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Gay hotel, THE OUT NYC, open for business

THE OUT NYC is being touted as a “straight friendly” gay boutique resort.

On a recent afternoon, construction was brisk and the excitement was palpable at 510 West 42nd Street in Manhattan, the site of THE OUT NYC, a sleek, three-story structure with a glass façade that its creators say will be the first gay hotel in New York City.

The 105-room boutique hotel, located between 10th and 11th Avenues in the Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood, close to Chelsea, Times Square and the Theater District, opens its doors on March 1.

“I had a vision five years ago,” to create a gay hotel that would be conveniently located, said Ian Simpson Reisner, a managing partner of Parkview Developers, which owns THE OUT NYC, but would also “be a relaxing home base resort-style retreat where guests can stay, eat and play.” 

Reisner said he drew much of his inspiration from both Ian Schrager and André Balazs, whose elegant hotels with cutting edge décor are very gay friendly. THE OUT NYC, Reisner said, is similar in conception and style, but is a gay hotel that is very straight friendly. By marketing it as a “straight-friendly” urban resort, it sends the clear message that the property welcomes gays as well as straights, and tourists as well as locals, he said.

THE OUT NYC is part of a global trend, said Darren Cooper, senior consultant for Out Now Consulting, an international company based in the Netherlands that specializes in marketing to the gay community.

“Traditionally gay-owned and or operated hotels and guesthouses have been located in vacation resorts, and catered almost exclusively to the gay leisure traveler,” Cooper said. But since 2003 there has been growth in larger, metropolitan, upscale, boutique hotels that are predominantly aimed at the LGBT community but also marketed as “straight friendly.” The LGBT community is announcing that it is now “part of the mainstream, but that straights are welcome, too,” he said.

Cooper cited a number of reasons for the increase, including the fact that post 9/11, the LGBT travel market “showed remarkable resilience, a fact that was not lost on the global travel industry as well as gay entrepreneurs and hoteliers.”

Bjorn Hanson, divisional dean of the Preston Robert Tisch Center for Hospitality, Tourism and Sports Management at New York University, said the fact that up to 10 percent of the population self-reports as being gay “creates an opportunity” for hotels that appeal to a substantial demographic.

The change in marriage laws may also play a role in the increase.

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THE OUT NYC “will be an attractive offering for LGBT audiences and their straight friends visiting the City on the heels of the passage of same-sex marriage,” said Kimberly Spell, chief communications officer for NYC Company. And the hotel’s opening “is another example of how New York City continues to evolve and reinvent itself.”

Rooms at THE OUT NYC will start at $250 a night and include wireless high speed Internet, flat screen TVs, in-room MP3 docking stations, workplaces and mini-bars. Valet parking will be available. Eight “Sleep Shares,” hostel-style rooms that sleep four, will be equipped with four full-sized beds, personal TVs, a bathroom, and privacy curtains. These innovative shared accommodations, from $99 per person, were designed to “help make the property affordable to a younger demographic,” Reisner said.

THE OUT NYC, designed by Paul Dominguez, will feature multi-use function spaces to be used as a business and conference center or for intimate private diners, large events and weddings. Public spaces include a 5,000-foot wellness center, three courtyards (one will boast an ipe-wood sunbathing deck, two hot tubs, and a cascading curtain of rain; another will feature a bamboo garden), and the 11,000-square-foot XL Nightclub.

The full-service restaurant and café, KITCHIN, set to open in May, will serve upscale comfort food. Guests will be able to dine at large communal tables and enjoy picnics prepared by the restaurant’s staff. Reisner said that he hopes the hotel’s welcome-to-all philosophy and atmosphere will help make the KITCHIN “the neighborhood cafeteria.” 

THE OUT NYC “is a nice-to-have, not a need-to-have,” said Henry H. Harteveldt, co-founder of the Atmosphere Research Group, a market research company. “I think it is going to be challenging” to succeed.

“The hotel is going to have to deliver,” said Harteveldt. “The hotel has to fill up its rooms; it doesn’t matter what sexual orientation its guests are.” Customers will expect the usual amenities like predictable hot water, good Wi-Fi connectivity and an on-site restaurant with good food and fair prices, Harteveldt said. He expects it to be especially challenging in New York. Unlike resort areas, where properties are frequently destinations themselves, the lure of New York City’s many attractions often means less time is spent on the premises.

