Two New All-Inclusive Hotels Are Coming to Saint Lucia

 

By the Caribbean Journal staff

Two new high-profile all-inclusive hotels are coming to the island of Saint Lucia.

The properties, part of a larger hotel project called Canelles Resort, will include two Apple Leisure Group subsidiary AMResorts’ brands: Dreams and Zoetry.

Together, the two hotels will comprise 330 rooms, along with an adjacent real estate component with 380 residential units.

The two hotels will include eateries, bars, conference centers, a spa, children’s clubs and entertainment areas.

all-inclusive saint lucia hotels

The famous Pitons in Saint Lucia.

Dreams is AMResorts’ high-end family-friendly all-inclusive brand, while its Zoëtry hotels offer more of a boutique wellness-focused experience.

The project, which was first announced in 2017, is slated to break ground later this year, the company told Caribbean Journal.

“Saint Lucia is a beautiful vacation destination,” said Ying Jin, chief executive officer of Caribbean Galaxy, the developer of the project. “WE are delighted to partner with Saint Lucia and with AMResorts to make this stunning resort a reality.”

It’s one of two projects in the region for Caribbean Galaxy at present, along with the in-construction Ramada by Wyndham St Kitts, which is slated for completion this September.

The new projects are part of a rapid regional expansion for AMResorts, which has more than 10,00 hotel rooms in its pipeline.

They also add to a burgeoning hotel pipeline in Saint Lucia, from Range Developments’ Black Bay project to a new Courtyard Marriott in Castries to a Hyatt-branded 400-room hotel coming to the northwest of the island.

The post Two New All-Inclusive Hotels Are Coming to Saint Lucia appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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Virgin Atlantic, Air France, KLM Launch Codeshare

 

By the Caribbean Journal staff

Aviation titans Virgin Atlantic, Air France and KLM have launched their first-ever codeshare agreement.

The new agreement means new trans-Atlantic travel options from Europe to the Americas, including the Caribbean region.

It means travelers can “build their ideal trip” by combining flights operated by Air France, KLM, Virgin Atlantic and Delta Air Lines, all on one booking reference.

And that of course means new options for European travelers looking to travel to the Caribbean, from the range of French and Dutch islands that Air France and KLM service to Virgin Atlantic’s strong network in the English-speaking Caribbean.

The codeshare comes as Virgin Atlantic, Delta and Air France-KLM will soon form an expanded joint venture later this year that will mean more than 300 daily trans-Atlantic flights and 340 destinations.

That joint venture was first announced in the summer of 2017.

— CJ

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Discover Puerto Rico Aims to Lead Comeback of the Island

… s making its comeback. Discover Puerto Rico, Puerto Rico’s new destination marketing organization … including key members of Puerto Rico Tourism Company and Puerto Rico Hotel & Tourism … the establishment of Puerto Rico’s first-ever DMO, Puerto Rico has an …

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How Jamaica Is Changing the Global Conversation on Sustainable Tourism

 

By Alexander Britell and Guy Britton

Tourism isn’t just the beating heart of the Caribbean economy — it’s one of the largest economic sectors on earth. And in an age of increasing global challenges, that means the continued sustainability — and resilience — of tourism is paramount.

In an effort to begin to redefine the conversation on these issues, Jamaica put itself at the forefront last month, opening the new Global Tourism Resilience and Crisis Management Center, set at the University of the West Indies in Kingston.

The aim, Jamaica Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett says, is to help educate and inform destinations around the world on how to “rethink” tourism amid increasing global disruptions, from climate change to pandemics to heretofore unforeseen crises — how to study and track new ways to address and recover from them, and how to use information to respond more quickly to them.

But at its heart, “tourism resilience” is about going beyond “sustainable” tourism. It’s not just about sustaining, Bartlett says. It’s about “thriving.”

To learn more, Caribbean Journal talked to Bartlett about the new center and how Jamaica is changing the global conversation on this all-important issue.

At its heart, what is the purpose of this new center?

The context of course is that the center was born out of the idea of creating a single reference point for dealing with global disruptions and assisting countries, particularly vulnerable tourism destinations, to recover from these disruptions and to recover quickly.

It’s about beginning to track these disruptions, and then being able to mitigate against them when they arrive and to manage them and to recover — but, more so, to build back quickly after.

The whole business of the capacity to track these disruptions, whether seismic or hurricanes, cyber-crimes, economic depression, downturns, political disruptions, pandemics and epidemics — to build that capacity is very important and we’ve found that when we did an assessment of the capacities across the world, we found that smaller countries that are the most tourism dependent are the least able to respond and to overcome these disruptions.

The example we had was, of course, our last two hurricanes in the Caribbean, when the GDP of one country was literally destroyed, wiped out completely — some 228 percent of the country’s GDP was lost. in the case of another island, in the case of Puerto Rico, which although aligned with the richest nation on earth, suffered 60 percent damage and ended up with a very protracted period of recovery.

So creating a single repository of information, data, best practices and communication to deal with these disruptions when they hit tourism destinations is absolutely imperative.

How do you define tourism resilience?

Tourism resilience really is the capacity of a country, through tourism, to enable recovery and thriving after disruptions of various sorts.

It’s the ability to innovate, to respond quickly, to be nimble. But the critical element is about thriving — and this is where it steps just slightly ahead of sustainability. We build the capacity to sustain the economy through maintaining good environmental practices and good husbandry of ecosystems, where you build resilience by creating the value added, the ability to go one step further.

