TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Saturday, 20th December 2025
Page 706

New hotels: Aiden Darling Harbour, Lyf one-north Singapore, and more

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Aiden Darling Harbour, Australia
The inaugural opening marks the debut of the Aiden by Best Western brand in Australasia.

Rooms within the 88-key property in Pyrmont boast locally-made furnishings as well as complimentary Wi-Fi and chromecasting. Some rooms also boast private open-air balconies.

In the ground floor lobby and Wayfarer’s Bar & Café, guests can discover the hotel’s signature botanical fragrance from candles handmade by Pyrmont local Em Cook, while enjoying croissants from Pyrmont’s PiOiK Bakery, Staves Beer brewed next door in Glebe, wine from an all-Australian list, and bottled Aiden by Best Western signature cocktails mixed with local spirits.

Lyf one-north Singapore, Singapore
Positioned as a coliving property, the 324-key Lyf one-north Singapore in the city-state’s research and innovation hub offers One of a Kind studios with ensuite bathrooms as well as Level Up lofts that can accommodate two.

A range of vibrant and green social spaces both indoors and outdoors are available here. At Meet, an outdoor amphitheatre, guests can gather for live performances. They can break a sweat in an exercise class at To-Gather, a flexible outdoor activity area, or take a Dip at the 25-metre outdoor lap pool complete with a BBQ pit for an intimate get-together.

Events and market fairs are planned at Hangout, the property’s rooftop social clubhouse and terrace. Huddle & Collab convertible function rooms are suitable for a variety of events, from mini brainstorm sessions to larger-scale business functions.

Alongside these social spaces, lyf one-north Singapore will feature the brand’s signature communal spaces. There are Connect social zones for coworking and collaboration, as well as a Bond social kitchen for guests to prepare and share meals. There are also a gym and laundromat on-site.

Dafam Enkadeli Thamrin Jakarta, Indonesia
The 50-room mid-scale Dafam Enkadeli Thamrin Jakarta is a Muslim-friendly property, with praying outfits and necessities in guestrooms and a dedicated praying room in the lobby.

Other facilities include a restaurant serving an Indonesian and international menu, while corporate planners may avail three meeting rooms with a capacity of between 50 and 150 people or the rooftop outdoor venue.

The hotel is located on Jalan Sunda, off Jakarta’s main business district of Jalan Thamrin, close to offices, shopping centres and restaurants.

OMO5 Otaru, Japan
Located a 10-minute walk from JR Otaru Station, OMO5 Otaru by Hoshino Resorts offers 92 rooms across two buildings. The south wing is a renovation of the former Otaru Chamber of Commerce and Industry, while the north wing is a new-build.

Amenities on-site include the OMO Cafe & Dining, public bath and sauna. Guests are provided with the GO-KINJO Map, an original map of the neighbourhood with activity recommendations by staff members, and have the option of joining a Local Guide Tour that will take them on a morning walk at the Rinyu Morning Market.

Hong Kong tourism worst hit in the world: Compare the Market study

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Historical Monuments Humayun's Tomb reopened to the public after Three Months in Delhi, Security guard mask, lock down coronavirus COVID 19

New research by Australia-based Compare the Market has identified Hong Kong as the destination most affected by pandemic-induced border closures, quarantine rules and the threat of infection, with a 75 per cent decline in tourism industry performance from 2019 to 2020.

Hong Kong travel and tourism sector contributed just three per cent of GDP in 2020, compared to 12 per cent – or US$45 billion – in 2019.

India’s tourism industry held up best among other Asian destinations; Humayun’s Tomb pictured

In the study’s ranking of the best and worst tourism performers, Ireland came off second worst with a 71.4 per cent decline in tourism year-on-year, while Fiji rounded out the top three with a decrease of 65.9 per cent in domestic and international travel.

Of the 45 countries observed, 23 saw their travel industry’s contribution to the national GDP cut in half in a single year, if not more.

Most island nations analysed, such as Fiji, the Bahamas, the Maldives and the Philippines, were able to keep their industry contributions to the national GDP above 10 per cent despite a slide in tourism performance.

On the other end of the scale, Brazil’s tourism industry was the least affected, going from 7.7 per cent in 2019 to 5.5 per cent in 2020.

India emerged second-best with a total decline of 31.9 per cent year-on-year, while Chile’s tourism industry went from being worth 9.9 per cent of the national GDP in 2019 to 6.6 per cent in 2020.

New Zealand, the US and Australia were among those that were able to minimise the damage of the pandemic and keep the decline under 50 per cent. Compare the Market acknowledges the surprising outcome of these countries, as they were among the first to implement restrictions on global air travel by early February 2020.

Domestic tourism might have helped to dampen the effects of suppressed international travel traffic, although domestic campaigns were also hampered by interior border closures, explained Compare the Market.

