OOZcollections :: real estate and design

July 9, 2009

The Future of Food

Source: National Geographic News

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/06/090630-farm-towers-locally-grown_2.html

 

Image courtesy Blake Kurasek, Vertical Farm Project

Image courtesy Blake Kurasek, Vertical Farm Project

“New York-based Architect Blake Kurasek designed the Living Skyscraper while he was a graduate student at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The concept places urban farms on the outer fringes of residential apartments. 

Some floors are enclosed for year-round production of greenhouse crops, while others include terraces for seasonal items such as orchards. The ground floor would contain a farmers’ market where residents could sell to one another and the general public. “

 

 

Illustration courtesy Eric Ellingsen and Dickson Despommier, Vertical Farm Project

Illustration courtesy Eric Ellingsen and Dickson Despommier, Vertical Farm Project

“The Pyramid Farm may be one way to address the needs of a swelling population on a planet with finite farmland, according to designers Dickson Despommier at New York’s Columbia University and Eric Ellingsen of the Illinois Institute of Technology.

Design teams around the world have been rolling out concepts for futuristic skyscrapers that house farms instead of—or in addition to—people as a means of feeding city dwellers with locally-grown crops.”

 

High-Rise Farms: The Future of Food?

John Roach
June 30, 2009

Salads of the future may still be served in bowls, but their ingredients might be grown in skyscrapers.

That’s the hope of scientists and architects who are erecting a unique strategy to feed a swelling population on a planet with finite farmland. (Find out more aboutsustainable agriculture.)

“In another 40 years, there’ll be another three billion people. That’s the problem,” said Dickson Despommier, a professor of public health at Columbia University in New York. “We have to find another way to feed them.”

One solution, Despommier believes, is to grow everything from salad greens to staple grains year-round in high-rise buildings at the hearts of urban centers.

This so-called vertical farming could put food within easy reach for billions of people while reducing carbon emissions from shipping crops across continents and oceans, he notes.

(See pictures of glass pyramids, towers of greenhouse pods, and other possible designs for vertical farms.)

“[The concept] is based on technologies already in use throughout the world, mainly high-tech greenhouses,” Despommier said.

For example, many existing greenhouses use hydroponics, a technique for growing crops in smaller spaces using nutrient-enriched water instead of soil.

Energy Hogs?

But for now high-rise farming remains just an idea. One challenge is how to stack the greenhouses so that layers of crops get enough light to be grown in a vertical structure, Despommier notes.

That’s one of the reasons Bruce Bugbee, a crop physiologist at Utah State University in Logan, is critical of high-rise farming. He says the concept is too expensive to implement and would be a colossal waste of electricity.

“We’re talking gigawatts of power, just huge amounts of power [to grow crops indoors], compared to free sunlight outside,” he said.

Typical office light is only about one percent as intense as the full sunlight needed to grow crops, Bugbee notes.

“People get confused about the amount of light needed to get plant yield versus the amount of light needed to keep people happy and productive and healthy,” he said. “They are roughly a hundred-fold different.”

Despommier counters that architects are already designing buildings to harvest the maximum amount of natural light.

What’s more, by incorporating new energy sources such as hydrothermal and wind power, these buildings don’t necessarily have to look like typical skyscrapers.

Start Small

Another consideration is creating a vertical farm design that would be economically viable.

Despommier said he is particularly intrigued by Eco-Laboratory, created by Seattle, Washington-based architectural firm Weber Thompson.

Other proposed buildings, which can be solely farms or mixes of farms and houses, would reach up to 60 stories high.

But the Eco-Lab complex would be just 12 stories tall and would mix residences with gardens that produce food for the local neighborhood.

“This was [an] attempt at something that seemed viable to a developer,” said project designer Myer Harrell.

Residents might tend the crops and own equity in their production, or they might assign the work to outside agricultural firms and later purchase the crops at a local market.

Selling the housing at market rate and proceeds from the farmers’ market could generate significant funds.

For example, Harrell said, sales of tomatoes and lettuces grown in the high-rise’s hydroponic gardens could total about a million U.S. dollars a year, based on revenue minus the base production costs.

The market viability of Eco-Lab, Harrell noted, distinguishes it from taller vertical farm proposals.

“Those [designs] have merit, but it would be difficult for us to see this idea jump to a larger scale right away,” he said.

