TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Wednesday, 24th December 2025
Page 2296

Mark Meaney takes charge as Conrad Centennial Singapore GM

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HILTON Worldwide has appointed Mark Meaney as general manager of Conrad Centennial Singapore.

Moving to Singapore for the first time to assume his new role, Meaney was director of operations since July 2011 and director of F&B from February 2010 to June 2011 at Conrad Tokyo. Prior to his Japan appointments, he was the resident manager of the Mount Juliet Conrad, in Kilkenny, Ireland.

Born in Ireland, Meaney has held several management positions in Japan, the US and Ireland in his 17-year hospitality career. He is a graduate from the Shannon College of Hotel Management in Ireland with First Class Honours and a Higher Diploma in International Hotel Management.

Peggy Fang Roe is Marriott’s new chief sales & marketing officer

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MARRIOTT International recently announced the appointment of Peggy Fang Roe as chief sales and marketing officer for Asia-Pacific.

In her new role, Fang Roe leads Marriott in growing the group’s brand and hotel portfolio in Asia-Pacific.

Reporting to Simon Cooper, president and MD of Asia-Pacific, she is a key member of the group’s regional leadership team, in charge of orchestrating its sales, marketing, revenue management, public relations and e-commerce functions to drive business growth.

She was most recently the group’s VP of global operations, where she spent the last two years leading a global, strategic initiative called Future of Meetings.

Her previous roles with the group include VP of brand management, where she led the redesign and repositioning of the TownePlace Suites brand and supported the Marriott Executive Apartments brand; and director of marketing, where she developed marketing strategies for select service and extended stay brands.

Prior to joining Marriott, she worked for General Electric in marketing, product development and operations. She also had stints with Amazon.com and Homestead.com in Silicon Valley during the early stages of the Internet.

Get connected for free at Crown hotels

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ALL Crown Hotels in Melbourne and Perth will now offer free Wi-Fi Internet access to all guests.

Guests who book accommodation or a spa treatment at any of the five properties – Crown Towers, Metropol Melbourne, Metropol Perth, Promenade Melbourne and Promenade Perth – will be able to log on and enjoy complimentary access for up to two devices.

McAuley rises, Buckingham joins, as Fairmont reorganises

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A RE-ORGANISATION of Toronto-based Fairmont Holdings, which now sprouts a freshly registered corporate entity and logo, FRHI Hotels & Resorts, sees Aiden McAuley rising as FRHI’s senior vice president-operations Europe, based in Zurich, and Wayne Buckingham joining as senior vice president-Asia, based in Singapore.

McAuley is now responsible for FRHI Hotels & Resorts’ 30 hotels in Europe across the three brands, Raffles, Fairmont and Swissôtel. McAuley, who assumed his role December 1, was managing director of Fairmont Singapore Swissôtel The Stamford Singapore and regional vice president-Asia/Pacific of Swissôtel Hotels & Resorts. His successor in Singapore, Tom Meyer, will be on board in January.

Buckingham, McAuley’s counterpart for the Asia region, is understood to be joining in January. He served as senior EVP at Thai Charoen Corp TCC Land Leisure and was a former long-time Starwood Hotels & Resorts’ senior executive.

The new organisation is understood to be region-driven than brand-driven, sharing the same system for sales, HR and IT, among others. Meinhard Huck, who championed Swissôtel Hotels & Resorts as president, based in Zurich, retired in October. It is not clear yet if the roles of president-Raffles Hotels & Resorts, held by Peter French, based in Singapore, and president, Fairmont Hotels & Resorts, held by Jennifer Fox, officially based in Toronto, will continue in the future, given the move to operate the three brands under the single FRHI entity. FRHI is to issue an official statement soon.

Shangri-La’s second Yangon property to open in 2017

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SHANGRI-LA International Hotel Management on Saturday broke ground for its second hotel in Yangon, Myanmar.

Located on the banks of Kandawgyi Lake, the 350-room Lakeside Shangri-La slated for opening in 2017 is near the new Shangri-La Residences, Yangon, which is also managed by Shangri-La.

The property will feature three restaurants, two bars, meeting and convention space, a health club, and an outdoor swimming pool. Guests will also have access to Kandawgyi Nature Park and Yangon Zoological Gardens surrounding the lake.

The Hong Kong-based hotel group has been operating in Myanmar since 1996 when it opened the 334-room Traders Hotel, Yangon.

Flooding in Malaysian east coast not impacting tours

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TOUR operators said business has not been affected by the heavy rains and resulting flooding that struck the east coast states of Peninsular Malaysia and Johor since last week.

Raaj Navaratnaa, general manager of Johor-based New Asia Holiday Tours & Travel, said sightseeing tours are going on as usual. However, the number of outdoor activities such as camping had dropped due to the rain.

Similarly, Manfred Kurz, managing director of Diethelm Travel Malaysia, said tours to the east coast states of Kelantan, Terengganu and Pahang are going on as usual.

“We divert and use another road when it is necessary, but we don’t miss out on any of the tourism spots. We have an action plan in place if the roads get closed due to floods. There have been no cancellations from guests,” said Kurz.

