TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Sunday, 14th December 2025
Page 315

Hokuriku Shinkansen extends line to Fukui Prefecture

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Japan’s Hokuriku Shinkansen high-speed rail service, known for its sleek white and blue trains, will extend its line from Tokyo to Fukui Prefecture starting March 16.

Currently, the service ends at Kanazawa City, known for its well-preserved Edo-era districts, traditional tea houses, and landscaped gardens.

The extended Hokuriku Shinkansen line takes travellers deeper into Japan

Hokuriku Shinkansen will operate 14 round trips from Tokyo per day.

With this extension, travellers can get from Tokyo to Fukui City, the prefectural capital, in just two hours and 51 minutes.

Fukui City is a small castle town most known for the Fukui Prefectural Dinosaur Museum, which is recognised as one of the greatest dinosaur museums in the world. The destination is also loved by cherry blossom hunters in springtime.

Other attractions in Fukui Prefecture include Maruoka Castle, one of twelve castles in Japan with a surviving historical keep from the feudal era; Tojinbo Cliffs, a Natural Monument and Place of Scenic Beauty; and Eiheiji Temple, founded in 1244.

The extension of the high-speed rail line allows Japan to increase connectivity to the outskirts, taking travellers deeper into the country.

Vouch brings tech assistance to back of house

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Singapore-based Vouch, which specialises in guest experience platforms for hospitality businesses, now has a new suite of back-end solutions to support hotel operations, from housekeeping to engineering.

Named Hotel Operations Management Ecosystem (Vouch HOME), the new system integrates seamlessly with Vouch’s existing guest-facing platform, creating a unified ecosystem that streamlines workflows, automates tasks, and increases efficiency. This also eliminates the need for multiple vendors, offering a single source of truth for operational data.

Vouch HOME empowers hotels with automation, freeing up human resources to focus on delivering exceptional guest experiences

Joseph Ling, founder and CEO of Vouch, said: “In today’s competitive hospitality landscape, being efficient is no longer a luxury, it’s a necessity.”

The company noted that traditional hotel operations are often plagued by manual tasks, scattered data across different systems, and communication breakdowns between departments. This inefficiency directly impacts the guest experience, leading to longer wait times, frustrated staff, and ultimately, lost revenue.

Ling explained that Vouch HOME grants hotel managers “a holistic 360-degree view of their operations, allowing them to identify areas for improvement and make data-driven decisions”.

The new system comprises three back-end components.

One, the Task Manager, a centralised task management system with mobile access, that shares live status for timely completion. Two, Room Assignments and Inspection, which automatically assigns rooms for attendants and alert floor supervisors instantly for inspection on customised checklists. Three, Preventive Maintenance, which schedules and tracks maintenance for assets proactively, minimising downtime and ensuring positive guest experience.

Looking ahead, Vouch will leverage the power of generative AI to analyse data and deliver customised, actionable recommendations for each hotel, empowering them to further optimise operations and drive sustainable growth. This will launch in the first half of 2024.

New hotels: La Festa Phu Quoc, The Royal Park Hotel Iconic Nagoya and more

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Abu Dhabi intensifies Asia-Pacific courtship

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IATA steps up support in journey to digital identity transformation

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IATA is setting standards and developing tools like training and publishing the One ID Handbook to take airlines, airports and governments a step closer to “transforming passenger processing using digital identity technologies”.

The handbook aims to help build a “solid trust framework across global boundaries” and benefits include a “seamless and contactless journey”, a “cost-effective and productive operation, “secure and facilitated” border management, and a “scaleable and interoperable system for the industry”.

Industry professionals can learn more about One ID through IATA classes in Singapore, Beijing and Miami

Speaking at the recent Aviation Festival Asia, Shu Hui Bian, regional manager, customer experience and facilitation, IATA, said training on One ID: Digital Identity and Biometrics Fundamentals is being offered in Singapore, Beijing and Miami this year. These courses run for four days, across 32 hours in all.

According to IATA, 41 participants from seven countries have taken this course in the past four years.

