TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Friday, 19th December 2025
Page 276

A 50 and Fabulous Special: ibis

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ibis Styles Ambassador Seoul Myeongdong, South Korea

ibis is celebrating its 50th anniversary with a big milestone: opening its doors in its 80th country by the end of this year, with the exciting launch of ibis Styles Reykjavik Muli in Iceland.

It was back in the early 1970s that Accor’s co-founders, Paul Dubrule and Gérard Pélisson created the ibis brand. After the successful launch of Novotel in 1967, Dubrule and Pelisson realised they had to stay close to a young and modest clientele. Travel had become more affordable to a wider demographic in the late 60s, so the co-founders agreed that Accor should offer pleasant hotels within everyone’s reach – these hotels would be simple yet equipped with every comfort. The first ibis hotel opened in 1974, in Bordeaux, France.

Fast forward to 1976, and ibis was already spreading its wings to 15 properties across France, the Netherlands, and Switzerland. Since then, it has been a whirlwind journey of growth and expansion, turning ibis into one of the go-to names in the world of economy hotels.

Today, ibis proudly boasts a whopping 2,500 hotels under its belt across three fantastic brands – ibis, ibis Styles, and ibis budget.

Throughout its 50 years of hospitality, ibis has racked up some pretty cool milestones. Remember the 15-minute guarantee programme they rolled out in 1997? If something wasn’t quite right with the room and it wasn’t fixed within 15 minutes, the room fee was waived. Talk about service with a smile.

Then, there was that genius campaign in the early 2000s where guests got to name their price for the second night’s stay. Who wouldn’t want to take advantage of that sweet deal? And let’s not forget about Sweet Bed by ibis, introduced in 2012. With a bed so comfy, it’s practically like sleeping on a cloud – ibis knows the importance of a good night’s sleep for every traveller’s journey.

Simmons: each ibis hotel delivers the same high level of hospitality and efficiency

In 2H2024, ibis is rolling out a whole new brand culture programme, global employee ambassadorship, and brand campaign. They are doubling down on what makes them so special: their people. After all, ibis isn’t just a hotel chain – it is a community of Heartists (Heart + Artist) who pour their hearts into making every guest’s stay memorable.

Garth Simmons, chief operating officer of Accor’s premium, midscale & economy division in Asia, shared: “When I joined Accor in 2007, I vividly remember being impressed by ibis’ commitment to delivering both comfort and value, which is exactly what today’s savvy travellers are looking for.

“From the first moment I stepped into an ibis hotel, the vibrancy and energy were palpable. The design was modern and inviting, underscoring our commitment to innovation in the economy segment.

“No matter the location, each ibis hotel delivers the same high level of hospitality and efficiency, ensuring a seamless experience. This consistency is something we pride ourselves on and is a testament to our dedicated teams who work tirelessly to maintain these standards.”

He added: “Our ambition is to continue leading the economy segment by offering high-quality, affordable hotels across the world. To do this, we must continue responding to the evolving needs of consumers.”

Living Tours joins ITB China to promote new tourist experiences in Portugal, Spain

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Living Tours, a Portuguese tour operator, participated for the first time in ITB China (May 27 to 29) in Shanghai, joining the delegation of Portuguese companies in the China Roadshow (May 29 to 31), with stops in Beijing, Guangzhou, and Macau.

The leading tour operator in Portugal and Spain kicked off a week entirely dedicated to major industry events in China to promote new tours and activities in Portugal and Spain, with updates for those planning to travel to cities like Lisbon, Barcelona, Madrid, Ibiza, or Palma de Mallorca.

Living Tours hopes to attract more Chinese visitors to Portugal and Spain with new tours and activities

While this debut at ITB China marks a new phase, the connection to the Asian market had already been established via a partnership with Trip.com earlier this year to enhance the range of activities and experiences available in Portuguese territory for Chinese travellers.

For Rui Terroso, CEO of Living Tours, visiting the major industry events in China is “essential for the strategy of promoting the destinations we represent, especially due to the opportunity to strengthen our proximity with local partners and customers”.

The partnership with Trip.com helped to make Living Tours’ presence in China even more indispensable, he added.

For ITB China, Living Tours shared updates on new routes and private activities in Portuguese territories, where the company now offers its own resources, fleets and teams in cities like Lisboa, Fátima, Nazaré, Óbidos, Arrábida or Comporta to provide experiences focused on gastronomic and wine tours.

