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  • Wha unnu say? Issa Mad?

    Kingston back on the map - New tourism campaign, hotel give Jamaica's capital well-needed push

    Published: Monday | June 15, 2009


    Janet Silvera, Senior Gleaner Writer


    Children of the Drums performs during the official opening of the Spanish Court Hotel in New Kingston yesterday. - Photos by Janet Silvera
    WESTERN BUREAU:
    Unveiling a boutique property, while launching the revolutionary 'Kingston 360 degrees' campaign, the country's newest hotelier says Jamaica's capital city has returned to being a formidable tourist destination.
    Spanish Court Hotel's Managing Director, Christopher Issa, who heads the Crissa Group, yesterday officially opened the first major hotel to be built in the capital city in 40 years, adding 107 stunning rooms to the accommodation stock in the region's cultural centre.
    Spanish Court, which started receiving guests in February this year, is located in the business district in New Kingston on what was once the site of a shopping plaza. Every effort was made to preserve the landmark Spanish-style exterior architecture.
    Aim to show rich diversity
    However, the hotel's managing director will tell you that filling a need to provide accommodation that comes with great dining, contemporary amenities, functional design, art deco, bold colours and patterns is just one aspect of the thrust he is embarking on.
    His aim is to have stakeholders, particularly Jamaicans, showcasing a potpourri of rich cultural heritage and diversity that celebrates the return of Kingston to its heyday, while offering the option of experiencing some 360 things that can be done in and around Kingston - from the near magical effects of the breathtaking Blue Mountains to the inner-city richness that is Passa Passa, the pulsating rhythms found only in this cosmopolitan city, incredible restaurants such as Gloria's, Fort Clarence beach, fairs, fashion shows, theatre, rum, music and rich diversity that define the area.
    Complete cosmopolitan city

    Christopher Issa (left), managing director of the Spanish Court Hotel, presents a Kingston 360-degree shirt to Edmund Bartlett, minister of [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]tourism[/COLOR][/COLOR], during the official opening of the hotel in New Kingston yesterday.
    Admittedly concerned that there are people who are still apprehensive about visiting Kingston, not only is the hotelier hoping Kingston 360 degrees will decrease that fear, but he is banking on people considering it "a crime not to visit Kingston".
    Addressing some 800 guests in the courtyard of his hotel, Issa spoke of a dream to see Kingston become the complete cosmopolitan city.
    His speech was augmented by Minister of Tourism Edmund Bartlett, who lauded the creation of the new facility as setting a pace that is unmatched by any other city or town in the English-speaking Caribbean.
    Bartlett had high praises for the management which he said has placed great emphasis on service excellence.
    "Spanish Court's 'Real style, Real service' approach is critical to the success of any business, especially those involved in tourism. It adds value to the customer experience and serves as a draw for new and repeat visitors," he said. "All members of staff should strive to consistently deliver high quality and personalised service and, thereby, enhance the visitor experience." janet.silvera@gleanerjm.com
    • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

  • #2
    Don1 woulda seh him head gone....

    Scrap Kingston.. not even Financial Center mek sense inna Kingston... better we guh short term route like Mobay since hotel and beach deh deh ahready so di business man dem can relax after dem Financial Center wuk and dem nuh haffi drive way guh a pennisula tip fi jump pon plane..

    Is not every project wi muss tie up inna 'Long Term Vision'..

    LOL !

    Comment


    • #3
      Sass I hope you will give me some credit when our dream for Kingston as a mega tourism spot is realized. Afterall, I have been pushing for Kingston's development along with St. Thomas as THE Casino destination of the Caribbean for a while now. Also throw in legalising prostitution and ganja into the mix.
      Hey .. look at the bright side .... at least you're not a Liverpool fan! - Lazie 2/24/10 Paul Marin -19 is one thing, 20 is a whole other matter. It gets even worse if they win the UCL. *groan*. 05/18/2011.MU fans naah cough, but all a unuh a vomit?-Lazie 1/11/2015

      Comment


      • #4
        Only thing mi nuh really support you on is the prostitution thing but yes you have been an advocate.

        You want tell me 4 busload a tourist going Passa Passa every week won't make changes down there?
        • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

        Comment


        • #5
          Kingston is dead.. Vere Plains is where its at.. Mobay need a Financial Center..

