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Have a Saigontourist Tet at Majestic and Grand

For Saigonese and guests to the city to celebrate the Lunar New Year with delicious food and wine, two hotels under Saigontourist in downtown HCMC present special food and entertainment programs.

Majestic Saigon Hotel (1 Dong Khoi Street, District 1, tel: 3829 5517)

On Lunar New Year’s Eve (February 2), at the hotel’s Prima Ballroom & Breeze Sky Bar, guests can enjoy a buffet of Western and Asian dishes with free champagne, wine, beer, soft drinks, and mineral water from 7 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. for US$89 per adult.

At the hotel’s M Bar on the eighth floor, an outdoor barbecue buffet will be held from 7 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. on February 2. Tickets are priced at US$89 per adult, inclusive of all kinds of drinks.

Also that night, admire the fireworks display, at the Serenade Restaurant on the seventh floor to eat from a sumptuous selection of European and Asian cuisine. Tickets are US$79 per adult.

All the Majestic venues will have entertainment such as lion dance, calligraphy displays, New Year music and dance shows and fashion shows.

Grand Hotel Saigon (8 Dong Khoi Street, District 1, tel: 3829 4046)

Do the New Year in classic Vietnamese style with an exotic Vietnamese Tet food program featuring banh tet, banh chung (glutinous rice cakes filled with green bean paste and fat pork), steamed pork with coconut water, vegetable pickles and watermelon to name a few. The hotel will give lucky money for guests.

The program will be prepared at the hotel’s Chez-Nous Restaurant from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. from January 30 to February 5. Tickets are priced at US$20 each.

On Lunar New Year’s Eve, enjoy the view of the fireworks display at the hotel’s Belle-vue Restaurant and enjoy the excellent service and delicious dishes with a cocktail party, Flamenco band, dance shows, gameshow, and lucky door prizes. Tickets are priced at US$35 per adult and US$20 per child.

At the swimming pool area, relax at the barbecue buffet from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. from January 30 to February 5 featuring grilled salmon with salt, barbecued lamb ribs, oyster and salads plus music by Filipino music band.

Tickets are VND90,000++ to VND280,000++ per dish. Buy 10 tickets in advance before January 30 get one free.

(Collected by Vietnam Hotel network)

Ha Noi plans for more tourists

The capital should tap into its natural resources and cultural and historical heritage, and diversify its unique tourism products and services, said the municipal Culture, Sports and Tourism Department’s deputy director Mai Tien Dung at a workshop titled “Tourism Investment Promotion in Ha Noi city“.

hanoi big 07 300x204 Ha Noi plans for more tourists “The city has the infrastructure and ability to further develop tourism,” he added.

Dung said the city accounted for 30 per cent of the country’s total foreign tourists with over 1 million arrivals last year and a projected 1.2 million this year.

Most tourists were from mainland China, South Korea, the US, Japan and European countries.

The capital received 9.2 million arrivals last year while this year, the number is expected to reach 10.6 million, an increase of 11 per cent.

Dung said Ha Noi had improved infrastructure and services for tourism development including accommodation, restaurants, shopping centres, entertainment areas and new products.

Statistics from the department showed that the number of accommodation facilities in the city was up to 800 with 17,500 rooms to just 351 facilities with 10,000 rooms in 2002.

Restaurants, bars and cafes had also mushroomed.

“However, many of them are small and don’t have parking lots. Hygiene and food safety are also matters of concern at some outlets,” he said.

In addition, the capital had 10 big commercial centres, 84 supermarkets and several hundred shops that sold a diverse range of goods.

“Careful studies have led to a large amount of culturally orientated construction,” Dung said.

“Ha Noi has been the destination of choice for many events and the city needs more investment to improve infrastructure to promote that strength.”

He said the city had successfully organised large international and regional events, adding that Ha Noi had huge potential in the meetings, incentives, conventions and exhibitions (MICE) industry. With the rapidly growing number of hotels in Hanoi and high standard facilities, it is believed that the MICE industry in Hanoi will be developing to international level in the future.