Additionally, turn-key tours can be experienced in Spain’s cities – Barcelona, Madrid or Andaluzia, while in the Balearic Islands region, specifically in Ibiza and Palma de Mallorca, the focus is on the nature and adventure tourism with activities like hot air balloon flights, visits to sea caves and coasteering. Also available are boat parties with international DJs, entertainment teams and swimming in the Mediterranean Sea.

Vietjet adds four new international routes in June

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Vietjet is set to launch four new non-stop services from Vietnam’s Phu Quoc Island to Taichung and Kaohsiung, and from Hanoi to Melbourne and Sydney in June.

The Phu Quoc-Taichung route will commence operations on June 13, offering thrice weekly service on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays, while the Kaohsiung-Phu Quoc route will be launched on June 14, operating four return flights per week on Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Sunday.

Vietjet will commence four new non-stop services from Vietnam to Taiwan and Australia in June

Offering flights linking Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, and Phu Quoc in Vietnam with major cities in Taiwan including Taipei, Taichung, and Kaohsiung, this brings the total of the airline’s Vietnam-Taiwan flight network to nine direct services.

Vietjet also bolsters connectivity between Vietnam and Australia with the launch of twice-weekly service from Hanoi to Melbourne, as well as the Hanoi-Sydney route, beginning in the first week of June.

Tickets for these routes are now available across all official Vietjet booking channels.

Explore more of Japan with Princess Cruises

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Princess Cruises will be extending its number of itineraries in Japan during the 2025-26 season, and will feature an expanded Japan season showcasing the region’s fall foliage, Mount Fuji, Kyoto and more before continuing to Singapore and South-east Asia.

From ancient temples and castles, to markets and gardens, cruisers experience the best way to see Japan aboard Diamond Princess with a new fall 2025 season offering 11 new voyages in addition, ranging in length from nine to 22 days, visiting 25 destinations throughout the Land of the Rising Sun, as well as stops in South Korea and Taiwan.

Diamond Princess will offer 11 new voyages in 2025, visiting 25 destinations throughout Japan

Following her extended Japan season, Diamond Princess will sail to Singapore on a 12-day South-east Asia and Japan cruise featuring Taipei (Keelung) and Hong Kong to kick off three roundtrip Singapore sailings from December 2025 to February 2026 including a 14-day Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam cruise; a 16-day Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam sailing; and a 14-day South-east Asia and Japan voyage from Singapore back to Tokyo (Yokohama) with late night More Ashore stays in both Hong Kong and Shimizu (for Mount Fuji).

For more information, visit Princess Cruises.

Glamp in style at Paya Beach Spa & Dive Resort

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Forward as one

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You have been with ASEAN Secretariat and are now with ASEAN Tourism Association (ASEANTA). What have the organisations achieved?
The establishment of the ASEAN Open Skies in 2010 is one key milestone, as it changed the landscape of South-east Asian aviation. I was involved in the process. Before, such matters were governed by bilateral agreements. With the new policy, it became easier for airlines to begin operations and ask for certain routes. It also led to the rise of LCCs, which encouraged regional travel.

The second milestone is the visa facilitation signed in 2002. It started with a framework that required ASEAN member states to push for visa facilitation based on bilateral agreements. Today, all member states are visa-free (for nationals), with the exception of between Malaysia and Myanmar.

These policies contribute massively to travel within South-east Asia, which was crucial during the pandemic. In 2022, intra-ASEAN travel rose to 50 per cent of total arrivals; usually it was 38 to 40 per cent.

I would also count the ASEAN Tourism Agreement as a third achievement. It pushes all member states to facilitate travel and undertake joint marketing. Along with this come the ASEAN tourism standard and mutual recognition arrangement for tourism professionals. However, the agreement may need another look, as an article within calls for no levies on travel within the region. Now, for different reasons, Bali and Malaysia have applied tourist taxes. I have raised this issue (at ASEAN Tourism Forum 2024) and asked that the agreement be revisited.

Has ASEAN reached its goal to be a single destination?
I think not quite. Joint marketing efforts are done from time to time, driven only by events or country-specific aims. Efforts are neither continuous nor periodically implemented and organised by the ASEAN Secretariat or the ASEAN marketing coordinator.

Yes, we see member states taking single country pavilions at international tradeshows, pitting against each other. How can the region do better?
One challenge is the lack of a single coordinator undertaking (full participation of ASEAN member states) in certain events, (resulting in) member states joining individually instead of as one ASEAN.

Another challenge is that each member state has a different capacity for participation.

There is actually (potential) to pool resources and establish a common area with a coordinator. When I was with the ASEAN Secretariat, we had a project from South Korea (that led all) 10 member states to participate in a travel fair as one ASEAN village, but each country was able to design their own booths.