For passengers, their credentials needed for travel such as passports, visa, etc can be stored in their digital wallets; they can share those credentials with other parties such as airlines, airports and governments with consent in advance before arriving at the airport; complete the process remotely, go through touch points with biometric recognition only; and use the same credentials for the next journey.

IATA One ID standards status shows that the handbook is scheduled to be available in March – digital admissibility is planned for 2024 while dates for contactless travel and biometric handling have yet to be confirmed.

Shu commented: “The key principles of One ID are that passengers own and control their data, can opt in to advance share digital identity information, have a biometric-enabled end-to-end digital experience, that verifying parties request only the minimum data and passengers must have the ability to opt out at any stage for manual processing.”

Pan Pacific Hotels Group makes ambitious return to Indonesia

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Malaysian Association of Hotels celebrates milestone with first domestic travel fair

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The Malaysian Association of Hotels (MAH) will host its inaugural domestic tourism fair to mark its 50th Anniversary this year.

This two-day consumer event will take place at Pavilion Bukit Jalil, Kuala Lumpur, starting on July 6.

(From left) MAH’s Haziz Hassan and Khoo Boo Lim; Tourism Malaysia’s Amin Yahya; Negri Sembilan state’s Nicole Tan; MAH’s Christina Toh; and Tin Media’s Nuur Hidayah

Khoo Boo Lim, organising chairperson and vice president of MAH, revealed that the fair would showcase various state tourism pavilions, including Negri Sembilan, Pahang, and Melaka alongside presence by Tourism Malaysia.

Khoo emphasised that the fair would stand out from others in the marketplace with its exclusive focus on the inbound sector.

MAH envisions turning this fair into an annual event and expanding its reach beyond Kuala Lumpur, pending support from its members.

The event is expected to feature over 200 exhibitors from across the hospitality spectrum and attract over 10,000 visitors.

Khoo encouraged members to take the opportunity to promote their properties, especially in areas that are off the beaten track, as well as provide consumers with competitive rates.

More than 2,500 room vouchers will be distributed to visitors with any purchases made at the event.

Christina Toh, MAH president, highlighted at a press conference that participating hotels would present attractive value propositions tailored for Malaysians. These may include room-and-breakfast packages and discounted rates for second room purchases.

Travel Exclusive Asia kicks off expansion plans

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DMC Travel Exclusive Asia now serves Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam in addition to Thailand, and has revealed plans for further expansion in the future.

Yves Van Kerrebroeck, managing partner for Indochina and group business development director, said the move gives the DMC the chance to curate a raft of combined tours between the four destinations, as well as individual packages for each to cater to the growing slow travel trend emerging from European markets.

Kerrebroeck: leverage strong industry network and destination knowledge

“There are many combinations between Thailand and Laos, Thailand and Cambodia, and also with Vietnam; there’s a lot of opportunities there,” Kerrebroeck told TTG Asia, adding that in the immediate aftermath of the pandemic, there was a shift towards solo country travel.

However, that is changing.

“Now, we’re seeing more demand for multi-country programmes, which we wouldn’t have seen two years ago,” Kerrebroeck added, noting a demand for 60-day multi-destination itineraries.

“Everyone is complaining about ticket prices for long-haul flights, so it makes sense to stay a bit longer. In the European market, there’s definitely a trend for people wanting to spend a bit more time in a destination,” he said.

Kerrebroeck added that since Travel Exclusive Asia launched in 2016, himself and founder, André van der Marck, have built up a strong reputation as experts in Thailand. Kerrebroeck also spent five years working in Vietnam, as well as in a role overseeing multi-country and wholesale divisions.

“I have a great network, I know a lot of suppliers and lots of agents know me as somebody who knows these destinations, so it made a lot of sense,” he said. “We really meet the demand of our existing clientele and a lot of potential new agents are very excited by this.”

Kerrebroeck added that the company has set its sights on further expansion in the region, eyeing up Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia. “I think these are the regions that are next on our list to really offer a full range of satisfaction destinations.”

Indian hotel federation joins Sustainable Hospitality Alliance

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Earthcheck is a tourism advisory and certification group developed by the Sustainable Tourism CRC

Interest in Cambodia high among European travellers

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