BIG CRUISERS FOR LIVERPOOL

Liverpool will be able to handle the huge floating blocks of flats that these days pass for modern super liners with a new £50 million cruise terminal bring built on its waterfront from October this year (The Business Desk).

Last year the City welcomed 120,000 passengers and crew from 60 vessels to its current terminal, which generated £7 million for its local economy.

NIGHT NIGHT

A sleeper mini-coach that can carry 12 passengers lying down has been launched for those travelling 300 miles or more.

The berths on the coach come equipped with draw curtains, night lights, charger sockets magazine racks and morning facial wipes, and the concept is said to be ideal for groups attending events 300+ miles away since the combined travel and accommodation package could save on train or plane costs, and hotel nights.

Web travelbyknight.co.uk

NEW MARRIOTT AT NEC

Building of the new Marriott International Moxy Hotel will start at the National Exhibition Centre (NEC) in June this year and should be open for business by June next year.

The eight-storey structure will incorporate 224 bedrooms. Moxy is a Marriott lifestyle brand and there are currently 20 Moxy properties worldwide, the latest just open at Heathrow Airport and the largest with 437 bedrooms. Other Moxy hotels opening this year are in Southampton, York Edinburgh and Glasgow.

FIVE-STAR WARSAW

Joining a familiarisation trip to Poland as a guest of Marriott Hotels the writer enjoyed five-star accommodation at hotels in Warsaw, and Krakow (next month’s issue).

On arrival at Warsaw Chopin Airport from our BA flight we were quickly transferred to the 40-storey + glass skyscraper in the Manhattan-like business district where the five-star Marriott Warsaw occupies the top 20 floors, and is said to have more amenities than any other hotel in Poland. We could believe it as there are 523 bedrooms here and all have luxurious facilities and fabulous views over the city, as does the hotel’s unique 40th floor Panoramic Sky-Bar. Our large bathroom had no curtains or blinds up at the huge picture window, and this worried us a bit on behalf of female delegates, until we were told the glass was only one-way, ie we could see out but no one could see in, so that was all right. For those looking to hold meetings and events there are 28,000 square feet (2,600 square metres) of venue space, which includes 26 event rooms and a Grand Ballroom with seating for 700 delegates, all this complemented by an indoor pool, spa, fitness centre and five dining options. Continue reading

HILTON AT HEATHROW

There can’t be many airport hotels with a large and attractive outside area for al fresco barbecues and other eating in the warm months but the four-star Hilton London Heathrow Airport, which we experienced recently and which won the World’s Leading Airport Hotel award last year is one of a very few. Also much-appreciated by arriving guests, especially those arriving in inclement weather is the covered walkway connecting the Hilton to Terminal Four, an eight minute walk away and a fifteen minute ride on the Heathrow Express to Central London. Continue reading

BEER TASTING

A recent cruise around Scotland and the Orkneys, the Shetlands and the Danish Faroe Islands gave the writer the chance to run a beer tasting of twelve local brews purchased. The tasting team of six was equally split with three of each gender and all the ales were tasted blind, with marks out of 10 given.

Top choice, with 39 points out of 60, was Edinburgh Gold from the Stewart Brewery, a golden ale with a healthy ABV of 4.8% and a bargain price of £1.99 for a 500ml bottle in Edinburgh supermarkets. Very close behind, with 37 and 36 points respectively were two light and clean-tasting beers from the Foroya Bjor brewery at Klaksvik in the Faroes, their Organic Light at 2.8% ABV and their Pilsner Light at 2.7 ABV, both costing £3 for 500ml bottles. Continue reading

MARTY

Only two films have ever won the double of the Palme d’Or at Cannes and the Academy Award for Best Picture, and one was director Billy Wilder’s 1945 The Lost Weekend about recovering alcoholic writer Ray Milland while the other was Marty, director Delbert Mann’s 1955 romance about decent, honest shy and awkward 34 year old Bronx butcher Marty (Ernest Borgnine) and decent, honest, shy and awkward 29 year old teacher Clara (Betsy Blair). Continue reading

Event Organisers Update February-March 2018 ISSUE 161

EVENT SLEAZE An undercover investigation by the Financial Times at a President’s Club fundraising dinner in January at the Dorchester Hotel, London, led to …

WHAT PRICE SOCIAL MEDIA? A very public row has been running since a blogger on social media asked the owner of a Dublin hotel for a free five-night stay for herself … 

WOMEN ONLY Britain’s first women only members club is set to open its doors in a townhouse at Rathbone Place, Bloomsbury, London on March 8, where facilities …

VENUE NEWS
o Three hotel groups have been named as supplying freebies to the UK’s serial …
o Travelodge have apologised for branding a 46 year old father a paedophile when …
o Blenheim Palace have apologised after organising a Chinese New Year party that …

MANCHESTER SNOWFLAKES MELT A stupid decision by precious souls at the Manchester City Art Gallery to remove its famous Victorian painting of Hylas and … 

FOCUS UP NORTH Event show Confex has announced a Future Focus of the London based exhibition to take place in Manchester, July 4-5. This will be at the Victoria …

CHASE PERSUED Organisers of events for charities and associations might be interested to hear that the dedicated exhibition for the non-profit sector, CHASE, is … 

THE BAREFOOT CONTESSA In 1954 director and screen-writer Joseph L Mankiewicz followed up his 1950 All About Eve biting satire of Broadway with a biting and …

EVENT SLEAZE

An undercover investigation by the Financial Times at a President’s Club fundraising dinner in January at the Dorchester Hotel, London, led to allegations of hostesses being groped by some of the guests and sex workers supplied. Since the details were published the Club has wound up and some charities have refused to accept its donations.

Shortly after this it was revealed that hostesses at the February ICE Totally Gaming conference and exhibition at Excel, London were told to wear “nothing more than swimsuits” to attract buyers (presumably male) to their stands.

All this has brought on tut-tutting attacks of the moral compasses and calls in some of the event trade press to “root out sexism” from our industry, and everyone else’s, but it is left unclear who can or will actually do it. Question is, should the event or exhibition organiser be responsible, and in turn their sponsors and exhibitors? Should it be any trade association behind the event? Or should it be the venue where the event is being held?

Anybody?

WHAT PRICE SOCIAL MEDIA?

A very public row has been running since a blogger on social media asked the owner of a Dublin hotel for a free five-night stay for herself and a partner in exchange for some positive publicity on her website.

Elle Darby,22, who blogs her followers about beauty, lifestyle and travel, sent her email request to Paul Stenson, owner of the Charleville Lodge Hotel, Dublin, who turned her request down, and then obtained publicity for his hotel by publishing the request, and his rejection. Darby, who received abuse from bravely anonymous internet trolls as a result, has published a tearful video entitled “i was exposed (SO embarrassing)” and Stenson has responded by offering his customers T-shirts featuring the row.

Views on the uninspiring spat are polarised. Some feel that Darby overestimated the selling power of her blog and was accordingly naive in asking to be given an expensive five-night stay for two. As a rule most honest event industry journalists writing about hotels are offered just one or occasionally two nights to do the job. Others feel that Darby was also naive in assuming that a hotel highly star-rated for its facilities would not be cursed with poor service and/or terrible food.

However there is also the view that Stenson was gratuitously cruel in the way he rejected Darby’s hopeful approach, which came across to us as just something to boost his ego, something he clearly needs.