As president of ASEANTA, what are your priorities now?
Firstly, we want to grow both inbound and outbound traffic. Secondly, apart from intra-ASEAN travel, we also need our neighbours, like India, China, Japan, South Korea and Australia, as source markets.

India has become a new big market for ASEAN, with recovery at 120 per cent (compared to pre-pandemic). However, seat capacity is an issue. Connectivity among member states with India is governed by bilateral agreements. Some, like Thailand, are running out of capacity. We are asking ASEAN to negotiate for ASEAN-India open skies.

With China, an ASEAN open skies policy exists, but recovery is slow. Besides being the last country to open after Covid, domestic travel has remained strong due to the government’s domestic promotions, easy access, language ease, and a familiar payment system. A way to speed up Chinese inbound recovery is for ASEAN to bring Chinese payment mechanisms into our region.

How would you like travel and tourism to look in the future?
Many rank-and-file jobs may be taken over by AI and robots in the future; driver-less buses and robot chefs, perhaps. However, human interaction will still be important and people will continue to travel. Tourism activities will accelerate, thanks to tech advancements, but people will no longer want to visit common places. New and unique destinations will be king.

Big plans for Bintan

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How has the recovery of tourism been doing so far this year?
We did slightly better in 2023 than 2022. Total arrivals in 2023 was 500,000, almost 60 per cent compared to pre-pandemic.

While arrivals are improving this year, it is not what we have expected. Many markets are still not fully revived. This year, we hope to close with a minimum of 700,000 arrivals.

What is hampering recovery?
The implementation of visa-on-arrival is an issue. Indonesia offered the visa-free facility for 169 countries pre-pandemic, but suspended this during the pandemic. Currently, travellers, other than those from South-east Asian countries, need to apply for a 30-day visa-on-arrival, which costs 500,000 rupiah (US$31) per person.

This is challenging, especially for travellers on chartered flights from China, as they tend to pair Singapore with Bintan. These travellers have to pay another 500,000 rupiah to re-enter Bintan from Singapore to catch their flights home.

This is also an issue for travellers who arrive through Singapore – the main international gateway to Bintan. A family of four, for example, would have to pay an additional two million rupiah on top of a ferry ride.

Our (Riau Islands) governor has requested that the central government reinstates the visa-free policy or come up with a shorter visa and cheaper tariff – he suggested US$10. While the Directorate General of Immigration has approved the shorter visa period, implementation is pending the Ministry of Finance’s approval for the proposed tariff.

However, we see potential in the Chinese travel market as its economy this year (is expected) to improve by 5.6 per cent. As such, there is likelihood that a lot (more) people from China will travel. Even if only one per cent of Chinese travel, that translates to over 10 million people.

If Bintan can get 150,000 from China, that is already (an improvement from) last year, which welcomed less than 10,000 Chinese travellers.‌

What about the other markets?
We saw fewer guests from Europe and Japan (compared to pre-pandemic), while arrivals from South Korea are slowly improving.

What are you doing to boost arrivals to Bintan Resorts?
We set up a representative office in Seoul, South Korea last October, and in Shanghai, China last November. Now, we are embarking on having a representative in India. (Based on) a survey we conducted with VFS Global, there are many enquiries (from India), so we are confident that the market will return.

We appointed Avia Tour early this year to represent us in Indonesia, particularly to (attract travellers from) Jakarta and the surrounding areas. We lack domestic branding. We know Indonesians like to go to Bali, but Bintan offers a different aura. Bintan may be perceived as a pricey destination, but we offer quality. Bintan may not have the shopping facilities that people like, but it does not lose out in terms of hospitality, tourism – especially if travellers are looking for a tranquil beach resort – and safety. I’m sure that out of 270 million Indonesian people, there are many who want places that are not as busy as Bali.

On top of opening representative offices, we are now aggressively attending all the trade shows to reintroduce Bintan to the international market.

What new product developments are taking place in Bintan?
Together with some investors, we are setting up a polo club with race tracks, equestrian and polo facilities, as well as international stable management. Currently, we are looking at between 200 and 300 horses in the stable, and we expect this to be ready by 1Q2025. We feel that this sport will attract travellers, especially those from Asia-Pacific.

Beside that, once Mövenpick is ready by the end of this year, we hope to also organise MICE activities. Even though (the property) can only accommodate up to 1,000 people, it is a good start.

We are also setting up our own exhibition centre, a standalone convention facility with a capacity of up to 10,000 people. We have already allocated five hectares of land for the development. This is (scheduled) to be ready by 2026, (along with) the opening of our airport.

