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SÃO PAULO’S FIRST ‘HERMÈS’ AND PARIS’ FIRST ON THE LEFT BANK

Hermès

Is this another sign that the global economic crisis is over? Hermès recently opened two more shops in two different parts of the world, so apparently luxury is once again on people’s wish lists. One of those new shops is in Paris (the first one on the Left Bank), on Rue de Grenelle 16. Because this is a temporary shop, it’s not that large, but it’s quite attractive. A cardboard art installation stands at its center, further tempting curious shoppers before the grand opening of a much more spacious store on Rue de Sévres. Apparently that future shop will be so grand that it just may overshadow the flagship on Rue du Faubourg St. Honoré.
The second recent opening was cross the Atlantic, in São Paulo. It’s Brazil’s first Hermès, and it naturally had to be located in the country’s most sophisticated city. It is found inside the luxury Cidade Jardim shopping , and although São Paulo is not a city, the highlights for the Brazilian market are the brand’s beachwear and signature towels.

-See the complete São Paulo city guide.
-See the complete Paris city guide.
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Written by Travel News on November 4th, 2009 with no comments.
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ABERCROMBIE & FITCH OPENS IN MILAN

Abercrombie & Fitch, Milan

Abercrombie & Fitch has just opened its doors in Milan today. It’s the first store of the American “casual luxury” fashion brand in mainland (it had already crossed the Atlantic to London in 2007), but this is the second attempt to open a new store in the continent. It previously requested a space in Paris‘ Champs-Elysèes but was denied, only to finally be given the go-ahead by the French government earlier this year. French law only allows valuable retailers (read: “luxury”) to open in ’ historical boulevard, so any new spaces must meet the approval of the government. The French store is now scheduled to open in 2011, but before that, there will be yet another A&F store in . That will be in Copenhagen in 2010 in a century-old neoclassical building.
In Milan, the shop that opened today is found on Corso Matteotti 12, just around the corner from the city’s chic Via Monte Napoleone. It’s found behind a modern stone façade at an intersection, and opened along with the world’s first Abercrombie Kids flagship.

-See the complete Milan city guide.
________________________________________
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or check out UCityGuides.com Hotels – Design, Boutique, Luxury, Cheap Hotels

Written by Travel News on October 31st, 2009 with no comments.
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British Airways and Expedia: Cheap Flights from Las Vegas to Europe

This deal is bigger than anything transatlantic – in fact, it almost reaches the Pacific. In honor of Airways’ new routes to Las , it’s offering cheap flights to , starting at $498 round-trip. Book with Airways through…

Written by Travel News on October 29th, 2009 with no comments.
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Spain: From Madrid to Benidorm

We couldn’t have had a better first few days in Spain. After a 9 am landing on a cool, late-February morning at Madrid’s Barajas International Airport, our trip was about to go much better than we had expected. Arriving in relatively good spirits from Portland, my girlfriend Kate and I hopped on the Madrid Metro for a quick ride to our in the Puerto del Sol, the heart of the city center. Dumping our bags and fighting the good, but always losing, fight against jet lag, we headed out for an early afternoon walk on the bustling streets of one of ’s biggest cities.

Color Guard MadridWe headed towards the Plaza Mayor, one of Madrid’s most scenic squares and once the sight of public hangings during ’s darker days. The square seemed to be oddly busy, considering the time of year, and as we were about to enter through one of the dramatic, arched walkways, a color-guard of white horses came charging out with riders dressed in what looked like medieval garb. What few tourists were around started snapping pictures while Kate and I rubbed our eyes in disbelief, wondering if this display was a side effect from the sleeping pills we popped after our connecting flight left Newark.

Spain, as usual, was in the mood to surprise. This was my third trip to one of the most colorful countries in and it was a place that Kate had wanted to go for a long time. While I had visited the urban centers of Madrid and Barcelona, the trip we planned would be a brand new experience for both of us. We were heading to Murcia to stay with friends of my aunt and uncle Madrid Fountainbefore spending the next ten days driving across the southern province of Andalucia. Our incredibly rough itinerary included stops in Grenada and Seville, but we were basically going to play it by ear. This was all in the future, however, and we were just getting settled.

