intercontinental Clement Monterey

This hotel is a Zenned-out haven in the middle one of the most chaotic tourist traps in California. Has to be seen to be believed. There you are, in the middle of Cannery Row, with people and cars and shops coming from every direction — walk in the doors of the Clement, and zzzzing! Sophistication. Style. Quiet!  Typically San Jose is the meeting/convention destination, while Carmel/Pebble Beach golf resorts draw the incentive/retreat traffic…but the Clement is something of a switch-hitter, with the spa/lounge features of a Pebble Creek resort, and the meeting/corporate capabilities of a Silicon Valley conventioneer hotel. The fact that it’s within walking distance of the Aquarium and the Taste of Monterey wine attraction and about sixty zillion shops and restaurants doesn’t hurt.

Instead of Manhattan hotels, try …

Nu Hotel Brooklyn

Okay, I must be honest. I loooove Manhattan and want to marry it. However that city is not a cheap date. So I urge all regular NYC travelers to check out this "nu" hotel in a neighboring borough. It’s boutique-style, with chic loft-inspired style and a fun, friendly vibe. You actually might strike up a conversation with the people having cocktails next to you in the bar and end up having dinner together. Probably in Manhattan, having taken the subway in for the evening, but that is not the point! What is, is that when you’ve had your big night out, you can come back to your cozy Nu Friends Suite (the name of the mid-size room, NOT my encouragement to take your night to the next level, what were you thinking?) and get 3 hours of sleep for a fraction of what you’d pay for it in Chelsea.

Instead of Phoenix hotels, try …

Intercontinental Montelucia, Scottsdale

Oh, who are we kidding? Anyone who can go to Scottsdale over Phoenix, does. Here’s a new hotel (rather, re-flagged, was formerly La Posada) to check out next time you’re lucky enough to get a corporate-sponsored Scottsdale retreat. The Montelucia (say it with a lisp; it’s Spanish-inspired, not Mexican). Having been renovated and re-imagined to the tune of a cool $250 million, this property marries Moorish architectural influences and super-luxe self-contained desert resort style. Five pools, seven restaurant/bar offerings, a destination spa spanning nearly 3000 square feet … and it opens later this fall, so you’ll be the first to get a look at it.

Related Orbitz resources:

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

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Rock, mariachi highlight end of summer festival season

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

Sanjosemariachifestival_2
By Lena Katz

The streets are alive with the sound of music. So are the amusement parks, the beaches, the patios and every other conceivable venue — not just in the cities, but in resorts and small towns from Bar Harbor in the northeast to Bal Harbour in South Florida, and from San Diego, Calif., to Vancouver, B.C.

Amusement park chain Six Flags has made many preteen summers a whole lot squealier, what with its nationwide concert series featuring headliners like Flo Rida, Good Charlotte and Katy Perry. Upcoming dates include Good Charlotte at Six Flags Great Adventure in New Jersey on August 21, Flo Rida at the same park on August 22, and Katy Perry at Six Flags Fiesta Texas in San Antonio on September 1.

Now that Burning Man’s gone mainstream and Tiesto/BT/Crystal Method are playing regularly for Las Vegas club crowds, it falls on other people to carry the progressive electronica torch. Minitek, a New York-based festival of "electronic music and innovation," has that evolutionary artist spirit in spades. Its lineup includes M.A.N.D.Y., Audion (AKA Matthew Dear) and several other Euro-flavored DJs, all of whom would be too cool for school if they weren’t such obvious turntable geeks. The program also promises groundbreaking art, design and technology by "pioneers" who are "shaping the future." September 12-14, (night venue only) Penn Plaza Pavilion, New York City. Weekend passes: $80 + fees.

Around L.A.

As Southern California’s summer reaches its final few weeks, annual festivals encourage its citizens to come out and play. In the trendy East Side enclave of Silverlake/Echo Park,
The 28th annual Sunset Junction takes over nine city blocks and four stages. The music lineup includes Broken Social Scene, Cold War Kids, Kinky and the Black Keys. The tragically hip entertainment roster gets authentic street fair ballast, in the form of carnival midway games, food booths and craft vendors.  August 23-24, 3700-4300 Sunset Blvd and 4000-4200 Santa Monica Blvd.

Just north of the LA county line, old-school surfers, families and displaced islanders come together for a laid-back multi-generational celebration on the beach. The Aloha Beach Festival, held just west of the historic pier in Ventura, combines Hawaiian culture and athletics (i.e. an outrigger canoe race) with Southern California heritage and humor (as seen in the Old Guys Rule BZ Surf Contest — there are no winners, only many honorable mentions). This free festival takes place from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on August 23-24.

World Music in the S.F. Bay & the Southwest

You’ve swooned to Shakira and watched countless samba/salsa/meringue renditions on the dance contest reality shows — but how much consideration have you ever given to that south-of-the-border soundtrack staple, el mariachi? Probably not too much. However, this under-respected subgenre a festival of its very own, complete with attending musical stars, luxury hotel sponsors, and a schedule of cultural activities. Now in its 17th year, the San Jose International Mariachi Festival takes place September 26-28 in California. Headliners include Pepe Aguilar, Los Tigres del Norte and Linda Rondstadt. This is the largest festival of its kind, and organizers see it not only as a world music showcase, but an important cultural heritage event — fittingly hosted by the United States’ fourth-largest consumer Latino market.

Speaking of world music … New Mexico is prepping to host the 4th annual !Globalquerque! world music festival on September 19-20, on the banks of the Rio Grande. Historic Southwestern setting notwithstanding, the event is inclusive to all cultures and musical genres: its program runs the gamut from Hawaiian rock (HAPA) to Sephardic/Ladino Israeli gypsy (Mor Karbasi) to Quebecois acoustic folk (Genticorum). Wonderfully diverse lineup, a full slate of educational and cultural side programs, and a limited number of mostly veggie food vendors. Venue: National Hispanic Cultural Center, Albuquerque, NM.

Related Orbitz resources:

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

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