This year, four hotels are entering the market: Four Points by Sheraton Bintan, Lagoi Bay opened last February; Indigo and Holiday Inn will be ready in July and August; Mövenpick will open by end of the year.

Philippines joins hands with Brunei to boost tourism cooperation

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New hotels: Caption by Hyatt Zhongshan Park Shanghai, ibis Styles Manila Araneta City and more

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Caption by Hyatt Zhongshan Park Shanghai

Caption by Hyatt Zhongshan Park Shanghai, China
Situated adjacent to the iconic Zhongshan Park and within the lively Yuyuan Road neighbourhood is 254-room Caption by Hyatt Zhongshan Park Shanghai, which offers easy access to exploring historic Shanghai, shopping centres, towering skyscrapers, and boutiques.

With the latest technological features such as digital keys, free Wi-Fi, and more, guests at the hotel can enjoy the convenience of mobile food ordering services, self-service coffee/tea, and 24-hour grab-and-go options. There is also a fitness centre onsite.

ibis Styles Manila Araneta City

ibis Styles Manila Araneta City, the Philippines
The 286-key ibis Styles Manila Araneta City is situated in Quezon City, right next to the iconic Araneta Coliseum, one of the largest indoor arenas in Asia. Nearby are malls, restaurants, and cultural spots with a variety of activities to discover.

Hotel facilities include four dining options, a fitness centre, pool and lounge, co-working space, and meeting room.

The MRT and LRT 2 metro stations are conveniently located just a stone’s throw away from the hotel.

voco Jim Corbett

voco Jim Corbett, India
India’s first voco hotel, voco Jim Corbett, is nestled on the foothills of the Mailani range in the Kumaon region.

voco Jim Corbett features 70 guestrooms and offers an all-day dining experience, and other dining options like a banquet hall and alfresco lounge bar. For recreation, there is a pool, spa, amphitheatre, fitness centre, as well as indoor and outdoor banqueting spaces for weddings and other occasions.

Four Points by Sheraton Boracay

Four Points by Sheraton Boracay, the Philippines
Four Points by Sheraton Boracay – the first Marriott property on the island – boasts 339 guestrooms and suites, three F&B outlets and an expansive outdoor lap pool and jacuzzi, among others.

Situated in Station 1 mere steps away from the White Beach, the former Citic Hotel Boracay also offers a 250m² fully customisable Evolution Annex meeting room and canopy area for up to 120 pax, Four Points by Sheraton’s signature Best Brews craft beer, and fitness centre.

Onyx Hospitality Group fosters tourism growth in China with roadshow

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Onyx Hospitality Group has embarked on its second roadshow event, this time in China. The event aims to target the country’s thriving tourism sector and further enhance the group’s existing connections with the Chinese market.

Spanning four key cities – Beijing, Shanghai, Chengdu, and Guangzhou – the roadshow started on May 27 and will run till May 31, providing a dynamic platform for networking, insightful presentations, and collaborative discussions.

Onyx Hospitality Group’s CEO Yuthachai Charanachitta at the roadshow in China

The focus of 2024’s roadshow will be showcasing the progress made since last year while illuminating the diverse offerings of Onyx’s Thai properties. Thailand properties attracting the Chinese market include Amari Pattaya, Amari Bangkok, Amari Phuket, Ozo Phuket, Shama Lakeview Asoke Bangkok, and Shama Yen-Akat Bangkok.

Alongside the Thai properties, Onyx will also highlight the latest updates and developments, with planned expansion across Thailand and Malaysia, including: Shama Rayong (Thailand), Shama Suasana Johor Bahru (Malaysia), Ozo Medini (Malaysia), Shama Hub Metro South Hong Kong, and Shama Hub Qiantang Hangzhou. An opening in Laos, Amari Vientiane, is also in the pipeline.

When the Chinese borders opened in early 2023, Onyx Hospitality Group has been actively implementing strategies within the market to attract Chinese tourists as they returned to Thailand. As a result, China is once again Onyx’s top source market, for the first time since the pandemic.

Onyx Hospitality Group CEO Yuthachai Charanachitta said: “We are thrilled to launch our inaugural roadshow in China, a market with immense potential for tourism growth. We believe this roadshow will be a significant step forward in fostering closer collaboration and unlocking new opportunities for mutual success. We are excited to present our latest developments and illuminate our premier properties in the Chinese market through this event.”

Earlier in April this year, Onyx Hospitality Group held its first roadshow at Seoul and Busan in South Korea to boost inbound travel to Thailand.