Harrell believes breaking ground on Eco-Laboratory or a similar scaled-down building could be feasible within the next few years. Even the burst housing bubble and global recession, he noted, may work to the concept’s advantage, as people become more interested in self-sufficiency such as growing their own food.

(Related video: “Urban Farming Blooms in London”.)

Go Veggie Instead?

The need for vertical farms is most urgent in Southeast Asian countries, Columbia University’s Despommier said. Many of those places have seen increasing crop failures due to extreme weather and disease amid surging population growth.

(Related: “Food of the Future to Be More Diverse?”)

Indoor farming eliminates vagaries of the weather, he said. And even if disease destroys a harvest, the next crop can be planted immediately.

Bugbee, the vertical farming critic, has another solution to feed Earth’s swelling population: Eat less meat. This would free up land currently grazed by livestock to be sown with food crops.

“That,” he said, “is a rock-solid principle if you are looking for a way to be environmentally responsible.”

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/06/090630-farm-towers-locally-grown_2.html

 

April 6, 2009

10 Great International Wine Destinations

Filed under: Food & Restaurants, Lifestyle, PLACES — Vivian Chen @ 6:34 PM
Tags: ,

source: forbes.com

http://www.forbes.com/2009/03/12/wine-tasting-destination-lifestyle-wine-destination.html?partner=forbeslife_newsletter

 

Quinta do Portal, Duoro Valley(Portugal)            forbes.com

Quinta do Portal, Duoro Valley(Portugal) forbes.com

Wines for the Weekend

Ten Great International Wine Destinations

Eric Arnold03.12.09, 04:50 PM EDT

California isn’t the only spot offering fine wines and friendly tasting rooms.

The next time a friend or co-worker says he’s headed to Napa on vacation to do a little wine tasting, don’t get jealous. Go somewhere better.

Visited by well over 3 million tourists a year, Napa can be a hassle, with crowded tasting rooms, near-standstill traffic on Highway 29 and a paucity of dinner reservations (call the French Laundry two months in advance, to the day, but you’ll probably get a busy tone).

To be sure, Napa practically invented high-quality wine tourism. But wineries in other regions around the world have followed its lead and stepped up their game, offering a personal touch, not to mention high-quality hotels, restaurants and tasting rooms that provide connections to their regions’ history and lifestyle. Oh, and they have some great-tasting wines, too.

The challenge is deciding among the many attractive options, from Chile to South Africa to Australia. Each, says George Taber, author of the forthcoming book In Search of Bacchus: Wanderings in the Wonderful World of Wine Tourism, offers a unique experience.

To research his book, Taber spent eight months on the road and visited 12 different countries. Along the way, he discovered that some regions offer great luxury and service, while others are worth visiting for the peace, quiet and spectacular views.

When it comes to the full package,Taber says there are few better places than Castello Banfi in Tuscany. The estate, started by American wine importer John Mariani, is housed in a spectacular castle, with two restaurants, a tasting room and a fun, informative cellar tour.

It’s a similar experience, minus the pretty views, at Chateau Lynch-Bages in Bordeaux. This is the world’s most heralded wine region, yet it’s notoriously short on good experiences for tourists. Fancy-looking chateaus, yes; welcoming tasting rooms, tours, pretty views, nice hotels and friendly, warm restaurants, not so much. But the owners of Lynch-Bages have built a tourist-friendly destination on the grounds of the wine estate, including a hotel, more than one restaurant, stores, a tasting class and art exhibits.

When it comes to tranquil atmosphere and stunning scenery, two destinations top Taber’s list: Quinta do Portal in Portugal’s Douro Valley and Peter Jakob Kühn in Germany’s Rheingau. Both offer incredible views and some of the best wines in their respective regions, says Taber.

By contrast, Felton Road in New Zealand’s Central Otago region, is not particularly pretty. The drive from Queenstown through the Gibbston Valley to this isolated spot offers nice views of the mountains along twisting, winding roads, but the scenery once you get to Felton Road is a bit raw, says Taber (I can attest, having spent a month living a couple miles away at a nearby vineyard; it’s dry and light on vegetation.).

However, the pinot noirs from this part of the world–and from Felton Road in particular–have begun to turn the heads of critics and consumers alike over the past few years, as they appreciate the wines’ balance of herbal, fruity and acidic flavors.


10 Great International Wine Destinations:

“There’s nothing sexy about it, just the wines,” says Taber of Felton Road.