It seemed that the color-guard was out to welcome a foreign dignitary who was far less impressed with the show than the handful of tourists gathered around. After the horses trotted off, Kate and I walked the small cobbled streets that ring Plaza Mayor. We popped in and out of shops selling hip, Spanish clothing in the pleasant, fogged over manner of people coming straight from an overnight flight. A pub offering up pints of Cruzcampo with free tapas was too good to pass up and we discovered that oiled sardines and strong, stuffed olives go great with a frosty beer even in the late .

MojitosWhen jet lag finally did get the best of us, we ambled back to our and conked out while watching animated Spanish game-show hosts on the television. A brief spark of motivation before giving in permanently to jet lag led us out to wander Madrid’s maze of streets. We walked through the gritty Chueca neighborhood, home to Madrid’s gay scene with its cool bars and bistros. Our wandering led us down the Calle de la Cruz and into the city’s traditional center. Here a mess of narrow, tangled alleyways are lined with tavernas and restaurants serving up food from all over the globe. Finally picking a nice place with tables out front, Kate and I sipped mojitos while the smells of chorizo and calamari filled the cobbled lane.

carol & noelWe had to catch an early train to Murcia in the morning where we would finally meet Carol and Noel. Carol was from the rainy Columbian coast and Noel, her husband, from the sunnier climes of Malta. They had met over 25 years ago when Carol and my aunt were traveling through . They met in Malta and when Carol left for Italy she lasted just a few days before heading back to Noel in Malta. They fell in love and have been together ever since, settling in Spain where they now have two kids and deep roots.

AndaluciaBoarding our train and happy to leave the chaos of Madrid’s Atocha Station behind, we settled into the comfortable enough Renfe seats and watched as the urban jungle turned into gentle, desert plains with huge modern windmills stuck liberally about. Murcia is a regional capital near Spain’s Mediterranean coast and its location among towering, rocky cliffs and olive and lemon farms make it a quaint and unpretentious place. While Murcia isn’t high on the traveler’s list of must-see places in Spain, its mellow pace and cool city center, complete with a stunning 15th century cathedral, make it a nice surprise.

It was impossible to miss Carol’s still thick Canadian accent at the station and within minutes of both her and Noel’s warm greetings, Kate and I felt as if we were with old friends. It felt good to know locals in a foreign land as Noel zipped his SUV down Murcia’s narrow streets. Arriving at their house under the warm Murcian sun, we dumped our bags in a spare bedroom and headed into the backyard where Carol was dishing up homemade paella under lemon trees while Noel poured beers. Surrounded by a yard full of Carol’s pet tortoises and the neighboring mountains, we finally acclimated to the Spanish pace.

While we let the paella settle in, Noel broke out a huge map of Spain. He poured over it like a general trying to decipher the best way to infiltrate Andalucia.

“You must visit here. And here. And of course….here.” Noel told us as he pointed rapidly all over the map. While we tried to keep pace, Carol must have noticed our inability to keep up and suggested we take part in one of the greatest of Spain’s traditions; the siesta. Although it isn’t as popular in Spanish society as it once was, Kate and I took immediately to the siesta and decided on our second day in the country to practice it regularly…if only for the cultural benefits it would bring to our trip.