In addition, in recent years a number of mainstream hotels, including Starwood, Kimpton and Marriott, have welcomed the LGBT community though marketing efforts and service. For example, when gay guests arrive to check in at a number of hotels, well-trained front desk personnel now handle questions like how many beds should be in guest’s room with greater sensitivity, Harteveldt said.

Another challenge will be getting repeat guests who are members of major brand loyalty programs. “For customers, loyalty is huge,” said Harteveldt. “By staying at The OUT NYC, they will be forfeiting perks and free future stays. It will be a tough choice, especially since they are often treated just as well at mainstream properties.”

Cooper, the marketing consultant, said that Out Now’s research pointed to a possible promising outcome. In a study, LGBT2020, which collected data from 18 countries around the world in 2011, New York was the No. 1-rated city destination for LGBT travelers globally. “In my opinion, a hotel that catered to this market was bound to happen sooner or later in New York,” he said.

But Cooper agreed that when competing with the best hotels in the world, who are already training their staff and who have access to the global LGBT community through a media network, “you have to make sure that you get it right, and that isn’t done overnight.”  He said several properties in Barcelona, Berlin and Buenos Aires opened by Axel Hotels in recent years cater predominately to gay leisure and business travelers and have been successful in competing in a tough marketplace, with facilities and service that “raised the bar for LGBT properties globally.”

And word of mouth, too, will be important in the hotel’s ultimate success, as the global gay community “is small, and it talks,” Cooper said. “The opening of OUT NYC is big news — people will be talking, blogging, writing, tweeting, chatting and texting about this,” he said. “Good news travels fast, as does bad in this community. If OUT NYC gets it right, the hotel will flourish.”

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Article source: http://itineraries.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/29/10541161-gay-friendly-105-room-the-out-nyc-open-for-business

Mob wars! Mafia attractions muscle in on Vegas

Visitors to Mob Attraction Las Vegas can see an image of actor James Caan, who frequently portrays mobsters, in the skim room.

If you’re heading to Las Vegas any time soon, don’t be surprised if you find yourself in the middle of a mob war.

On one side, there’s the new Mob Attraction at the Tropicana Las Vegas, set to open on March 1; on the other, the city-owned Mob Museum, which opened downtown on Feb. 14. Offering different takes on mobsters, gangsters and goodfellas, each one is hoping to stake out its own piece of the action.

“It’s a new turf war,” said Anthony Curtis, president of LasVegasAdvisor.com. “It’s the South Strip boys against the downtown mob.”

For those keeping score, the Tropicana attraction is technically reopening after its predecessor, the Mob Experience, went belly-up in September. “We had to create a new name, new logo, new everything,” said spokesman Spence Johnston.

Like its predecessor, the Mob Attraction is, as the name suggests, more interactive attraction than cultural repository. Upon entering, visitors make their way through a series of immersive experiences that chronicle mob history from immigration — think Ellis Island with foghorns and the smell of saltwater — to a 1930s speakeasy to the back room of a casino where you get to decide whether a cheater gets to walk or take a ride into the desert.

Along the way, videos by the likes of tough-guy actors, including James Caan, Frank Vincent and Tony Sirico, provide historical insights while real actors portray cops, bag men and bosses. According to Johnston, RFID badges will track visitors’ decisions at various points — for example, to participate in a shakedown or rat someone out — leading up to a final scene in which “they either get made or get whacked.”

Either way, they live to tell the tale and, presumably, visit the gift shop and view the venue’s collection of artifacts, which include Meyer Lansky’s journals, a home movie of “Bugsy” Siegel and photos of Sam Giancana, Tony “The Ant” Spilotro and other assorted wise guys.

“These are private belongings from their families,” said Johnston. “They give you a look into the personal lives of these guys. It’s a piece of American history.”

Of course, whether there are enough Las Vegas–bound history buffs to support, not one, but two, mob attractions is an open question.

“There’ll be some initial interest but I can’t imagine people coming back after they’ve seen them once,” said Alan Balboni, author of “Beyond the Mafia” and a professor at the College of Southern Nevada. “People still come here for the gambling and sex.”

Ethan Miller / Getty Images

Sin City is a major entertainment center and business travel destination, known for its carefully cultivated image, gambling and nightlife.