Nguyen Thanh Tinh, deputy director of the municipal Planning and Investment Department, said the city had a large market with a population of 6.45 million people.

“It has the investment advantage of a young and abundant labour force. 53 per cent of workers in the tourism sector are trained and labour costs are low,” Tinh said.

Ha Noi has been voted as one of the five most attractive cities for tourism in Asia by Travel and Leisure magazine since 2002.

“The city wants to develop tourism into a key economic sector, becoming a national and regional tourism hub, connecting Vietnamese tourism with ASEAN countries and China,” Tinh said.

Tourism businesses agreed that Ha Noi had a lot of potential, but lacked a complete tourism package.

Doan Thi Thanh Tra, head of the Sai Gon Tourist Company’s marketing department, said the city had not offered products customers were interested in.

“No surveys have been held to find out what tourists actually want to experience in the capital,” Tra said.

She added that Ha Noi had the advantage of being able to link tourism sites with neighbouring provinces as well as unique trade villages and pagodas.

Tra argued that the city had not advertised or marketed tour packages well, leaving tourists to plan their own trips.

“Poor quality services and a shortage of hotels, as well as a lack of tourist information have also contributed to the slow development of the sector.” She suggested that the city should overcome its shortcomings by carefully studying visitors’ demands to provide unique products.

“Travelling is an experience and visitors want to make new discoveries.”

Nguyen Thu Xinh, general director of the Ha Noi-based Dai Hoa Tourism and Commerce Company, added that people had not acknowledged the sector’s importance to the country’s development.

“Poor infrastructure and human resources combined with pricing issues are the main reasons for the problem,” Xinh said.

Department deputy director Mai Tien Dung said the city should promote investment in infrastructure and building unique and attractive tourism services.

Advertising and promotional campaigns should also be enhanced and more professional, he said, adding that the city should accelerate tourism planning by 2020 with a vision to 2050 with details of tourism sites.

“Tourism development and environmental protection should always come together in combination with the improvement of human resources in the sector,” he said, adding that the city had made investment policies to attract investors with assistance services, the one-door mechanism and simplified licensing procedures.

Head representative of the Indian Clark Group Ravi Kumar said the country should open direct flights between India and Viet Nam to promote investment in the two countries’ tourism industries.

“India has been paying attention to new tourism destinations in Viet Nam, Laos and Cambodia,” Dung said.

The municipal Culture, Sports and Tourism Department is going to focus on developing ecological tours using green travel with 12 electric cars in the Old Quarter and around Hoan Kiem Lake.

In addition, tours on the Red River, ecotourism in Ba Vi and community-based tours will also be enhanced.

(Collected by Vietnam Hotels)

Searching Saigon for Boutique Comfort

FOR more than 12 years now, I’ve been visiting Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, and I’ve watched as it’s grown bigger and richer, faster and hipper, more cosmopolitan and more connected. Saigon, as it’s still known to most, has an anything-can-happen energy that embraces me the moment I step off the plane, and I feel more at home there than perhaps anywhere else in the world.
And yet after all these years, I have yet to claim a local Saigon hotel as my favorite — a refuge to offer relief and comfort. I’ve stayed in numerous mini-hotels, the skinny, multistory accommodations favored by backpackers (generally $5 to $25 a night). I’ve stayed in the grand hotels that date back to the French colonial era — the Majestic and the hotel Continental saigon (from about $150). I’ve stayed in the ultramodern Sheraton tower ($225 and up for a deluxe room).

But none of these places have seduced me with that magical combination of décor, service, convenience, location, character and price to make me ever really want to return. Simply put, in my experience, Saigon had no exceptional, reasonably priced hotels.

During my most recent visit, in February — to see friends and attend a wedding — I was more hopeful. A friend had told me about the Ordinary Hotel (25 Dong Du Street), right in the middle of Saigon’s central downtown District 1. “Very boutique, very funky,” she wrote in an e-mail message. And affordable too: around $50 a night for a deluxe room.