Japan extends pandemic curbs

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Philippines rolls out virtual destination showcases

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The Department of Tourism (DoT) and the Tourism Promotions Board (TPB) Philippines have launched Virtual Destination Videos and 360° VR Experiential Tours, as part of their SmarTourism initiative.

TPB’s chief operating officer Maria Anthonette C Velasco-Allones said the digitalisation push is a product of their drive “to do better amid the trying times”.

The new Virtual Destination Videos and 360° VR Experiential Tours allow viewers to travel vicariously to the country’s tourist spots and activities

“It’s not only a teaser for our foreign guests so they can get a good glimpse of our country in the new normal; it’s also a gift to our kababayans and OFWs who have been wanting to come home. And it’s a way to experience the Philippines vicariously and a guide to making every minute of your travel experience count,” she said.

The Virtual Destination Videos series is spearheaded by the DoT and supports TPB’s It’s More Fun With You campaign, which welcomes both domestic and international travellers back to Philippines. Content invites the audience to look forward to travelling safely in the country after the long hiatus.

The virtual videos showcase the best-of-the-best in Boracay, Palawan, Baguio/Cordillera, Manila, Pampanga/Zambales, Pangasinan/La Union, Ilocos Norte/Ilocos Sur, Bohol, Cebu, Bukidnon/Camiguin/Cagayan de Oro, Iloilo/Guimaras, Davao, Batangas, Tarlac/ Bataan, and various UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

Besides allowing viewers to travel vicariously to the country’s tourist spots and activities, the web-based 360° virtual reality tour serves as a marketing tool for travel agents, helping them to promote Philippines digitally, as well as improve their destination knowledge.

The virtual reality tour is accessible via www.tpb.pcitech.com.ph/map, where the regions of Ilocos and Calabarzon can be viewed currently.

“Technology plays an essential role in promoting destinations, attractions, and activities here in our country. By leveraging on it, we have found new opportunities amid the crisis and new ways to tell the world that, hey, the Philippines is alive and well, worthy to see and explore, and remains as beautiful and fun as ever,” said DoT secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat during the launch event.

Marriott charts APAC growth plans

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Marriott International expects to open nearly 100 properties in Asia Pacific this year, with the greater aim of opening its 1,000th property in the region by late 2022.

With leisure demand expected to outpace business travel, Marriott will be strengthening its presence in several leisure destinations such as Jeju with the opening of JW Marriott Jeju Resort & Spa in May 2022, while W Sydney is expected to open in late 2022.

A rendering of a Ritz-Carlton Reserve that will open in China’s Jiuzhaigou this year

With wellness and well-being another key traveller trend, the company’s wellness brand, Westin Hotels & Resorts, is expected to celebrate two new debuts in Yokohama and Cam Ranh in 2022.

Meanwhile, luxury demand will boom in Greater China, a key market for the company’s growth, accounting for more than half of the company’s luxury openings in Asia-Pacific this year. Ritz-Carlton Reserve will be debuting its first rare estate in Jiuzhaigou valley, while other slated luxury openings include JW Marriott Hotel Changsha and W Macau – Studio City.

Also in Greater China, Four Points by Sheraton expects to continue its growth with five openings this year, while Moxy Hotels anticipates making landfall Suzhou and Xi’an.

Outside of Greater China, the company expects to debut its AC Hotels brand in South Korea with AC Hotel Seoul Gangnam, and in Australia with AC Hotel Melbourne Southbank. In Japan, Fairfield by Marriott has six new properties in locations such as Nara, Hokkaido and Hyogo, in the pieline.

Hong Kong’s zero-Covid stance and Omicron restrictions continue to batter tourism players

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Philippine tourism leaders take cautious approach to reopening

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As the Philippines reopens her borders tomorrow to fully-vaccinated tourists from non-visa required countries, tourism leaders expect arrivals to be gradual and anticipate hitches with possible solutions built into reopening guidelines.

Indicative figures from Philippine Airlines (PAL) showed that inbound demand is still led by returning overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), OFWs leaving for abroad, and a considerable number of Filipinos residing abroad (balikbayans) visiting with their spouses and children.

Inbound demand is expected to return gradually, with possible hiccups in reopening procedures, say industry stakeholders; Coron, Philippines pictured

The flag carrier has started flying to 23 international and 28 domestic destinations, with the total daily flights just 40 per cent of the 300 daily flights pre-pandemic, said PAL spokesperson Cielo Villaluna at a virtual forum, Kapihan sa Manila Bay, on February 9.

Tourism Congress of the Philippines president, Jojo Clemente, said his organisation is taking a “conservative approach” in the “gradual restart” of foreign arrivals. A big influx is not expected until towards the end of the year.