  1. Castello Banfi, Tuscany (Italy) - The Banfi winery was started by John Mariani, an American wine importer. One of the more gorgeous wineries in Tuscany, it boasts a beautiful castle with two great restaurants, a wine tasting room and cellar tour. Wine to try (if you can’t get there right away): Cum Laude, $30. A rich, red Super Tuscan: a blend of sangiovese, cabernet sauvignon, merlot and syrah.
  2. Montes, Colchagua Valley (Chile) –  Montes is among the most well-known Chilean wine producer, but it hasn’t lost its eccentricity. “It’s the only winery in the world I know where the wines are aged with Gregorian chants being played in the background,” says Taber. Wine to try (if you can’t get there right away): Purple Angel, $60. This ripe, plush red is made mostly of the carmenere grape, which is similar to merlot.
  3. Ken Forrester, Stellenbosch (South Africa) - Stellenbosch is considered one of the most beautiful wine areas in the world, with a Mediterranean climate and scenery reminiscent of the Napa Valley, absent the crowds. Winemaker Ken Forrester made several trips to France’s Loire Valley before applying his expertise back home in South Africa.Wine to try (if you can’t get there right away): Ken Forrester FMC chenin blanc, $60. Taber calls this one of the best white wines he’s ever tasted, better than the best chenin blancs from France’s Loire Valley.
  4. O. Fournier, Mendoza (Argentina) -This winery is only about 10 miles from the Andes, “so in the background you can see the snow-capped mountains all year long,” says Taber. The winery has a modern design, almost like a spaceship that landed in the middle of the desert.Wine to try (if you can’t get there right away): Urban Uco Torrentes, $10. Torrentes is a grape variety similar to viognier–very aromatic and perfumey, with concentrated fruit flavors.
  5. Leeuwin Estate, Margaret River (Australia) -Margaret River is closer to Singapore than it is to Melbourne, so it’s a long trip getting there from the U.S., but it’s more than worthwhile. “It’s a little pocket that makes just outstanding wines,” says Taber. The beautiful landscape with old forests “is so isolated it’s not so crowded–you get wonderful service.”Wine to try (if you can’t get there right away): Leeuwin Art Series Chardonnay, $65. It may seem pricey, but Taber points out that this wine has been ranked among the best 100 wines in the world by a French wine writer.
  6. Felton Road, Central Otago (New Zealand) - Relatively new to the wine world, Central Otago is also the southernmost wine region on the planet. Some areas, like the Gibbston Valley, are more aesthetically pleasing than others, such as the Bannockburn area, the site of Felton Road. But Otago’s pinot noir superstars, such as Carrick, Mt. Difficulty, Akarua and Felton Road are all here in Bannockburn.Wine to try (if you can’t get there right away): Felton Road Block Three Pinot Noir, $70. Felton Road is probably the most coveted pinot noir from Central Otago; it’s balanced, subtle and complex in its flavors.
  7. Bodegas Ysios, Rioja (Spain) - The area has become famous in the past few years for architecture by the likes of Frank Gehry. Bodegas Ysios, designed by Santiago Calatrava, resembles the mountains that lie just behind it. “They also make great wine,” says Taber.Wine to try (if you can’t get there right away): Ysios Rioja Riserva, $30. With other Riojas reaching sky-high prices, Taber says this one is a good value.
  8. Quinta do Portal, Duoro Valley (Portugal) -Reach this winery by driving along narrow, winding roads. If you’re planning on tasting more than one glass of wine, consider staying the night. “They have a guest house hotel that has beautiful views,” notes Taber.Wine to try (if you can’t get there right away): Grande Reserva, $35. Many port houses have, in recent years, made high-quality table wines from grapes that were traditionally for port. This one is top of the line, says Taber.
  9. Château Lynch-Bages, Bordeaux (France) -Bordeaux is known to produce some of the best wines in the world. But until recently, the region did not have a reputation for beautiful views or a friendly tourist experience. Lynch-Bages now offers a hotel, restaurants and shopping.Wine to try (if you can’t get there right away): Château Lynch Bages, $100 (for 2005 vintage; prices vary year to year). This wine has long been known as a high-quality Bordeaux bargain, since the price is lower due to the estate’s lower rank in the 1855 classification of vineyards. But the wines over-deliver on quality, year after year.
  10. Peter Jakob Kühn Oestrich, Rhein/Mosel (Germany) -This is one of the world’s most romantic settings, with mountain-top castles and a friendly, welcoming winery. Don’t be put off by the screw caps on all this winery’s bottles, says Taber–the wines are now the best and most consistent they’ve ever been.Wine to try (if you can’t get there right away): Riesling Kabinett, $27. Taber says this is one of the best winemakers in Germany.

