TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Thursday, 5th February 2026
Page 2280

Manila’s Makati City witnesses deluge in rooms

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THE room boom in Makati City in Manila continues unabated across different segments in the hotel sector, and travel consultants are crossing their fingers that it will translate into lower room rates.

Scheduled openings this year include the 141-suite Discovery Primea on Ayala Avenue, where opening rates will start at 10,000 pesos (US$ 224) for the lowest category,  and the 189-room Tune Hotel (TTG Asia e-Daily, October 10, 2013), also on Ayala Avenue.

A 401-key Worldhotels hotel and a 324-room Mövenpick hotel, both in the Makati Avenue area, are expected within the next two years. The 169-room Y2 Residence Hotel opened earlier this month off Makati Avenue.

Travel experts hope that rates will decrease, relative to cities like Bangkok that Manila is often compared to. “If you compare our rates to those in Bangkok for three-, four-, and five-star hotels, their rates are generally lower,” said Patty Chiong, general manager, Guatson International Travel & Tour.

However, Marlene Jante, president, Queenspoint Travel & Tours, was more concerned about the disparity between contracted rates for offline agencies and OTAs, as well as the progressive crowding in the city.

“For you to have more tourists in areas like Makati, there should also be a more friendly environment…less pollution, less traffic,” she said.

Sheraton scales up in Australia and the Pacific

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STARWOOD Hotels & Resorts has announced plans to open six new hotels in Australia and the Pacific this year under the Sheraton brand name.

Sean Hunt, regional vice president, Pacific, Starwood Hotels & Resorts, said: “We are embarking on a milestone year for Starwood’s growth and development in the Pacific.

“I am confident that the strength of our brands, especially Sheraton, will fulfil robust demand for upper-scale hospitality offerings in Australia, the region’s mature market, as well as in emerging resort isles – providing a range of excellent facilities for both business and leisure travellers.”

The new hotels to open this year are: Sheraton Melbourne Hotel; Four Points by Sheraton Brisbane; Sheraton Resort & Spa, Tokoriki Island, Fiji; Sheraton New Caledonia Deva Resort & Spa; Sheraton Samoa Aggie Grey’s Resort; and Sheraton Samoa Aggie Grey’s Hotel.

Sheraton Melbourne’s opening heralds the return of the brand after nearly 10 years’ absence, and will offer guests 174 rooms, a signature restaurant, Terrace Bar, heated indoor pool, business centre and more than 650m2 in meeting space.

The 246-key Four Points by Sheraton Brisbane is set to debut in March, with meeting rooms, a fully equipped gym, all-day dining restaurant, casual café/bar and high-speed Internet access.

In the Pacific, the Sheraton Resort & Spa, Tokoriki Island, Fiji will be launched in March. It has 101 guestrooms, an outdoor pool, a “Gold Class” theatre for up to 50 guests, three F&B outlets, a spa and state-of-the-art functions spaces.

Newly built Sheraton New Caledonia Deva Resort & Spa will open in July featuring 180 rooms, two large meeting spaces, and a house reef for diving and snorkelling.

Starwood will bring the Sheraton brand to Samoa this year through the recently signed management agreement for the 140-key Sheraton Samoa Aggie Grey’s Resort and 198-room Sheraton Samoa Aggie Grey’s Hotel.

Both will offer large outdoor fantasy pools, restaurants and bars and meeting spaces.

PATA to publish Young Asian Traveller report

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PATA is calling for responses from young Asian travellers for a study on their demographic, which has caught the attention of the international travel trade as Asian economies boom.

The survey is open to travellers between 16 and 35 years of age from Brunei, Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Laos, Macau, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Taipei, Thailand and Vietnam.

Answers will be used in a new report called The Rise of the Young Asian Traveller, scheduled to be launched in April.

All participants will be entered into a prize draw for a two-night stay at Aloft Hotel Sukhumvit 11 Bangkok, among others.

The survey is available here in English, Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Thai, and will run until March 14.

SilverNeedle pads up Australian network with Ballarat hotel

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SILVERNEEDLE Hospitality will add Country Comfort Ballarat to its Australian network from March 1, marking the company’s eighth property in the state of Victoria.

Country Comfort Ballarat is a 25-key hotel situated in the former gold mining town of Ballarat, minutes away from the city centre.

It features two function rooms, a restaurant, bar and free Wi-Fi in all guestrooms.

Carlson Rezidor unveils 2 new global hotel brands

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CARLSON Rezidor Hotel Group this week launched two new international hotel brands – the technology-focused Radisson Red and luxury Quorvus Collection.

The hotel company hopes to position Radisson Red within a new industry category, Lifestyle Select, denoting an upscale, select service concept that recognises the growing importance of technology in the daily lives of travellers.

