What the new normal will be like for future travellers staying in hotels
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What the new normal will be like for future travellers staying in hotels
Masked upwardly, cleaned out and mandated to avert contact wherever possible, luxury hotel brands are finding new ways to limited the personal touch.
The andBeyond Phinda Homestead in South Africa. (Photo: andBeyond)
08 Jun 2022 06:30AM (Updated: 09 Jul 2022 07:23AM)
As countries slowly emerge from lockdown, international travel is taking on a distinctly different veneer that few would have imagined other than in movies. Temperature checks, face up masks and health declarations are already expected to be de rigueur at every check-in indicate. When fifty-fifty screaming on a roller coaster is discouraged, you know that vacations will no longer exist the same again.
On ane hand, travellers are looking forward to be greeted by the same cheery smiles and fastidious service (hello, perfect 63ºC eggs and frothy hot chocolate for breakfast just the way you want it) at destinations that spark joy and wonder.
On the other paw, nosotros know that guest interaction protocols are being rewritten, and we volition exist whisked away to our rooms by staff garbed in personal protective equipment faster than anyone can say "Good afternoon, sir/madam".
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Hotel groups that CNA Luxury spoke to – including Vi Senses, Aman, Belmond, and the luxury properties under the Hilton, Marriott and Accor groups – all acknowledge that these will be the new normal: Regular disinfection of common spaces and rooms, gentle reminders on safe distancing throughout the property, and the utilise of contactless mobile technology equally much as possible for safety's sake. No more flipping through beautiful menus, pausing by the corridors for convivial chats with staff that have become friends, and lingering at buffet tables to admire gorgeous platters of food. Fifty-fifty buffets might become a affair of the past.
Merely these hotels are too banking on their trump cards to retain loyal customers and entice new ones: Expansive grounds surrounded by spectacular scenery, spacious suites and villas, and well-trained staff with an instinct for circumspect yet discreet service.
Those in remote destinations that require a hop, skip, canvas, flying and drive already have natural safe distancing features in their favour, not to mention a low room count made upwards of standalone villas, oftentimes with in-room facilities such as pools and spa treatment rooms.
In Bhutan, which has only 47 coronavirus cases and zero deaths, travellers can traipse across the kingdom'southward western and cardinal valleys to bask in nature at its finest while staying at Vi Senses Bhutan's five lodges. The lack of crowds in this circuit of dreamscapes makes information technology alluring; its latest lodges, Gangtey and Bumthang, accept only eight suites and 1 two-bedroom villa each, and immerse guests in the little-visited Phobjikha Valley and a tranquil pine grove.
With this winning formula for attracting the well-heeled, what remains is to clinch the highest of safety and cleanliness standards, while offering more intimate dining and living settings, and an enhanced plan of well-being.
Aman has created new private dining experiences across all its properties, including garden dining in Shanghai's Amanyangyun. Roland Fasel, Aman's Chief Operating Officer, said: "Travellers want to exist away from the crowds, which means an increasing demand for private dining, villas, experiences in nature and wellness."
"Travellers desire to be away from the crowds, which means an increasing demand for individual dining, villas, experiences in nature and wellness." – Roland Fasel
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INCREASED EMPHASIS ON WELLBEING AND SUSTAINABILITY
For brands that already emphasise well-being, travellers will discover an even deeper dive into experiences for transformation inside and without.
"Luxury and aspirational leisure will shift towards purposeful tourism centred on green choices, personal growth and transformation, and well-being for the individual and families," said Ho Renyung, Vice-President of Banyan Tree's Brand HQ division.
Safari holidays with travel companies that have a strong sustainability and conservation ethos such as andBeyond and Singita would see the same commitment to these causes, even as the lodges increment the frequency of cleaning in high-contact areas and discreetly add hand sanitation amenities in common areas and the rooms.
Private dining and wellness classes for small groups remain standard inclusions in stay packages while game-viewing vehicles will transport guests in reduced groups of up to 4 or six.
andBeyond plans to keep its drink stops on game drives, simply with "private snacks offered in environmentally friendly packaging", said its CEO, Joss Kent, adding that "all our lodges are carefully designed to ensure maximum privacy, the layout of our lodges by default allows for effective social distancing, and our lodge activities are staggered and then that guests never get together in shared spaces in large numbers".
THE USE OF ANTI-MICROBIAL MATERIALS
Renowned architect and designer Jean-Michel Gathy, whose iconic works include the soon-to-be-opened Aman New York, Cheval Blanc Randheli in the Maldives, and Singapore's Marina Bay Sands, believes that hereafter hotel designs will include anti-microbial surfaces on everything from lobbies to side tables, auto-cleaning metals in the bathrooms, and special resins on the floors and walls that repel viruses.
The pandemic has also brought a heightened awareness of how the travel industry plays a crucial role in environmental protection, conservation and sustainability. The hotels of tomorrow demand to be designed with a purpose, believes Bill Bensley, the man behind aesthetically memorable hotels such as Intercontinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort and JW Marriot Phu Quoc Emerald Bay Resort & Spa, in addition to his own Shinta Mani and Bensley Collection properties.
Despite the temporary closure of his Cambodian luxury tented camp Shinta Mani Wild, Bensley has continued to fund Wild animals Alliance rangers in their mission to protect the nearby S Cardamom National Park from poachers and illegal logging.
His latest project Worldwild China, dubbed the "luxury human zoo", upends conventional zoo concepts by dedicating a whopping 95 per cent of its ii,000 acres to animals roaming free and five per cent for guests.
"This (pandemic) situation has fabricated more people aware of how of import hotels with an environmental and/or social slant are. Having been impacted past this mess, guests will demand that kind of consciousness from luxury hotels. I think people volition travel less, just they will besides be choosier with where they get, and seek a return to nature, with lots of space and dazzler."
"I think people will travel less, but they will also be choosier with where they go, and seek a render to nature, with lots of space and beauty." – Bill Bensley
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Source: https://cnalifestyle.channelnewsasia.com/experiences/after-pandemic-travel-hotel-new-normal-251341
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