Alex Lee, CEO, Ping Anchorage Travel & Tours, also said there are no changes to his tours in the east coast, as main tourist sites such as the highlands and beach resorts are not affected by the floods.

“However, we did receive cancellations, from locals and foreign tourists, due to recent reports of the floods. Forward bookings for this month and January are a bit slow but we believe things will pick up again in February.”

Every year, the beach resorts off Terengganu such as Redang, Perhentian and Kapas are closed from November until February or early March.

Poland reaches out to Indian trade with online programme

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POLAND Tourism is developing an online specialist programme for Indian travel consultants, set to launch in March 2014.

“The online specialist programme will educate Indian tour operators about the various highlights and attractions of our destination. It will also provide details of key tour operators in Poland which are already strong in the Asian markets,” said Emilia Kubik, project leader, department of marketing planning with the NTO.

“It will be a live platform so information on various tourism-related developments will be updated real-time and be connected to an online social platform,” Kubik added.

The programme will be followed by a series of roadshows scheduled in New Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru in April 2014.

The NTO is also mulling the development of a special section on its global website dedicated to the Indian market by year-end.

“We will also start a series of print and online advertising campaigns this month through to June 2014. The campaign, Come and Find Your Story, will try to boost online traffic to our website. We have also planned a number of fam trips for tour operators, media and film producers,” said Kubik.

Additionally, a newsletter will be introduced to Indian travel trade partners focusing on Warsaw and Krakow.

Poland recorded 30,000 Indian overnights in 2012.

Madam Tussauds arrives in Singapore’s Sentosa next year

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SINGAPORE will welcome the debut of wax museum Madame Tussauds at Sentosa’s Imbiah Lookout in the second half of 2014.

The attraction, according to local broadsheet The Straits Times, will be located next to the existing Images of Singapore (IOS) exhibit.

Madame Tussauds owner Merlin Entertainments said the two attractions will be packaged together to showcase Singapore’s history and culture. The global attractions operator will invest over S$20 million (US$16 million) into the project, which also covers a revamp of IOS.

Merlin’s divisional director, Meike Schulze, was quoted as saying: “Sentosa is such a vibrant place, and it’s a great implemented and embedded leisure attraction already. And that is just creating the perfect home for us.”

Apart from the wax figurines of famous singers and actresses like Katy Perry, Jay Chou and Kate Winslet, Sentosa Development Corp chief executive, Mike Barclay, was reported as saying that the museum will include famous people who “have had a hand in shaping Singapore” as well.

The ticket price for both attractions will be around S$30.

US Airways leaves Star Alliance to join Oneworld

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US AIRWAYS will join Oneworld with effect from March 31, 2014, following yesterday’s completion of its merger with the alliance’s founding member, American Airlines.

All its regional affiliates operating under the US Airways Express brand will also transit to Oneworld at the same time. Their transition will follow immediately upon their exit from Star Alliance, with the final flights on March 30, 2014.

Until the full integration of American Airlines and US Airways – which will see the combined airline retaining the American Airlines name – US Airways and its regional carriers will operate as Oneworld affiliate members, under the American umbrella.

During the transition period, American Airlines and US Airways will maintain their current loyalty programmes.

The tie-up of both airlines was initially blocked by a lawsuit filed by the US Justice Department on fears that domestic routes would be concentrated in the hands of the two heavyweights, but was recently greenlighted after both agreed to make concessions to ensure more competitiveness in the US market (TTG Asia e-Daily, November 14, 2013).

Jogjakarta curbs hotel supply

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JOGJAKARTA will need a thorough re-evaluation of its ratio of the number of hotel rooms to public space, said its governor Sultan Hamengku Buwono X, expressing support for the municipal government’s recent decision to impose a moratorium on new hotels.

The governor said: “With the additional 34 new (star- and non-star-rated) hotels (in the last couple of years), it is important to have a thorough study of the ratio of the number of available rooms to public space, so that it does not take away what rightfully belongs to the travelling public.”

Mayor of Jogjakarta, Haryadi Suyuti, earlier imposed a city regulation to stop issuing new hotel licences as of January 1, 2014. The moratorium is valid until December 31, 2016 and is applied only to the Jogjakarta municipality of this city province. However, investors who obtain new licences before January 1, 2014 will be able to continue with construction, while existing hotels are allowed expansion.

Haryadi was quoted by the local media as saying: “Jogjakarta already has quite a lot of hotels. This moratorium is temporary and we shall evaluate again later.”

According to the municipality’s data, there are currently 37 star-rated hotels and 370 non-star accommodations.

Horwath HTL director, Pacific Asia, Matt Gebbie, said out of the six major cities in Java-Bali (Jakarta, Bali, Bandung, Surabaya, Semarang, Jogjakarta/Solo), Jogjakarta and Solo are the most balanced in terms of supply and demand, allowing occupancy and rates to increase in the last couple of years and next year.

Gebbie said the destination could apply a moratorium policy, but “more than dictating what to do the (regional government) can have an educated look at where the gaps in the market are”, such as whether there are too many hotels in the lower tier and not enough in another.