          Comment


          • #6
            Yuh haffi know whey yuh a go in a Kingston. Yuh go certain place whey people nuh know yuh, and yuh put yuh health at risk. Some part a downtown look as mashup as when mi was a likkle yute.
            Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Assasin View Post
              Kingston back on the map - New tourism campaign, hotel give Jamaica's capital well-needed push

              Published: Monday | June 15, 2009


              Janet Silvera, Senior Gleaner Writer


              Children of the Drums performs during the official opening of the Spanish Court Hotel in New Kingston yesterday. - Photos by Janet Silvera
              WESTERN BUREAU:
              Unveiling a boutique property, while launching the revolutionary 'Kingston 360 degrees' campaign, the country's newest hotelier says Jamaica's capital city has returned to being a formidable tourist destination.
              Spanish Court Hotel's Managing Director, Christopher Issa, who heads the Crissa Group, yesterday officially opened the first major hotel to be built in the capital city in 40 years, adding 107 stunning rooms to the accommodation stock in the region's cultural centre.
              Spanish Court, which started receiving guests in February this year, is located in the business district in New Kingston on what was once the site of a shopping plaza. Every effort was made to preserve the landmark Spanish-style exterior architecture.
              Aim to show rich diversity
              However, the hotel's managing director will tell you that filling a need to provide accommodation that comes with great dining, contemporary amenities, functional design, art deco, bold colours and patterns is just one aspect of the thrust he is embarking on.
              His aim is to have stakeholders, particularly Jamaicans, showcasing a potpourri of rich cultural heritage and diversity that celebrates the return of Kingston to its heyday, while offering the option of experiencing some 360 things that can be done in and around Kingston - from the near magical effects of the breathtaking Blue Mountains to the inner-city richness that is Passa Passa, the pulsating rhythms found only in this cosmopolitan city, incredible restaurants such as Gloria's, Fort Clarence beach, fairs, fashion shows, theatre, rum, music and rich diversity that define the area.
              Complete cosmopolitan city

              Christopher Issa (left), managing director of the Spanish Court Hotel, presents a Kingston 360-degree shirt to Edmund Bartlett, minister of [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]tourism[/color][/color], during the official opening of the hotel in New Kingston yesterday.
              Admittedly concerned that there are people who are still apprehensive about visiting Kingston, not only is the hotelier hoping Kingston 360 degrees will decrease that fear, but he is banking on people considering it "a crime not to visit Kingston".
              Addressing some 800 guests in the courtyard of his hotel, Issa spoke of a dream to see Kingston become the complete cosmopolitan city.
              His speech was augmented by Minister of Tourism Edmund Bartlett, who lauded the creation of the new facility as setting a pace that is unmatched by any other city or town in the English-speaking Caribbean.
              Bartlett had high praises for the management which he said has placed great emphasis on service excellence.
              "Spanish Court's 'Real style, Real service' approach is critical to the success of any business, especially those involved in tourism. It adds value to the customer experience and serves as a draw for new and repeat visitors," he said. "All members of staff should strive to consistently deliver high quality and personalised service and, thereby, enhance the visitor experience." janet.silvera@gleanerjm.com
              We should start with Port Royal since is easier to secure. Make Pot legal, prostitution legal, nude clubs legal, clothes optional beaches and market the place as Sin City.
              The same type of thinking that created a problem cannot be used to solve the problem.

              Comment


              • #8
                How I Feel

                Originally posted by Jangle View Post
                Sass I hope you will give me some credit when our dream for Kingston as a mega tourism spot is realized. Afterall, I have been pushing for Kingston's development along with St. Thomas as THE Casino destination of the Caribbean for a while now. Also throw in legalising prostitution and ganja into the mix.
                We’re running the real danger of putting the cart before the horse, as our people sometimes tend to do, and I will explain below what I mean by this statement! Certainly it would be ideal for Kingston to become the mega tourism spot of the Caribbean! This, too, has been my dream! Added to that is the obvious fact that Kingston (unlike several Caribbean cities to which I have been) is a well-planned city. I also like teh idea of St Thomas being the casino destination of the Caribbean. Jamaica can do these things, but our leaders have to share a similar vision.

