Category: Island Life

Melia Nassau Beach Completes $19 Million Renovation

 

The Melia Nassau Beach resort in New Providence has completed a $19 million renovation project that first began back in 2014.

The 694-room resort has been “completely transformed,” according to the property, with 102 rooms belonging to Melia’s The LEVEL exclusive hotel-within-a-hotel wing.

Guest rooms and suites have been redesigned to feature what the property is calling “contemporary Caribbean style decor,” while the resort has also added a newly refurbished 24-hour fitness center and a stage for live entertainment.

The resort, which is open to adults and families, has three pools, seven dining venues and four bars, along with universal Wi-Fi, among other amenities.

For families, there is additionally a Kids Pool and a Kids’ Club.

– CJ Staff

The post Melia Nassau Beach Completes $19 Million Renovation appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

Powered by WPeMatico

San Juan Marriott Sold to Buyer from China

 

The San Juan Marriott Resort & Stellaris Casino has been sold to a buyer from China, brokerage JLL announced.

The 527-key Condado resort’s sale was arranged by JLL on behalf of Rockwood Capital and Interlink Group. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

JLL Managing Director Gregory Rumpel and Senior Vice President Andrew Dickey led the JLL team on the transaction.

“The San Juan lodging market has performed well over the past few years, despite short-term impacts in 2016 in the Caribbean region and Puerto Rico’s debt pressures. This transaction represents continued interest from investors in the Puerto Rican lodging market, given the robust demand drivers, no new supply, exceptional airlift and overall attractiveness of the opportunities in the market,” said Dickey. “This property garnered interest from both international and domestic investors due to its beachfront location, outstanding financial performance and affiliation with a globally recognized brand.”

The hotel property includes the Stellaris Casino, five food and beverage outlets, more than 14,000 square feet of meeting and event space and a pool set on the beach.

The resort is located on a four-acre beachfront site, and there is room to “add density to the resort,” JLL said.

The resort has averaged 87.6 percent occupancy over the last five years, significantly outperforming the Caribbean average.

Investors have been scooping up a number of Puerto Rico hotels in recent years, most notably the iconic El San Juan resort, which sold in 2015.

The post San Juan Marriott Sold to Buyer from China appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

Powered by WPeMatico

A New Spa at Captain Don’s Habitat in Bonaire

 

One of the Caribbean’s greatest dive resorts has just gotten even better.

Bonaire’s Captain Don’s Habitat has debuted its new Namaste Spa, with spa packages available for relaxation, wellness and rejuvenation, whether you’re there for a diving trip or simply want to relax.

The spa includes a special Sea Side Couples Cabana with stunning views of the sea.

The spa is the brainchild of Nancy Hart from Namaste Relaxation Studio, who has two other studios in Bonaire.

Treatment options range from Reiki and Ayurveda to foot detox and even weight loss programs.

— Caribbean Journal staff

The post A New Spa at Captain Don’s Habitat in Bonaire appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

Powered by WPeMatico

Why You Need to Visit Great Harbour Cay, The Bahamas’ Best-Kept Secret

 

By ALEXANDER BRITELL

Brigitte Bardot used to skinny dip here. Right on this beach. Or maybe the one next to it. No one is quite sure. No one can remember.

Bardot used to come to Great Harbour Cay when the island was the Next Great Destination in All the World, when this tiny island in the Berry Islands chain of the Bahamas was booming, a magnet for Cary Grant and Paul Newman, when the Tamboo Club was jumping.

Bardot Beach. Perhaps.

Half a century later, Great Harbour Cay is something very different. It is also precisely as it was.

The sparkling beaches are empty, the Tamboo Club is a graying monument to a gilded age and the 18-hole championship golf course is half covered in weeds, with nature clawing back this little speck of sand north of Nassau.

But what has survived has done so for a reason. In the shadow of a once-celebrated destination has emerged something else: a well-kept secret.

The Tamboo Club, once the island’s premier hotspot.

Today, the impossibly clear waters and endless beaches are only for those who have by some serendipity discovered this place — a grandson whose grandfather who once went to the Tamboo, a boater drawn to the protected marina, a bonefisherman.

But those who come here understand — why it boomed, why it went quiet, why once you come here you realize the trip was essential.

Because the siren song of Great Harbour Cay remains, the one that drew Marty and Angie back in 2005 before they opened the island’s best and only hotel, the Carriearl, in 2012.

Today, Angie Jackson and Martin Dronsfield are the warm British stewards of this place, the onetime home of Earl Backwell, the man charged with turning the island into a celebrity hotspot, and the stewards of his legacy, of Great Harbour’s legacy.

Angie Jackson and Martin Dronsfield, co-owners of the Carriearl.

There are four well-designed bedrooms, a terrific restaurant and bar (one with a great rum selection, to boot) a beautiful pool and a short walk to one of the island’s stunning, deserted beaches.

Carriearl is the epicenter of the island, its bar always full of travelers and locals, with a Sunday brunch as much a social requirement as there be on a minuscule island.

The island’s only freshwater pool, set at the Carriearl.

It should be no surprise, then, that they don’t make hotels like the Carriearl anymore, and they don’t make islands like Great Harbour Cay anymore.

Because that was the destination dreamers’ great flaw — the island didn’t need to be made or remade. It already was paradise.

There was already a magnetism here, hidden in the brush and the shallows, a beckoning frequency.

Because the reason to come to Great Harbour Cay isn’t for celebrity or golf or flash.

The bar at the Carriearl.

This is a place to retreat from the world, to find the kind of tranquility no one can buy, to stay in a hotel that’s instantly your home and experience the almost mystical energy that you can only find in the far reaches of the Out Islands of the Bahamas.

The waters of Shark Creek.

Time has been a peculiar friend to Great Harbour Cay, lifting it and dropping it, pushing it forward and taking it beyond its shores, moving memories and reinventing them.

Sure, Great Harbour Cay never became that great international hotspot. But it was never meant to be. It was meant to be Great Harbour Cay.

Because it doesn’t matter which beach Brigitte Bardot used to skinny dip on.

What matters is that there was a time when she simply had to be here.

And now, so do you.

HOW TO GET HERE

Watermakers Air and Tropic Ocean Air fly scheduled and charter service out of Fort Lauderdale.

WHERE TO STAY

The Carriearl, of course, at www.carriearl.com.

See more in the video at the top by Guy Britton.

The post Why You Need to Visit Great Harbour Cay, The Bahamas’ Best-Kept Secret appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

Powered by WPeMatico

BVI Tourist Board Names New Deputy Director

 

The British Virgin Islands Tourist Board has appointed a new deputy director, the organization announced Wednesday.

Rhodni A. Skelton has been named to the position, having previously served as film commissioner and events marketing manager for the tourist board from 2004 to 2015.

In a statement, BVI Director of Tourism Sharon Flax Brutus said she was “pleased to have the position of deputy director filled and looks forward to Mr. Skelton making a strong contribution given his background and experience.”

Skelton will “assisting the Director of Tourism with the responsibility of developing implementing and managing a series of tourism marketing initiatives including, the oversight of the development of the Board’s annual Marketing Plan; establishing and maintaining networks within the regional and international tourism industry as well as assisting in overseeing general operations,” according to a statement.

Skelton’s appointment took effect on May 8.

— Caribbean Journal Staff

The post BVI Tourist Board Names New Deputy Director appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

Powered by WPeMatico