http://www.forbes.com/2009/03/12/wine-tasting-destination-lifestyle-wine-destination.html?partner=forbeslife_newsletter

 

March 15, 2009

Urban Entertainment Architect: Zark Fatah

source: http://www.condominiums.com/condomonde/condomonde0/condomonde40.htm

The Don Juan Condo Code
Si Si Penaloza talks to Nightlife Bon Vivant Zark Fatah on his Fabulous New East End Digs
   
  Toronto’s come a long way in variations on the “ultimate bachelor pad” theme. I remember when the terms “utilitarian, vermin-free, furnished in Early Ikea” used to pass for progressive bachelor living. These days, with singles playing the field longer than ever, it pays to invest in sophisticated style – even if it means going solo on that high-end sectional. 
Of course, one Toronto bachelor has taken this investment in personal style to a whole new level. Enter Zark Fatah, social entrepreneur and nightlife architect extraordinaire, whose name is synonymous with all things hip and hot.

Ten years ago, he was a bartender at clubs like Fluid and the Guvernment. Today, his company, Zark Inc. spearheads six businesses. And of course, there’s the fact that he’s on too many most eligible and best-dressed lists to mention. 
With five of his six Zarkinc businesses on or near King St. W. – the Century Room nightclub, Atelier, restaurants Blowfish and Doku 15 and the Hammam spa, it’s no surprise Fatah grew wary of living where he worked.

The ICON condo development on Wellington, his first Toronto real estate acquisition, put him right in the middle of the action. With his businesses thriving and firmly entrenched in the downtown scene, the impresario of King West looked east for a sanctuary to call home. Of course, his must not be a mere dwelling. His must be the signature of a lifestyle itself.


It doesn’t take long to realize Fatah isn’t your run-of-the-mill property-buyer. Upon his first viewing of his current home at The Broadview Lofts, there was a considerable Gulp Factor – a kind of gulp-in-your-throat “I Have to Have It” sort of deal. He recalls, “I walked in and was blown away by the expanse of open space and spectacular views. It was the kind of space where I could really import the best creative possible. And the fact that I could see panoramic skylines sealed the deal.” The view, as any man on a meteoric rise can tell you, is everything. Fatah explains further, “I had seen about a dozen loft spaces all over the city before seeing this one; I knew as soon as I saw it that I could make any ambitious design idea work here as it’s such an open concept, raw space.”


As founder of entertainment empire Zarkinc and Prototype Design Lab, “a design-and-build company” in Mississauga, Fatah has made it his business to set social and design trends in the city, importing the best experiences of his travels to the heart of Toronto. And, as a man who likes to have a hand in everything, his own company, Prototype Design Lab, produced a lot of the fixtures and fittings for his marquee properties, including the signature metal steam “spout” of Hammam’s gorgeous steam room.

 

  CONDO MONDE ZARK LOFT 

Featuring soaring 21-foot ceilings, a mezzanine that feels like a true second floor, floor to ceiling warehouse style windows, two south facing terraces, two full bathrooms – this pad has James Bond written all over it. At 1,424 square feet, Fatah definitely had room to flex his design muscles. The first thing he decided to do was drop a Versailles-sized, gleaming black glass chandelier from the altitudinous ceiling. Seriously. When this man dresses to impress, it doesn’t stop at mere shoulder pads. The drama of the stark black glass against a towering, textured Baroque ivory and vanilla wall treatment creates the key signatures in the decadent dining room. 
In choosing a dining room set, Fatah went for a Valentino-Meets-Gothic Cowboy kind of thing, and to great effect I might add. Heavy black empire chairs get the royal treatment with sumptuous fabric and silver rodeo studs. And, if conversation ever flags around that big dining table, the two storey panoramic views provide endless talking points. “It’s a different energy when you wake up and you see water and the skyline,” Fatah elaborates. “It just opens your mind.”
Fatah designed the space to be functional and purposeful without needless embellishment. His main attraction to modern and minimalist décor? Large, spare spaces lend themselves to entertaining – an activity that lies at the heart of the bachelor lifestyle. Guests to his home no doubt enjoy the HDTV, as Fatah invested in that most ubiquitous electronic accoutrements of bachelorhood: the flat screen plasma television. Although Fatah’s looks gigantic to me, rivaling the size of an exit sign on the Gardiner Expressway.