                Regarding my comment about putting the cart before the horse, I think we need to consider at least one major thing:

                No investment should be made in any major long-term development in downtown Kingston until a major dent has been placed in the overriding problem of violent crime and extortion. Now, I suspect that some posters will point out that job creation is necessary to put that dent in crime, and I completely agree with this rather obvious point. The problem, however, is that the extortionists and others will, as usual, succeed in making life difficult initially, and so chaos may take the place of orderly development. Also, all it takes are two or three homicides against the business class in downtown Kingston to send us straight back to square one!

                Secondly, it is my view that prostitution, while a lucrative (and highly dangerous at times) career, should not be promoted as part of any development model. The emphasis should be on as much job creation as possible so that those unfortunate women would not see the need to engage in the degrading activity of selling their bodies to Tom, Dick (no pun intended) and Harry!!

                It’s easy, being the macho, sexist beings that we men are, to talk about prostitution, but we should be careful not to look at this sordid activity with blinders on! Our women need dignity through the creation of decent jobs, not the lowering of their values and principles in order to put bread on their table!!

                Regarding the marijuana issue, my views on this are by now surely well known on this forum, so I will leave that issue alone at this time.

                Just my two cents .

                Comment


                • #9
                  4 busload a tourist a passa passa? Wha unuh a smoke? Unuh nuh realize how fragile tourism is? Unuh think money deh fi waste pon damage control? Until dem get crime under control, tourists shouldn't be allowed in certain areas. Sorry ... smady affi keep it real round here.
                  "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    I can appreciate your views on the weed and prostitution (although I have always thought that prostitution would be much less of a dangerous activity if it is legal and regulated) but regarding the development of a tourism product in Kingston, I am not sure that I agree with the approach of waiting until we put that dent in crime.

                    If Cape Town and New Orleans , two notoriously violent cities in the same league as Kingston, can have a well known tourist product, then so can Kingston. But it has to be marketed as a disctinct cultural product and not as just another location under the Jamaica sun, sea,sand brand.
                    "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Good Post!

                      Originally posted by Lazie View Post
                      4 busload a tourist a passa passa? Wha unuh a smoke? Unuh nuh realize how fragile tourism is? Unuh think money deh fi waste pon damage control? Until dem get crime under control, tourists shouldn't be allowed in certain areas. Sorry ... smady affi keep it real round here.
                      Excellent point, Lazie! While I might have stated it in slightly different words (lol), I agree 100-percent with your view here. And like you so aptly stated, "smady affi keep it real round here"!

                      The mixture of tourism and Passa Passa is not something I'd recommend, unless I was a citizen of a competing destination and wanted to see Jamaica's tourism attempts fail. The JTB has in the past been forced to spend way too much of our limited resource on damage control.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I agree with you 100%
                        • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Lazie what you don't realise is that Passa Passa has been relatively safe. Tourist are trecking down their on their own.

                          You need to see travel channel and they are showing the dances they visit downtown. Not every tourist going want that experience but there are many who do. In case you don't realise about 60% uptown rich social class youth visit Passa Passa.

                          Not everything is all negitive, how do they have Bob Marley museum at hope road and his yard at Jungle? You are the same one who talk how Tivoli itself is realitively safe.

                          When the communities realise the livelywood they can make and how their lives can change you think they going support the foolishness?
                          • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Historian View Post
                            Excellent point, Lazie! While I might have stated it in slightly different words (lol), I agree 100-percent with your view here. And like you so aptly stated, "smady affi keep it real round here"!

                            The mixture of tourism and Passa Passa is not something I'd recommend, unless I was a citizen of a competing destination and wanted to see Jamaica's tourism attempts fail. The JTB has in the past been forced to spend way too much of our limited resource on damage control.
                            Thank you sir!
                            "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Lazie, Historian, watch this...

                              Lazie, watch this :

                              Murder Capitals of the world - 2008

                              http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/c...?story_id=4480

                              And yet......


                              Beautiful Cape Town! Great vacation ! Attend the next World Cup! (BTW if FIFA think its good enough for a high profile event like World Cup, then..)

                              http://www.capetown.travel/

                              Exciting New Orleans! Come Visit! Jazzfest! Essence Festival! Great food and music!

                              http://www.neworleansonline.com/
                              "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

                              Comment

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