Booking proved to be a challenge. The hotel’s Web site and e-mail address didn’t work, nor, for a while, did its phones. I had to ask another friend actually to go to the hotel and reserve a room. When I got there, however, the desk clerk had no record of it. Luckily, a fourth-floor room was available. Unluckily, an elevator wasn’t.

The room itself had a sheen of cool: it was spacious, with antique wooden furniture and a wide white divan under a broad bank of windows. The walls were a neat mix of magenta and pea-soup green. Wi-Fi signals flowed freely into my laptop.

But the sheen soon faded. The desk chair kept breaking. The paint on the walls was peeling. The Wi-Fi signal was strong, but the Internet connection spotty. The divan was dingy. The shower-head mount collapsed the instant I turned on the water.

Where, I wondered as I checked out after two nights, are Saigon’s true boutique hotels? The city is full of French colonial villas and Art Deco houses ripe for transformation into properties of character and class. And while real estate is expensive, labor remains cheap — and that should translate into bargains for travelers.

“As an investment, it doesn’t work,” said Jean-Marc Merlin, chairman of the Apple Tree Group, a Vietnam-based company that owns and operates hotels all over Southeast Asia. “The annoyance factor of having to complete a project is too high. If you have to turn gray over two years, you’d rather do it over 200 rooms.”

In the meantime, there’s A & Em (848-3-822-7245; www.a-emhotels.com), a chain of five small, design-savvy hotels. I checked into the newest location, at 66 Le Thanh Ton Street just a few streets away from the Ordinary in District 1. Slick and clean, this month-old A & Em branch featured tasteful, minimalist interiors — flower patterns were everywhere, from the pillowcases to the frosted-glass walls of the bathroom — and, more importantly, a reasonable level of comfort. The linens were soft, the mattress was real. The TV was a Samsung flat-screen, not some boxy knockoff. The bathtub was huge and deep, with whirlpool jets.

There were, of course, a couple of design misfires, like a toilet-paper holder wedged inaccessibly between tank and wall and no mount for the shower head. But I was willing to let those issues go, especially since the desk had given me $5 off the $50 deluxe-room rate — a sweet gesture. Even better, a shower-head mount miraculously appeared above the bathtub one morning, without my having said a thing — just the sort of attention to detail that makes boutique hotels an attractive option.

Still, one incident disturbed me, albeit briefly: One morning, on my way to breakfast, I took the stairs instead of the elevator. Halfway down, I was suddenly grabbed by an employee and bundled into the elevator, just so I wouldn’t have to step around a platter of food that was on the stairway landing. Annoyance flared, then subsided. Saigon may be changing, but it’s still Saigon: rough, intimate, improvised and surprising — all qualities that make the city my home away from home.

(From The New York Times)

Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

Mist is covering Ba Na-Nui Chua Resort at this time of the year, creating an atmosphere of mystery and a scene straight out of a book.

The site is located in Hoa Vang District, some 40 km from Da Nang City to the west. It used to take visitors an hour to go through dangerous roads to Ba Na Mountain. Now, thanks to the cable car system, you only need 15 minutes to get to the mountain top.

The cable car system, which links Ba Na Mountain’s base to Vong Nguyet Hill, includes 24 pillars, 94 cabins and can serve 1,500 visitors per hour.

The system has two places in the Guinness Book of World Records: The world’s longest one-wire cable car network (5,042.62m) and the cable car system with the highest gap between the first and last stations (1,291.81m). The cable car offers a wonderful view and unique experience to soak in the nature.