Nowadays, fashionable bachelors invest in the same consumer culture that has historically been the mainstay of women. Men cultivate their homes and spending money on them in ways that only women used to. From the way they customize floor plans to the way they accessorize, their choices reveal a lot about their ideals of masculinity. 
With the Broadview Lofts, The Sorbara Group caters to the architecturally educated consumer, those who desire just the right balance of history and modernity. Heritage savvy buyers won over by tongue & groove wood ceilings were equally wowed by the gorgeous exposed brick walls. The builder retained much of the building’s original structure and materials, an approach that appealed to Fatah. Active in real estate development, investment and management, The Sorbara Group has been involved in the GTA’s most successful residential communities including The Village of Brooklin, Sherwood Village, Britannia Meadows and Bankside in Mississauga, as well as Tanglewood in Oakville. No stranger to Toronto’s east side, the company’s landmark Corktown project, the Brewery Loft on Sumach Street, is now regarded as a Toronto classic.


Collectively, The Broadview Lofts community enjoys a beautifully landscaped central square, underground parking, a party room and roof deck patio. The builders also engaged the contemporary palate with their penthouses, adding two floors of brand new lofts to their original, turn-of-the-century Rexall drug warehouse, for those like Fatah, who yearn for a truly contemporary space.


Loft living is all about the city and its myriad sights and sounds – endless choices and possibilities. Fatah loves that his loft is actually part of three vibrant neighbourhoods: Queen & Broadview, Leslieville and The Studio District. Each nurturing its own vibrant and unique character. Hip cafés and restaurants. Funky shopping everywhere you turn, all within walking distance. Not to mention the close proximity to Queen Street and Toronto’s major artery, the Don Valley Parkway.


A bachelor pad is a cultural icon. It has earned mythic status. And it has essential ingredients. The quintessential pad is masculine, minimalist and, in the best-case scenario, cleaned by a maid. There is leather, hard exotic wood and fine wine. The views are befitting of a emerging master of the universe, but one touch remote can kill the lights, lower the shades and turn on the David Bowie before a girl knows what hit her.
So is there a downside to living so high? When I ask the question, Fatah stifles a simultaneous laugh and a blush. “You wouldn’t think so, but there is,” he confides. “Girls seem to get really attached to the idea of not necessarily leaving. I brought a girl back here once who, as soon as she walked in the door asked, ‘So when am I moving in?’” Indeed, this may seem like the Hollywood version of a bachelor pad, but it’s just a little place he likes to call home. 

THE BROADVIEW LOFTS: 68 Broadview Ave., on the northwest corner of Broadview and Eastern Ave. 
Builder: The Sorbara Group. A six-storey building. The first five storeys will be a restored brick warehouse. A new five-storey extension will have a facade of steel and glass. 
Amenities: rooftop patio and large party/media room.

www.broadviewlofts.com

Entertainment Visionaire: Sam Nazarian

Filed under: Design, Food & Restaurants, LODGING & RESTAURANTS, Lifestyle — Vivian Chen @ 10:55 PM

source: http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/feb2008/id2008021_569245.htm

BUSINESSWEEK –> BUSINESS INNOVATION –> February 1, 2008

Sam Nazarian: Emperor of Cool

His L.A. nightclubs and restaurants may be A-list only, but Nazarian makes sure business sense isn’t lost in all the glitz. Up next: boutique hotels

Nazarian has signed designer Philippe Starck to an exclusive, multiyear contract to design hotels and restaurants in North America.

http://images.businessweek.com/story/08/370/0201_Nazarian.jpgSam Nazarian’s club, the 90-person Hyde, attracts a defiantly A-list clientele—and is a regular feature in celebrity gossip Web sites such as TMZ.com as a result.

A bouncer clad in black stands guard at the door. Sushi knives, dipped in white plastic and encased in Plexiglas, serve as cocktail tables. Huge photos of models with bright red lips cover the walls. Below, stylishly dressed diners indulge on pricey treats such as Kobe beef filets with foie gras and watermelon cucumber mojitos.