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Rob Lovitt is a longtime travel writer who still believes the journey is as important as the destination. Follow him at Twitter.

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Article source: http://itineraries.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/29/10542485-mob-attraction-muscles-in-on-las-vegas

Travel photo: South African elephant up close

Gary Arndt / everything-everywhere.com

Hartbeespoort Dam Elephant Sanctuary, South Africa

In 2010 I had the pleasure of traveling to South Africa. During that trip I visited the Hartbeespoort Dam Elephant Sanctuary which serves as a halfway house for adolescent African elephants. Here orphaned elephants are raised until they can be more independent later in life. 

I felt this photo captured the size and temperament of the elephants I met at the sanctuary. 

The sanctuary is located about an hour north of Johannesburg. They are open to tourists and visiting can be a powerful experience.

Gary Arndt is a travel blogger who has been traveling the world since 2007.

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Article source: http://todaytravel.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/17/10435325-travel-photo-of-the-day-south-african-elephant-up-close

Catch a ‘firefall’ in Yosemite National Park

Bethany Gediman

Every mid-February, the setting sun backlights Horsetail Fall in Yosemite National Park.

Lava hasn’t flowed in Yosemite National Park for millions of years, but for the next few weeks, visitors can get a glimpse of a natural phenomenon that echoes the area’s fiery past.

Instead of molten rock, however, what the locals call a “natural firefall” owes its existence to a fortuitous convergence of water, sunlight and season.

“There’s a little waterfall on the east end of El Capitan called Horsetail Fall that catches the light for just a few fleeting moments,” said filmmaker Steven Bumgardner. “It creates the illusion of a waterfall of fire, not unlike lava.”

The firefall only occurs for approximately two weeks in mid-February when the setting sun shines up the Yosemite Valley, effectively backlighting the ribbon-like cascade.

“Some years, it’s bright red; some years, it’s more golden,” said Park Ranger Kari Cobb. “As long as the weather’s clear and there’s enough water, it’ll light up.”

This year, viewing looks promising thanks to recent snowfall that’s now melting and feeding the seasonal stream that flows into Horsetail.

“It’s flowing right now,” said Cobb, “but it probably won’t last for two weeks unless we get another storm.”

While the firefall may resemble lava, it actually takes its name from a more recent page of Yosemite history. From the 1930s to 1968, visitors to the park were treated to the sight of the original Yosemite Firefall, a nightly event in which park employees pushed a pile of burning embers over the edge of Glacier Point, creating the impression of a glowing cascade of water.

“Eventually, they came to realize that pushing embers over a cliff in Yosemite probably wasn’t the best thing to do,” said Cobb.

There are, of course, no such concerns with the current version of the firefall, although visitors should realize that its appearance is dependent on natural variables that vary from year to year, day to day and even minute to minute.

“The whole experience is about an hour although the peak is only a fraction of that,” said Bumgardner, who produced a video of the firefall for the Park Service during last year’s flow.

“You just never know if that peak is going to be right now or in another five minutes,” he said. “When in doubt, take a picture, wait a little longer and take another.”

Rob Lovitt is a longtime travel writer who still believes the journey is as important as the destination. Follow him at Twitter.

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Article source: http://todaytravel.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/16/10428048-catch-a-firefall-in-yosemite-national-park

Travel photo of the day: Sunbeam in the Andes

Submitted by Nicholas Zetts / UGC

A shaft of sunlight touches down on Imbabura, Ecuador.

Nick Zetts caught a local bus to the hill in Imbabura, Ecuador, where he took this photo in January 2007. The rainy season in the Andes brings in overcast skies, with the occasional cloud breaks to let the sun shine through.

Zetts lived in Imbabura for two-and-a-half years, doing agriculture work, and told TODAY.com that he thoroughly enjoyed the landscape and the strong connection that people still have with the land.   

If you have photos you’d like to share, submit them for a chance to be featured in the weekly gallery.

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Article source: http://todaytravel.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/15/10342358-travel-photo-of-the-day-sunbeam-in-the-andes

Travel photo: Train crossing in the Hudson Valley

Maureen Moore / UGC

Moodna Viaduct, Hudson Valley, N.Y.

New York’s Hudson Valley is famous for its rolling hills and colorful foliage. Maureen Moore of Cornwall, N.Y., captured this photo of the Moodna Viaduct in October 2010.