Robert in BenidormBefore we would hop in a rental and head off across Spain, we had a couple of days to spend with Carol and Noel on the Mediterranean. They were taking us to the coastal town of Benidorm where they had a second home in the form of a high rise apartment. I had heard plenty of stories about Benidorm from my time living in Scotland and was eager to finally get a look at it. An aging beauty, Benidorm is part Atlantic City and part curiosity. Still a popular place with people from all over , Benidorm certainly has lost some of its luster to the newer kids on the block like Ibiza, Tenerife and Mallorca. I was expecting a quiet place, especially for the time of year, but the pubs and restaurants on Benidorm’s narrow streets were chock a block. The old girl, it seemed, still had some life left in her.

flea marketAfter a night out sampling Benidorm’s tapas restaurants and seaside tavernas, we sat on Carol and Noel’s balcony the next morning eating breakfast and staring peacefully at the . On our way out of town we stopped at a huge market selling all kinds of oddities. After checking out everything from old fur coats and antique jewelry to New Kids on the Block VHS tapes and plastic swords, we sat down at the market’s busy restaurant. As we tucked into our paella and sangria, Carol pointed out a woman dressed far too nice for the relaxed atmosphere of the market. Cloaked in elegant furs and caked in thick makeup, the woman floated from table to table. Carol told us, “We see her here all the time. She certainly likes a drink. I imagine she’ll be stumbling around soon enough looking for the attention of men.” We’d just crossed paths with Benidorm’s human counterpart.

As we headed back to Murcia, I realized it was going to be tough to beat our first couple of days.
Neither Kate nor I wanted to leave the safety of our hosts and it didn’t feel right leaving them so soon. They had gotten our trip off to an amazing start and were a reminder that traveling is just as much about the people as it is the places.

Before we left though, Carol gave me a crash course in driving manual so Kate wouldn’t have to do all the driving. As expected, she proved herself a brave woman for letting me stall out her a handful of times before I got the hang of it on very tight roads. Lesson done and rented, Kate steered our red Chevy west towards the medieval city of Grenada and what would definitely be a few more stories to tell the friends back home.

Related posts:

  1. Magical Madrid, Spain
  2. The Reina Sofia in Madrid, Spain
  3. Easy Day-Trips from Madrid

We couldn’t have had a better first few days in Spain. After a 9 am landing on a cool, late-February morning at Madrid’s Barajas International Airport, our trip was about to go much better than we had expected. Arriving in relatively good spirits from Portland, my girlfriend Kate and I hopped on the Madrid Metro for a quick ride to our in the Puerto del Sol, the heart of the city center. Dumping our bags and fighting the good, but always losing, fight against jet lag, we headed out for an early afternoon walk on the bustling streets of one of ’s biggest cities.

Color Guard MadridWe headed towards the Plaza Mayor, one of Madrid’s most scenic squares and once the sight of public hangings during ’s darker days. The square seemed to be oddly busy, considering the time of year, and as we were about to enter through one of the dramatic, arched walkways, a color-guard of white horses came charging out with riders dressed in what looked like medieval garb. What few tourists were around started snapping pictures while Kate and I rubbed our eyes in disbelief, wondering if this display was a side effect from the sleeping pills we popped after our connecting flight left Newark.

Spain, as usual, was in the mood to surprise. This was my third trip to one of the most colorful countries in and it was a place that Kate had wanted to go for a long time. While I had visited the urban centers of Madrid and Barcelona, the trip we planned would be a brand new experience for both of us. We were heading to Murcia to stay with friends of my aunt and uncle Madrid Fountainbefore spending the next ten days driving across the southern province of Andalucia. Our incredibly rough itinerary included stops in Grenada and Seville, but we were basically going to play it by ear. This was all in the future, however, and we were just getting settled.

It seemed that the color-guard was out to welcome a foreign dignitary who was far less impressed with the show than the handful of tourists gathered around. After the horses trotted off, Kate and I walked the small cobbled streets that ring Plaza Mayor. We popped in and out of shops selling hip, Spanish clothing in the pleasant, fogged over manner of people coming straight from an overnight flight. A pub offering up pints of Cruzcampo with free tapas was too good to pass up and we discovered that oiled sardines and strong, stuffed olives go great with a frosty beer even in the late .