Part of the Radisson Red focus on technology will extend to a mobile app allowing guests to skip reception for check-in, place orders for food or taxis, manage their guest preferences and in-room environment through their devices.

Carlson Rezidor will roll out the brand simultaneously in the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Asia-Pacific in 2015.

The second brand, Quorvus Collection, is a portfolio of curated luxury, five-star hotels that promises to offer a distinctive experience. Each will feature a list of services based on six core lifestyle elements: Wellness, Replenishment, Style, Inspiration, Entertainment and Connectivity.

The first members of the Quorvus Collection will be unveiled in 2Q2014, according to a Carlson Rezidor media statement.

Trudy Rautio, president and CEO of Carlson Rezidor, called the two new brands “the first manifestations” of Carlson’s Vision 20/20 that aims to improve guest experiences through technological innovations and guest service.

Radisson Red and Quorvus Collection join Carlson Rezidor’s stable of brands that include Radisson Blu, Radisson, Park Plaza, Park Inn by Radisson, and Country Inns & Suites by Carlson.

Onyx picks regional GM for Ozo Hotels Sri Lanka

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ONYX Hospitality Group has appointed Damian Ball regional general manager to oversee three upcoming Ozo properties in Sri Lanka.

These include Ozo Colombo (to open in 1Q2014), Ozo Kandy (2014) and Ozo Galle (2016).

Ball brings with him more than 21 years of hospitality experience across the Asia-Pacific region, including stints in his native Australia, the Philippines, the Maldives and Qatar.

FEH appoints area general manager for Orchard

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FAR East Hospitality (FEH) has named Melvin Lim area general manager, Orchard cluster to oversee the performance of FEH’s hotels in the Orchard district.

This includes The Quincy Hotel, Orchard Parade Hotel and The Elizabeth Hotel.

Lim has over 20 years of experience in the hospitality industry under his belt and was most recently vice president of an international hotel group.

Sofitel Bangkok Sukhumvit announces new GM

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William Haandrikman

SOFITEL Bangkok Sukhumvit has appointed William Haandrikman as general manager, effectively immediately.

The Dutch national brings to Sofitel’s flagship property in South-east Asia 21 years of experience in the hospitality industry. He was previously general manager of Sofitel Shanghai Jing’an Huamin.

Haandrikman joined Accor in 1992 and has since worked at the senior management level in eight countries across three continents.

India tightens flight safety standards with surprise aircraft check

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THE Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has formed technical teams in Mumbai and New Delhi airports to perform random safety checks on aircraft belonging to foreign airlines, imposing penalties for lapses.

Checks will cover aircraft hardware and mandatory documents such as the Air Operating Certificate and cabin crew licences, according to a checklist based on ICAO recommendations.

Penalties range from warning the airline to comply within a specified time frame and grounding the aircraft to denying the airline the right to fly into India for major safety violations.

The move comes after the US’ Federal Aviation Administration downgraded India’s aviation safety ranking two weeks ago (TTG Asia e-Daily, February 4, 2014).

Rajendra Churiwala, director-east, IATA Agents Association of India, said: “Safety checks are quite normal, it is the intensity of such checks that could determine what kind of impact it will have on international carriers flying to India.”

Ariana Afghan Airlines, All Nippon Airways and SriLankan Airlines were most recently penalised for safety lapses, said a DGCA source.

Japan is most-improved country for Muslim-friendliness

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MALAYSIA may have taken the top spot as the best destination for Muslim travellers but Japan has demonstrated the most commitment to bettering its facilities for this market segment.

Singapore-based Muslim travel specialist Crescentrating yesterday released its annual ranking of destinations that cater best to the needs of Muslim travellers, which saw Malaysia in pole position again (TTG Asia e-Daily, January 21, 2013). Main criteria taken into account include the suitability of the destination for family holidays, service levels, Muslim-friendly facilities and marketing initiatives aimed at Muslim travellers.

Japan rose from 50th spot last year to 40th currently, showing the greatest improvement of all countries surveyed.

Singapore’s The Business Times  quoted Crescentrating chief executive, Fazal Bahardeen, as saying: “Japan has definitely been the most active destination during the last year to focus on this segment of travellers”

“It has launched a number of initiatives – from awareness programmes to the local industry to releasing the Muslim travel guide to Japan (TTG Asia e-Daily, March 19, 2013).”

Crescentrating’s release also noted that a number of airports in Japan now offer halal food and prayer rooms.

This year’s survey ranked 60 destinations, 10 more than in 2013.

For countries within the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), the United Arab Emirates took second place followed by Turkey, Indonesia and Saudi Arabia to round up the top five.

Singapore leads as the number one halal friendly destination outside the OIC for the second year running. South Africa, Thailand, the UK and Bosnia & Herzegovina made up the rest of the top five.