“[It] was one of the many days I was out photographing the beautiful fall days we enjoy here,” Moore told TODAY.com. “As I was riding around I noticed that the setting sun was shining on the trestles support beams.”

Though Moore likes to photograph landscapes, she says her true love is getting shots of bald eagles and black bears.

If you have photos you’d like to share, submit them for a chance to be featured in the weekly gallery.

In the meantime, be sure to check out this week’s It’s a Snap gallery and vote for your favorite photo.

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Article source: http://todaytravel.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/10/10373209-travel-photo-of-the-day-train-crossing-in-the-hudson-valley

Romantic getaways — with the kids

On the Disney Dream cruise ship, take a break from the kids in the Meridian, an adult-only lounge that offers inside seating and an outdoor teak deck.

 

No one deserves a romantic getaway more than moms and dads. If you can’t find a sitter or don’t want to leave the kids at home, check out these options for having your travel version of a heart-shaped box of chocolates, and eating it too!

Jack Affleck

Keystone Resort in Colorado offers plenty for children and adults, including horse-drawn sleigh rides.

Warm up in a winter wonderland
A ski vacation provides just the right mix of family-time and couple-time. Keystone Resort in Colorado is known for its kid-friendly ski school (ages 3-plus), horse-drawn sleigh-ride dinners, and a snow fort complete with maze slide, and lookout tower. For a special date night hire an in-room babysitter so you can board a gondola to snuggle up under a blanket while you soar to 12,000 feet to dine on contemporary cuisine with a Bavarian accent at the AAA four-star Alpenglowe Stube.  

Canada’s Whistler Blackcomb also offers ski school for the kids (ages 3-plus) as well as romantic touches for parents. Take a dogsled adventure for two to a breathtaking waterfall dripping with icicles, or bring the kids along for a jaunt through the Canadian wilderness. Book a rental condo with room for the whole brood and cozy up by the fire after the kids are asleep.

Be mine at the beach
On a beach vacation, the whole family can play together in the water and on the sandy shore. Just when the kids tire of too much time with mom and dad, sneak away for a bit of romance.

All guests at Franklin D. Resort Spa in Jamaica are assigned a vacation nanny as a full-time babysitter or to act as that extra pair of hands you always wish you had. At first Corinne McDermott, founder of HaveBabyWillTravel.com, was uncomfortable with the idea of a nanny, however, she says, “We had been in our room for no more than 10 minutes when both kids were swimsuited, sun screened, a dirty diaper dealt with, and out on the beach just outside our door — leaving me to unpack in peace with a cold Red Stripe in my hand. I was sold!”

There are plenty of fabulous beach hotel options in Hawaii, but if traveling with young children, only one offers a kids’ club for children as young as 3, Disney’s Aulani Resort on Oahu. With Hawaiian crafts (like paper lei making), interactive electronic game tables and visits from Disney characters — it may be difficult to get the kids to leave.

Sail into romance
Cruises offer fun for all ages, both at sea and in port. Plus, parents can indulge in side-by-side massages in the ship’s spa or sip cocktails in a floating nightclub while children are busy with kids’ club activities such as games, arts and crafts, and face-painting. Tweens and teens have clubs of their own with video games and dance parties. Carolyn Spencer Brown, editor in chief of Cruisecritic.com, says, “Certain cruise lines are better for kids with different ages.” She recommends Cunard (babies and toddlers), Disney (children under 10), Carnival (tweens), and Royal Caribbean (teens).

For a customized, private sailing experience, you can charter your own yacht. You don’t need to be a rock star to sail like one; prices start at $300 per person per day all-inclusive through AmazingCharters.com. Tuck the kids into bed and then enjoy a romantic dinner for two under the stars, prepared by your own private chef. Your crew can even create a treasure hunt for the children on shore while you and your honey soak up some rays.

No matter the destination, be sure to make time for a little romance during your next family vacation!

Colleen Lanin is the founder/editor of TravelMamas.com, a site for anyone who wants to travel with children … and stay sane!

 

Article source: http://todaytravel.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/31/10280268-romantic-getaways-with-the-kids?chromedomain=celebrate

Museums highlight Black History Month

Courtesy of Smithsonian Institution

Thomas Jefferson, who owned about 600 slaves, wrote his rough draft of the Declaration of Independence on this mahogany lap desk.