Clemente added that inbound interests are coming more from longhaul markets like Europe “since they are a bit more liberal in travel restrictions” compared to Asia, which has the “toughest set of protocols for inbound and outbound”. Preferred destinations are the major ones: Boracay, Palawan, Cebu and Bohol.

Since mandatory quarantine is no longer required for fully-vaccinated foreign tourists and Filipinos coming from abroad, 76 quarantine hotels in Metro Manila have already applied to convert into regular hotels – more are expected to follow suit – and 14 of them have been approved, revealed tourism secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat.

Former tourism undersecretary Benito Bengzon Jr, now executive director of 303-member Philippine Hotel Owners Association (PHOA), is asking for financial lifeline for many of its hotels recording a single-digit occupancy and reduced revenue stream as quarantine guests have halted.

“What we would like is some kind of financial assistance coming from the government to help tide us over the next six to 12 months, which we see will be difficult,” Bengzon said.

It is understood that the government has not given hotels the stimulus package that they have been asking for during the pandemic.

Romulo-Puyat said the tourism authority is pushing for the “healthy rebound of tourism,” noting that the country has “moved past the worrying wave” with the Omicron variant under control and high vaccination rate of tourism workers.

Ready for the hitches and challenges that may crop up during the tourism restart, Romulo-Puyat said: “We are ready as we can be with health and safety protocols, rafted as early as May 2020 and implemented in June 2020. These protocols will continue to be changed according to the need of the times.”

As to the lack of unified travel protocols among destinations, Romulo-Puyat said that since it is the destinations’ local government units (LGUs) who are lobbying for foreigners to be allowed entry, “I would like to think that….they will make it easier for foreigners to come to the country and make it as easy as possible”.

Rare storks lift Kinosaki and Toyooka’s eco-tourism potential

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A hot spring town in rural Japan is eyeing an uptick in eco-tourism due to the success of environmental initiatives to re-wild a rare breed of oriental white stork.

Kinosaki in Toyooka City, Hyogo Prefecture, has restored its population of oriental white stork since work to save the endangered species started in the 1960s. Then, oriental white storks were only present in a handful of regions including Toyooka. Today, about 140 of the birds fly in the skies above Toyooka and live in the city’s organic rice paddies, wetlands and biotopes.

Kinosaki has built a variety of stork-related tours for travellers keen on nature, wildlife and the environment

Efforts to revive the oriental white stork population have increased the diversity and number of many other species in Toyooka, giving the city a further boost as a green destination. The city is now home to 280 bird species as well as hundreds of kinds of other wildlife. The city supports 45 per cent of the total 633 species found in Japan.

Along the way, Kinosaki has developed a raft of stork-related tours, facilities and souvenirs. With the opening up of travel in 2022, the town, near Kyoto, hopes to attract visitors who are interested in nature, wildlife and the environment or who simply want to spend time in an environmentally friendly and sustainable destination.

A five-hour tour of the Toshima Hachigoro Wetlands, which was launched in late 2019, aims to introduce revived habitats and the diverse wildlife they support such as insects, fish, frogs and snakes. Visitors can travel through lush wetlands, including rice paddies converted into wetland, which have been registered under the Ramsar Convention. Guides will point out the wildlife and efforts by local stakeholders to create an optimal environment for the storks. These efforts include developing shallows along riverbeds, transforming unused rice fields into biotopes and fostering corridors to connect key wetlands for the birds’ easy movement. Following a viewing of agricultural sites, visitors are served a lunch featuring organic vegetables and Stork Natural Rice, a local brand grown without chemicals.

The tour will be held in full for the first time from April 1 to November 30, 2022. It is aimed at the FIT, group tour and corporate markets, including incentive travel and teambuilding segments. It is expected to generate awareness of Toyooka as a destination for bird lovers and environmentally conscious travellers, as well as draw greater numbers of visitors to Toyooka’s other wildlife-related tourism offerings.

Jade Nunez, coordinator of international relations at Toyooka Tourism Innovation, said by the end of March 2019, five million people had visited the city’s Stork Museum since its opening in 2006, the year after the storks were released back into the wild by members of the Imperial Family in a prestigious ceremony. A Stork Tourism Guide has also been produced to offer information, advice and tips for visitors to make the most of their stay.

With the rise in popularity of outdoor and off-the-beaten track tourism offerings due to demand for social distancing, and growing awareness in Japan of the need to support activities that contribute to the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals, Toyooka’s tourism stakeholders are poised for rapid growth. Their hopes have been buoyed by the city’s listing in the 2021 Top 100 Destination Sustainability Stories, a global initiative by the Netherlands-based organisation Green Destinations.

“This recognition is definitely helping us to raise awareness of Kinosaki as an eco-tourism destination,” said Nunez.

Cunard welcomes new ship in 12 years

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Malaysia’s National Recovery Council recommends border reopening in March

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