Untitled Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

Ba Na’s cable car has two spots in the Guinness Book of World Records

A 3 Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

Stunning views from the cable car

A 4 Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

The view from above

A 5 Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

Thick mist makes surrounds the cable car

A 6 Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

Loc Uyen Garden

A 7 Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

A 8 Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

Quan Am Cac Pagoda in the fog

A 9 Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

A huge statue, 26m high, located on the top of Ba Na Mountain

A 12 Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

A 13 Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

Visitors soak in the scenery

A 16 Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

Bridge on top of Ba Na Mountain

A 17 Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

A suspension bridge hangs at a height of over 1,000m

A 21 Misty Ba Na’s cable car offers an enchanting view from above

A unique and remarkable experience

Festive season at Sofitel Saigon Plaza

The Sofitel Plaza will start the festive season with a Christmas Lighting ceremony at 6 p.m. on Wednesday to the sweet sounds of the Sofitel Ambassador Choir. Being one of the most luxury hotels in Saigon, Sofitel Saigon is a good choice for tourists or business travelers.

sofitel saigon 297x300 Festive season at Sofitel Saigon Plaza

The Magnifique Christmas tree, fashionably designed by the hotel’s creative team with environmentally-friendly lights, will make the evening more enchanting.

The hotel will launch the new log cakes by the hotel’s award-winning pastry team and home-made goodies made from the finest chocolates and fruit inspired by chef Pastorelli – Best Craftsmen of France 1989.

The log cakes, hampers and special home-made goodies are available for order at Gourmand Shop until December 31. The Pastorelli’s Log Cake costs VND700,000+ for a cake to serve 8-10.

For more information call Olivier Restaurant on 3824 1555.

Source: Saigon Times Daily

Winter promotions at Victoria Hotels & Resorts

The Victoria Hoi An Beach Resort & Spa and the Victoria Sapa Resort & Spa are now offering winter promotions to customers.

e3a9f victoria hoi an pool 200 Winter promotions at Victoria Hotels & Resorts

The pool at Victoria Hoi An Beach Resort & Spa

From December 1 to 15, enjoy value added benefits for internet bookings at the Victoria Hoi An Beach Resort & Spa. Bookings made for Superior, Deluxe and Junior Suite category will enjoy a complimentary upgrade to the next available category plus one complimentary 60-minute body massage for two persons per stay. Suite bookings will be entitled to one complimentary set menu for two persons (without beverage). The resort will also lavish you with free mini-bar (one refill per day) and four pieces of laundry per day (not including dry cleaning) for all room types.

The Victoria Sapa Resort and Spa offers an interesting package rate starting from only US$260++ per person until December 31. This includes a two night stay in a Superior room with breakfast for two and round trip tickets on board the Victoria Express Train in a superior cabin (fourth-berth sharing with others). Package is only available for departures on Sunday, Monday or Tuesday. For more information and booking this particular resort or any other Vietnam hotel and resort, please contact support@vietnamhotels.net.

Spa InterContinental presents a special beauty package for the festive season. A ninety minute facial cleansing, massage and toning for VND1.8 million++/person till the end of December.

The InterContinental Asiana Saigon, corner of Hai Ba Trung Street and Le Duan Boulevard, District 1, HCMC.


Source: Saigon Times Daily

Learning local culture with homestay holidays

Tourists who want to experience rural life in Vietnam first hand are increasingly turning to home-stay holidays instead of staying in Vietnam hotels.

A folk band entertains foreign visitors at Ho Village in Sapa Town   Lao Cai Province Learning local culture with homestay holidays
A folk band entertains foreign visitors at Ho Village in Sapa Town, Lao Cai Province
A newly built stilt house for homestay visitors in Lac Village Hoa Binh Province Learning local culture with homestay holidays
A newly built stilt house for homestay visitors in Lac Village Hoa Binh Province
The Mekong River Delta is also a nice place for a homestay experience Learning local culture with homestay holidays
The Mekong River Delta is also a nice place for a homestay experience

Homestay holidays were not the brainchild of the director of a tourist agency. They came about due to a rising demand from foreign tourists, especially back packers, keen to get a glimpse of reality for Vietnamese ethnic groups.

Sarah Melone, a tourist from England, speaks highly of her last summer holiday where she stayed with a local family.
“The most interesting time was when I stayed with a Thai family in Lac Village in Mai Chau, Hoa Binh. I got the chance to learn about their work, their food and customs,” Sarah shared.

She had a friend working in Hanoi so her vacation had been carefully planned before she arrived. “I was lucky because my friend John had been in Vietnam for a while so he knew where I should go and what I should see. He put the homestay at the top of my to-do list.”