Katsuya, at the legendary intersection of Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street in Los Angeles, is the latest trendy stop in a mini-empire of cool created by entrepreneur Sam Nazarian. The 32-year-old Los Angeles native now has four nightclubs, two Katsuya sushi restaurants—with two more opening this year—and a movie production company (Down in the ValleyMr. Brooks) under his SBE Entertainment Group holding company banner.

ALL THE TAKINGS

Next? Boutique hotels. Nazarian is opening two over the next year: the SLS in Los Angeles in August and a remodeling of the Ritz Plaza in Miami Beach due to open in early 2009. On the drawing board is a complete reworking of the famed Sahara Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, which Nazarian acquired last year along with the investment firmStockbridge Real Estate Partners. “We’re building the Chateau Marmont of our generation,” Nazarian says, referring to the legendary Los Angeles hotel that’s been the site of countless Hollywood soirées and scandals.

Entrepreneurship runs in Nazarian’s family. His father, Younes, is an Iranian-born immigrant who made a fortune starting companies from construction to high tech. Sam dropped out of New York University to launch a wireless telephone company, Platinum Wireless. It’s still in business, but Nazarian got bitten by the real estate bug, and then lured into the world of nightclubs. Opening his first venue in 2003, his Los Angeles clubs, including Privilege and Hyde, next door to each other on the Sunset Strip, became famous for attracting the famous, including A-list starlets such as Paris Hilton, Britney Spears, and Lindsey Lohan. Nazarian himself had a cameo on the hot HBO show Entourage last year. And his clubs—especially the tiny, 90-person Hyde—have regularly been featured in celebrity gossip Web sites such as TMZ.com. As for B-listers such as Tara Reid and Bobby Brown, their rejections at the door show up online, too. “We probably got more hits per square foot than any place on Earth,” Nazarian says.

Nazarian says his innovation was to treat nightclubbing like a business. Typically, club owners round up money from wealthy investors who want to tell their friends they own a piece of a nightclub. The owners rarely returned much in profits and were quick to move on to the next project. “It was an ego thing for investors,” Nazarian says. “They’d be in business for a year, and whether they made money didn’t matter.” Nazarian sought to change that by running all facets of the business in-house—and treating clubs as a long-term business. Rather than lease his venue out to promoters on certain nights, a common practice in the industry, Nazarian acquired Bolthouse Productions, and several other top club promoters in town. That keeps them from sending their regular customers to other venues—and Nazarian gets to keep all the takings of any given night.

Nazarian has signed designer Philippe Starck to an exclusive, multiyear contract to design hotels and restaurants in North America.

CAPTURING THE “COOL FACTOR.”

And to keep up with the fickle crowd, Nazarian continually redesigns his establishments, as often as every six months. Privilege, now under renovation, will reopen as an upscale supper club this summer. So far, Nazarian has managed to keep up with the in-crowd, opening a “pop-up” version of Hyde at this year’s Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. for example. He’ll do that again at this weekend’s Super Bowl in Phoenix.

To give his properties even more star power, Nazarian pursued designer Philippe Starck for more than a year before signing him to an exclusive, multiyear contract to design hotels and restaurants in North America. Starck designs the interiors for the budding Katsuya chain and is working on Nazarian’s three new hotel properties. When he’s in Los Angeles, Starck works out of an office in Nazarian’s low-slung, modern headquarters on Beverly Boulevard. Nazarian admits negotiating new projects with the famous designer can often be a battle. “He always wants the best,” Nazarian says. “Stone, tiles, fabric, everything.” And while for the most part it seems like Nazarian humors his French collaborator, he has also found some savvy ways to offset that cost. Through a partnership with Italian furniture maker Cassina, he’ll be selling the couches, tables, and desks that Starck designed for the new Los Angeles hotel.

Nazarian wants to be more than just a younger version of Ian Schrager, the former Studio 54 promoter who launched the boutique hotel craze in the 1980s with properties such as the Morgans Hotel in Manhattan (MHGC) and the Delano in Miami Beach. He plans to link his various establishments with a common computer system so guests can present their room key and use it to charge drinks, dinner, or hotel services wherever they are. He’s also looking to advise other businesses, such as sports stadium owners and private jet operators, on how to capture what he calls the “cool factor.” Nazarian says he’s been talking with stadium management company Anschutz Entertainment Group to find ways to enhance the dining experience at Staples Center in Los Angeles, where the Lakers and Clippers basketball teams play. “People are paying $2,200 for floor seats and getting served a chicken sandwich,” he says disdainfully. Sounds like another opportunity for Kobe beef.