It’s, yes, about being sustainable — but it’s then about being able to thrive and create more wealth.

That sounds a bit like Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s concept of “antifragility,” of not just being able to withstand disorder and disruption, but actually becoming stronger because of them, actually gaining from disorder.

Exactly. It’s antifragility — so you recover, but you must thrive after. It’s about the capacity to not only retain but to get stronger and to be able to better withstand the future shocks if they come.

What does it mean to have this center in Jamaica?

It’s important for our ability to establish Jamaica as one which offers destination assurance.

That Jamaica offers a sense of security to visitors who come here, because they know that if disruptions hit at whatever time, the country has the capacity to deal with them, and that their own safety will be assured.

We’re also building a “resilience barometer,” which will be the basis of measuring a level of resilience that a country has. That will help to create the environment that, “If I come to this destination and anything happens, I will be alright.”

jamaica sustainable tourism

Jamaica Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett.

What does it mean for the Caribbean at large?

This also establishes the region as a thought center, as a leader in innovation and in global thinking so that people come to the caribbean to participate in these kinds of intellectual activities and research and development.

Because this center would also be a center of academic activity, it will become a reference point for think tanks and all sorts of intellectual activity relating to resilience and crisis management.

It’s positioning the Caribbean and Jamaica as a thought leader in the tourism sector, like the Davos of tourism. In the same way that people look to Davos every year for leadership, inspiration and for generating academic rigor, we would position the Caribbean and Jamaica for this kind of response.

What kind of reception have you gotten from within the Caribbean?

It’s been excellent. The Caribbean Tourism Organization is represented on the board of the center, and will participate in the board meetings in Berlin.

The private sector also has been coming on board — the Florida-Caribbean Cruise Association, for one, is involved through the Cruise Lines International Association. We have talked to airlines. Jetblue has started discussions, with the issue of airport security foremost on their minds, along with building resilience at airports in the region. The Petroleum Group in the Caribbean, i’ve met them and discussed their participation, and the Caribbean Insurance Group, we’ve met and they’ve given their commitment. The UAE have also pledged tourism support.

So it’s a growing entity arrangement that we’re having and we’re excited that almost everybody who hears about the center and what we intend to do are very warm to it and in many cases support whether material or financial sense.

What are the next steps for the center?

We’ve just completed a business plan, and the program of work for the center, which has been established at the University of the West Indies – Mona.

We are now building out the physical facilities, and technical leaders and officers of the center. There are four major steps: one is to do an academic journal; the second is to develop a compendium of best practices to be published and made available to vulnerable states that are tourism dependent; the third is to create the barometer that i mentioned; the fourth is to establish a chair, an academic chair at the UWI on resilience and innovation, which is a critical part of the academic rigor that must be brought to this whole process.

The last thing we must do is build a communications capability, because the center must be a repository of strong communication to enable messaging that is clear and coherent, and gives information on a real time basis — and to be geo-specific, so people know where it’s happening.

smaller countries that are the most tourism dependent are the least able to respond and to overcome these disruptions”

That was an issue during Hurricane Irma, for example.

Yes, that also means helping to identify and not confuse countries because of similarity of names, for example, something we dealt with during the recent hurricanes, when everyone was confusing Barbados and Bermuda when it was taking place in Barbuda.

There’s a geographical ignorance out there that exists that we have to deal with.

Even in Jamaica we were being called with great commiseration, and people didn’t understand this is an archipelago of dozens of islands.

So during global disruptions, information is very important. The goal of this center in that regard is to free us from those kinds of deficits, to be able to freely and readily pass information about events.

The business of building out that capability is critical.

We have a huge task ahead, with a very diverse and complex area of activity. But placed as it is in the center of academia, we think it is well positioned to be able to tap into all of those critical possibilities.

The post How Jamaica Is Changing the Global Conversation on Sustainable Tourism appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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Resorts World Bimini, Virgin Voyages to Partner on Beach Club

 

By the Caribbean Journal staff

Richard Branson’s Virgin Voyages revealed its plans for a cruise stop in Bimini last month — and now more details have been announced.

The new beach destination will be the product of a partnership between Virgin Voyages and Resorts World Bimini, with plans to open in early 2020.

In a statement, Resorts World said the new club would “rival the best beachfront clubs in Ibiza and Saint-Tropez.”

“Bimini features some of the most spectacular beaches, amazing fishing and authentic hospitality in the Caribbean; it is the perfect location for guests looking for the luxury of a premium beach club and resort but an island that has retained the charm of the Bahamas with a rich history to explore.” said Missy Lawrence, President of Resorts World Bimini.

Bimini will be one of several Caribbean calls for Virgin Voyages, including Puerto Plata and Havana, among others.

Its first season will operate from April 1, 2020 through Oct. 25, 2020.

“The Beach Club at Resorts World Bimini will be a unique experience that will allow our guests to experience the Bahamas in an unpretentious, luxurious way only Virgin and Resorts World can provide,” said Tom McAlpin, president and CEO for Virgin Voyages. “The pristine white-sand beaches of Bimini are jaw-dropping, they present the perfect canvas for Virgin to create something special for our guests.”

The post Resorts World Bimini, Virgin Voyages to Partner on Beach Club appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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