MojitosWhen jet lag finally did get the best of us, we ambled back to our and conked out while watching animated Spanish game-show hosts on the television. A brief spark of motivation before giving in permanently to jet lag led us out to wander Madrid’s maze of streets. We walked through the gritty Chueca neighborhood, home to Madrid’s gay scene with its cool bars and bistros. Our wandering led us down the Calle de la Cruz and into the city’s traditional center. Here a mess of narrow, tangled alleyways are lined with tavernas and restaurants serving up food from all over the globe. Finally picking a nice place with tables out front, Kate and I sipped mojitos while the smells of chorizo and calamari filled the cobbled lane.

carol & noelWe had to catch an early train to Murcia in the morning where we would finally meet Carol and Noel. Carol was from the rainy Columbian coast and Noel, her husband, from the sunnier climes of Malta. They had met over 25 years ago when Carol and my aunt were traveling through . They met in Malta and when Carol left for Italy she lasted just a few days before heading back to Noel in Malta. They fell in love and have been together ever since, settling in Spain where they now have two kids and deep roots.

AndaluciaBoarding our train and happy to leave the chaos of Madrid’s Atocha Station behind, we settled into the comfortable enough Renfe seats and watched as the urban jungle turned into gentle, desert plains with huge modern windmills stuck liberally about. Murcia is a regional capital near Spain’s Mediterranean coast and its location among towering, rocky cliffs and olive and lemon farms make it a quaint and unpretentious place. While Murcia isn’t high on the traveler’s list of must-see places in Spain, its mellow pace and cool city center, complete with a stunning 15th century cathedral, make it a nice surprise.

It was impossible to miss Carol’s still thick Canadian accent at the station and within minutes of both her and Noel’s warm greetings, Kate and I felt as if we were with old friends. It felt good to know locals in a foreign land as Noel zipped his SUV down Murcia’s narrow streets. Arriving at their house under the warm Murcian sun, we dumped our bags in a spare bedroom and headed into the backyard where Carol was dishing up homemade paella under lemon trees while Noel poured beers. Surrounded by a yard full of Carol’s pet tortoises and the neighboring mountains, we finally acclimated to the Spanish pace.

While we let the paella settle in, Noel broke out a huge map of Spain. He poured over it like a general trying to decipher the best way to infiltrate Andalucia.

“You must visit here. And here. And of course….here.” Noel told us as he pointed rapidly all over the map. While we tried to keep pace, Carol must have noticed our inability to keep up and suggested we take part in one of the greatest of Spain’s traditions; the siesta. Although it isn’t as popular in Spanish society as it once was, Kate and I took immediately to the siesta and decided on our second day in the country to practice it regularly…if only for the cultural benefits it would bring to our trip.

Robert in BenidormBefore we would hop in a rental and head off across Spain, we had a couple of days to spend with Carol and Noel on the Mediterranean. They were taking us to the coastal town of Benidorm where they had a second home in the form of a high rise apartment. I had heard plenty of stories about Benidorm from my time living in Scotland and was eager to finally get a look at it. An aging beauty, Benidorm is part Atlantic City and part curiosity. Still a popular place with people from all over , Benidorm certainly has lost some of its luster to the newer kids on the block like Ibiza, Tenerife and Mallorca. I was expecting a quiet place, especially for the time of year, but the pubs and restaurants on Benidorm’s narrow streets were chock a block. The old girl, it seemed, still had some life left in her.

flea marketAfter a night out sampling Benidorm’s tapas restaurants and seaside tavernas, we sat on Carol and Noel’s balcony the next morning eating breakfast and staring peacefully at the . On our way out of town we stopped at a huge market selling all kinds of oddities. After checking out everything from old fur coats and antique jewelry to New Kids on the Block VHS tapes and plastic swords, we sat down at the market’s busy restaurant. As we tucked into our paella and sangria, Carol pointed out a woman dressed far too nice for the relaxed atmosphere of the market. Cloaked in elegant furs and caked in thick makeup, the woman floated from table to table. Carol told us, “We see her here all the time. She certainly likes a drink. I imagine she’ll be stumbling around soon enough looking for the attention of men.” We’d just crossed paths with Benidorm’s human counterpart.