Today, this type of holiday is not only attracting foreigners, but also domestic tourists. Among them is Ha Thanh Huong, a student at the Hanoi Economics University.

“Vietnam is a multi-cultural country so we think that homestay tourism is the best way for us to learn about the different regions in our country.”

Huong spent her last Tet holiday visiting ethnic minority families in Dong Van, Pho Bang, Ma Le, and Sa Phin, Ha Giang Province.

“We did a 10-day homestay tour with some of the poorest families,” she says. “All the locals were very kind and friendly. It was our most memorable Tet holiday ever.”

Students seem to be the pioneers in this field. Many become volunteers to help communities in remote areas to build a better life.

“These are good opportunities for us to gain more experience and knowledge outside of school,” says Do Dinh Hoa, who spent time living with a Thai family in Son La Province last summer.

According to Tran Trong Tao, director of PSD Travel, the number of customers booking homestay tours is growing. “We are considering opening more tours to Mekong Delta Provinces like Ben Tre, Can Tho and Soc Trang,” he says.

“If we can provide good homestay service, visitors will not have to worry about finding a hotel during the high season.”

Things to remember

While Vietnam is known as a safe destination with friendly people and a rich culture, there is still a lot of work to be done to improve homestay services.

In the meantime, there are a few preparations you can make to get the most of your trip, especially if you organise it yourself:

Most families lack conveniences so remember to pack carefully and observe customs to avoid any embarrassing misunderstandings. If you have the choice, you should spend the first night with the families of local authorities, police or village chiefs because they will be safer and more comfortable.

Good places to stay

- Ho Village, Sapa District, Lao Cai Province with the Tay, Dao and Mong peoples.

Not to mention the magnificent scenery, visitors are always pleased with the service here because families in this village have good experience in welcoming tourists. This village has been billed as a homestay destination since 2000.

- A Thai village in Mai Chau District, Hoa Binh Province, 135km from Hanoi.

Mai Chau is one of the most famous homestay destinations in Vietnam with beautiful scenery and comfortable accommodation.

- Chay Lap Village, near the world natural heritage site Phong Nha – Ke Bang, in Quang Binh Province.

- The Mekong Delta

Join locals for fishing trips and visit orchards, floating markets, traditional craft villages and bird gardens. This is an emerging homestay destination.

Vietnam joins ranks of Asia’s finest hotels and resorts
sofitel metropole 2 Vietnam joins ranks of Asia’s finest hotels and resorts

Hotel Metropole Hanoi

Conde Nast Traveler, a renowned luxury travel magazine, has placed 5 Vietnamese hotels and resorts atop its lost of Readers’ Choice Awards.

Vietnamese resorts that made the top 20 list for Best Resorts in Asia included, Life Heritage Resort Hoi An, The Nam Hai (Nam Hai hotel), and Evason Ana Mandara Dalat & Six Senses Spa.

The Sofitel Legend Metropole-Hanoi and the Park Hyatt-Saigon, each won top spots in the survey of the 100 top hotels in Asia.

While readers lodged three Vietnam resorts onto the list, they also sung the praises of five resorts from Bali and five resorts from Thailand.

“Both Bali and Thailand have tremendous reputations as resort destinations,” said John Blanco, the new general manager at The Nam Hai. “So, for Vietnam to make this kind of impression on readers of such a distinguished travel magazine is indeed remarkable.”

The Readers Choice Awards polled 25,916 responses from readers who rated resorts and hotels across these five categories: food/dining, location, overall design, rooms and service. Resort ratings were also based on activities/facilities.

According to Conde Nast, only candidates that received a required minimum number of responses were deemed eligible for an award.

None of Vietnam’s islands made the Readers’ Choice Awards. Bali and Phuket were among the top three island destinations in Asia, which makes Vietnam’s resort standings all the more impressive.

Similarly, Vietnam’s top cities failed to make the top-ten cut. Bangkok and Chang Mai came in at number 1 and 2, while Bali’s Ubud ranked fifth.

Source: dtinews