Throughout February, museums, cities and cultural venues around the country are marking Black History Month with a variety of temporary exhibitions and special events.

In Washington, D.C., the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture is presenting “Slavery at Jefferson’s Monticello: Paradox of Liberty“ at the National Museum of American History through Oct. 14.

The exhibit includes artifacts excavated at Monticello and objects from the Smithsonian’s collection, including a set of slave shackles and the lap desk Jefferson used to write the first draft of the Declaration of Independence. “At the time he was espousing the opinion that all men are created equal, Jefferson owned approximately 150 slaves,” said James Gordon, spokesman for the National Museum of African American History and Culture. “During his lifetime, Jefferson owned about 600 slaves so, in fact, in his eyes all men weren’t equal.” 

Philadelphia is spotlighting its African-American legacy this month with exhibits, plays, storytelling events, music and more. Included in the line-up is an exhibit at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts featuring more than 100 paintings by Henry Ossawa Tanner, who lived in Philadelphia after the Civil War and became the first prominent African-American painter to gain international acclaim. (The exhibit runs through April 15.) Visitors may also download a free app for a tour showcasing 21 of Philadelphia’s most iconic African American-themed murals. The tour follows a trolley route through Philadelphia’s culturally diverse neighborhoods.  

Through Aug. 20, the National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tenn., is hosting “For All the World To See: Visual Culture and the Struggle for Civil Rights,” which features images relating to the struggle for racial justice during the period of the modern civil rights movement. 

The National WWII Museum in New Orleans is paying tribute to the more than 1.2 million African Americans who served with a month-long schedule of programming and an exhibit honoring the Tuskegee Airmen and the “Red Ball Express” drivers.  

And in San Francisco, the Museum of the African Diaspora is hosting an exhibit titled “Collected: Stories of Acquisition and Reclamation,” which includes more than 100 objects that help tell stories about the contributions of people of African descent to American history and culture (through March 4.)

For more events and exhibits around the country marking Black History Month, see http://www.africanamericanhistorymonth.gov/.

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Article source: http://itineraries.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/07/10342885-museums-highlight-black-history-month

Travel photo of the day: Bald eagle aloft

Submitted by Nancy Harder / UGC

This bird of prey was photographed in east-central Minnesota during a weekend drive in the country.

Nancy Harder and her husband headed out on a drive through the Minnesota countryside on Saturday, Feb. 4. On this particular morning, there was a light fog and hoarfrost blanketed the trees and ground.  

“My husband saw the eagle up in a tree, pulled over the car and asked me if I had my camera ready with the long lens and if I thought I could sneak out of the car and get the shot,” Harder told TODAY.com. “I squeezed out of the door and used the car roof to stabilize my camera. I got off a few shots with him sitting still; just then he took off and I managed to get off two more shots.”

If you have photos you’d like to share, submit them for a chance to be featured in the weekly gallery.

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Article source: http://todaytravel.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/08/10342514-photo-of-the-day-bald-eagle-aloft

Travel photo of the day: Mist on the Delaware River

Submitted by Nicki McManus / UGC

Delaware River near Milford, Pa.

Nicki McManus hadn’t planned on capturing this early morning image of geese on the Delaware River when she took it in the fall of 2010. 

McManus and her husband, who live in Wantage, N.J., were driving to photograph Hidden Lake, which is located toward the southern end of the Delaware Water Gap National Park. The couple had pulled over to make a phone call and McManus wandered around the river’s edge, at the Dingmans Ferry boat launch.

“That morning was very cool, as most fall days in the middle of October, causing the mist to rise off the river,” McManus told TODAY.com. “I was walking around with my camera, and as always, looking for a shot. When I turned to my right, I saw the geese gathered there on the shore just asking to be photographed.”

McManus is a professional freelance photography who mostly shoots landscapes. But she also has a “passion for old barns, and anything else from days gone by.” To see more of her work, visit her website.

McManus holds a special place in her camera for the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area: “It has so much to offer. There are countless hiking trails, beautiful views, and many, many photo [opportunities].”

Do you have some photos you want to share? Submit them for a chance to be featured in the weekly gallery by clicking here.

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Article source: http://todaytravel.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/24/10225151-travel-photo-of-the-day-mist-on-the-delaware-river