There are currently two Katsuya sushi restaurants, with two more due to open this year.

November 27, 2008

Underwater Restaurant – Ithaa at Conrad Maldives

Filed under: Design, Food & Restaurants, Hotels and Resorts — Vivian Chen @ 4:10 PM
Tags: , ,

Working  and writing on Thanksgiving. Of course. Never miss an opportunity. Always playing. 

I was first introduced to the islands of Maldives on my first visit at age six. Good memories and many more trips have/will come since. (Not many travelers have been cool enough to have even heard of the Maldives. It is one of travel’s kept secrets. Now we wouldn’t want to ruin that, do we? Keep the secret and only share them with the coolest closest people.) Travel in style. Ciao.

The whole living-under-the-sea concept is still relatively new to the general public, but I have learned about it for a while now. The idea still holds my interests. 

(Hilton Worldwide Resorts – Conrad Maldives Rangali Island – Rangali Island)

http://www.hiltonworldresorts.com/Resorts/Maldives/dining_entertainment/ithaa.html#Maldives

November 25, 2008

Top Food Trend in 2009

Filed under: Food & Restaurants, Hotels and Resorts, Lifestyle — Vivian Chen @ 12:09 AM
Tags: , ,

source: hotelsmag.com

http://www.hotelsmag.com/article/CA6616400.html?nid=3457&rid=1899835782

Experts Offer Top Food Trends 
For Hotels & Restaurants In 2009

By Derek Gale, Senior Editor — Hotels, 11/20/2008 10:00:00 AM

Here are 13 overall hotel food trends and 10 menu item / ingredient trends to expect in 2009, from experts around the industry.

Overall Hotel Food Trends

Chef-Driven Restaurant Scale-Back
Will those big-deal hotel restaurants carrying the names of absentee star chefs become economic albatrosses, or will they prove to have stable drawing power? We look for fewer hotels turning their restaurants over to star chefs. The cost of building these things often outstrips potential profits, and when times get tight, hotels can do without. Besides, we’re running out of star chefs.  - Michael Whiteman, Joseph Baum & Michael Whiteman Co.

The Bistros Are Coming
Restaurants in the United States, especially hotel restaurants, are lagging economic indicators: They take so long to design and build that a turn in the business cycle catches them flatfooted. Because they’re lagging indicators, all those new restaurants that recently were aiming for opulence and dripping with luxury (targeting the expense-account types) now will be part of the cyclical “bistro-ization” of America. And if not bistros, look for “osterias,” the Italian equivalent.  - Michael Whiteman, Joseph Baum & Michael Whiteman Co.

Farm-To-Table Cuisine
One of the big trends is farm-to-table cooking and cuisine. If I’m a client I want to know where the food comes from, how the food is prepared and who prepares it as well. We are doing more farm-to-table menus. That is where we’re going.  - Jean-Pierre Etcheberrigaray, VP F&B, The Americas, IHG

More Seasonal Menus 
With price increases and such a demand for fresh product, more chefs are changing menus more often. Chefs are starting to feel that having things on the menu for 10 months out of the year is wrong. Use only what is in season to help with cost.  - Chef Rocky Rocha, The Magnolia Hotel Omaha

Customization
Customization and personalization is in high demand. Menus easily changed to suit various preferences (i.e. vegan, gluten, or simply personal tastes) are important.  - Bob Puccini, The Puccini Group

Small Portions And Shareable Items
Smaller waistline; smaller budget. 2009 is the year for cutting back and restoring health to our economy and our lives. This means reorganizing your menu offerings to help: Creative appetizer menus, offering more innovative appetizer portions to share and offering half portions of entrée items allows guests to have enjoy an evening out with out fear of breaking the budget or the diet. Half glasses of wine are also popular. In 2009, we will see more sharable menus that offer a taste of everything.  - Bob Puccini, The Puccini Group

Activity Makes An Experience
Avid diners are looking for a variety of experiences when dining out, and activities enhance dining experiences—wine flights or sake tastings create more interesting dining options.  - Bob Puccini, The Puccini Group

Promotions Draw Diners
Luxury restaurants offering fixed-price dinners will unbundle their menus, allowing cash-strapped patrons to control their checks by ordering a la carte. Upscale a la carte restaurants will add value by adding fixed-price dinners to their menus, hoping to attract people by offering bargains. Happy hours will become more robust as hotels hope customers will order lots of small plates instead of dinner.  -Michael Whiteman, Joseph Baum & Michael Whiteman Co.