As we headed back to Murcia, I realized it was going to be tough to beat our first couple of days.
Neither Kate nor I wanted to leave the safety of our hosts and it didn’t feel right leaving them so soon. They had gotten our trip off to an amazing start and were a reminder that traveling is just as much about the people as it is the places.

Before we left though, Carol gave me a crash course in driving manual so Kate wouldn’t have to do all the driving. As expected, she proved herself a brave woman for letting me stall out her a handful of times before I got the hang of it on very tight roads. Lesson done and rented, Kate steered our red Chevy west towards the medieval city of Grenada and what would definitely be a few more stories to tell the friends back home.

Related posts:

  1. Magical Madrid, Spain
  2. The Reina Sofia in Madrid, Spain
  3. Easy Day-Trips from Madrid

No related posts.

Written by Travel News on October 25th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on News.

Is This a New Golden Age for Train Travel?

Tony Naylor doesn’t think so. In this piece in the Guardian, he argues that rail isn’t the comfortable, scenic, low-carbon alternative to to air that it’s cracked up to be. Here’s a taste:

Four years ago, I decided to limit the number of times I would fly each year to one transatlantic flight, or two within … The idea of the train as a far more authentic and civilised—not to mention non-lethal—mode of was seductive.

The reality, however, is more complex. You see more of the world, for sure, but that is a mixed blessing.

The Man in Seat 61 responds here.

Written by Travel News on October 24th, 2009 with no comments.
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Video You Must See: Where Would You Want to Wake Up Tomorrow?

A film crew asks 50 people the same question on a Brooklyn street. (Via The Daily Dish)

Written by Travel News on October 21st, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on Top Destinations.

Fallows: ‘How I Survived China’

The Atlantic’s former China correspondent reflects on the health issues he faced as an expat amid the “ochre skies and suspect sanitation of .” The air quality there can be so bad, one doctor told Fallows, “I encourage people with children not to consider extended tours in . Those little lungs.”

What will future air quality be like in ? In Beijing, at least, it’s already improving.

Written by Travel News on October 19th, 2009 with no comments.
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Company to offer cruise in 2012 to mark the 100th anniversary of Titanic

A UK firm is planning a trans-Atlantic in 2012 to mark the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic. The Titanic Memorial will depart, as the original ship did, on April 8, from Southampton, England, and arrive at the spot in the North Atlantic where the “unsinkable ship” sank on April [...]

Written by Travel News on October 13th, 2009 with no comments.
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The Economist: Americanisms to Avoid

Here’s an entertaining tidbit from The Economist’s style guide, advising writers for the venerable weekly on a few American-style variations of the English language that are best left unused. A sample:

Make a deep study or even a study in depth, but not an in-depth study. On-site inspections are allowed, but not in-flight entertainment. Throw stones, not rocks, unless they are of slate, which can also mean abuse (as a verb) but does not, in Britain, mean predict, schedule or nominate. Regular is not a synonym for ordinary or normal: Mussolini brought in the regular train, All-Bran the regular man; it is quite normal to be without either. Hikes are walks, not increases. Vegetables, not teenagers, should be fresh. Only the speechless are dumb, the well-dressed smart and the insane mad. Scenarios are best kept for the theatre, postures for the gym, parameters for the parabola.

And some people think there are no cultural differences to speak of between Americans and their trans-Atlantic neighbors—or should I say neighbours? (Via Gadling)

Written by Travel News on October 13th, 2009 with no comments.
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Curaçao – Heart of the Netherlands Antilles

Known mostly for the famous blue drink commonly used to prepare cocktails, Curaçao is one of the most beautiful island destinations of the Caribbean. The over 40 white sand beaches bathed by the clear blue waters of the Atlantic, combined with the charm of its capital city of Willemstad make…

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Written by Travel News on October 10th, 2009 with no comments.
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