Flexible Dayparts
Traditional set times for breakfast, lunch and dinner are a thing of the past. People are on the go and have unpredictable schedules. It’s important to offer services and time flexibility that reflects their busy itineraries.  - Bob Puccini, The Puccini Group

Restaurants Staying Open Late
Business travelers strongly favor hotel restaurants that are open late—well over half say this is a very important factor in their decision of where to stay.  - Chef Rocky Rocha, The Magnolia Hotel Omaha

Lobby/Lounge Dining
Lobby and lounge dining/drinking is gaining popularity; it allows for a great deal of socialization to occur and makes a hotel appear lively and fun.  - Chef Rocky Rocha, The Magnolia Hotel Omaha

Complimentary Items
Complimentary offerings such as breakfast or 24-hour coffee service resonate strongly with consumers. Fully 72% of leisure travelers and 71% of business travelers say a complementary breakfast is important when choosing a hotel.  - Chef Rocky Rocha, The Magnolia Hotel Omaha

Healthy Treats At Turndown
Tysons Corner Marriott is randomly giving guests a turndown treat of wholesome house-made granola with oats, almonds and dried fruit. A note on the turndown amenity encourages guests who like it to make it part of their morning routine at the on-site restaurant.  - General Manager Shelly DiMeglio, Tysons Corner Marriott
Menu Item / Ingredient Trends

Breakfast Anytime
Breakfast at any time of day will become the new standard. Grits, waffles or steak and eggs for lunch and dinner.  - Michael Whiteman, Joseph Baum & Michael Whiteman Co.

Innards And Odd Parts
Look for an even greater upswing in innards and odd parts on menus. Guanciale (pigs’ cheeks), pigs’ feet, tripe, lardo (cured pork fat), artisan salami, beef cheeks, tongue, neck meat, oxtails… and chicken livers taking the place of costly foie gras.  - Michael Whiteman, Joseph Baum & Michael Whiteman Co.

East Meets West
The world is flat and people are traveling farther distances and bringing back authentic spices and cooking methods. Expect to see more intriguing ingredients in restaurants. Also, Middle Eastern and Asian specialties prepared in the West are frequently less watered down and more authentic today.  -Bob Puccini, The Puccini Group

Asian Noodles In Broth
Soup loyalists will have more to choose from, as comforting Asian noodles in broth edge onto menus. Look for pho from Vietnam, ramen from Japan, and laksa from all over Southeast Asia.  - Michael Whiteman, Joseph Baum & Michael Whiteman Co.

Tarragon 
This spice has been underused though the years, but more chefs are starting to take a liking to it, so look for more menus to list it as an ingredient.  - Chef Rocky Rocha, The Magnolia Hotel Omaha

Flat Iron Steak/ Flank Steak
This will continue to be popular in 2009 due to relatively low cost. This piece of beef is considered to be one of the most tender cuts on the market today—it cuts like a filet but tastes like a New York Strip.  - Chef Rocky Rocha, The Magnolia Hotel Omaha

Ethnic Takes On Poultry
Look for lots of braised and fried chicken, this time in various ethnic flavorings.  - Michael Whiteman, Joseph Baum & Michael Whiteman Co.

Comfort Foods 
The old standbys are coming back. Yes, macaroni and cheese, but also certain Asian pasta dishes (such as Pad Thai and sesame noodles) for their equivalent creaminess without the palate fatigue, and rigatoni carbonara for the same reason. Spaghettie and meatballs will make a roaring comeback, but with creative meatballs. Watch for mashed potato variations, combined with creamy and pungent cheeses, for example, or with multiple winter vegetables.  - Michael Whiteman, Joseph Baum & Michael Whiteman Co.

Real Food
Even McDonald’s is saying ‘100% beef’ in their campaigns. Diners are savvy about what is on their plate. People’s ingredient protocol is higher than ever—they want “real” food.  - Bob Puccini, The Puccini Group

Sparkling Tap Water
A bubbly twist on a restaurant staple that is a more eco-friendly option because it isn’t bottled.  - Bob Puccini, The Puccini Group

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