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Some people were complaining at the size of the pages on the original thread, so now I'll do them in monthly threads (that'll up my thread count
)
I'll include the 31 March stories in this thread as well:
Inaugural Virgin flight to Dubai
Virgin Atlantic this week began flying to Dubai, its first Gulf destination, with a lavish inaugural trip attended by CEO Steve Ridgeway and Sir Richard Branson, as well as corporate guests and the UK press. As usual, the airline isn't backward in coming forward. Despite entering an extremely competitive market with prices being driven to an all time low by new entrants (see online news March 23), Sir Richard Branson spoke of his ambition to win a 10% market share.
Sir Richard sees Virgin's main competitor on the route as being British Airways rather than local carrier Emirates, perhaps wary of upsetting the home carrier. He is also bullish that the Upper Class product will win over customers at the front of the plane, while at the back he intends to compete on price with economy fares which are 15% cheaper, something that will be a real achievement given current prices. Sir Richard also said that once the route has established itself, the airline would be looking elsewhere in the region. Some options might be Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi and Lebanon.
A current Virgin Atlantic seat sale (book by March 30) sees economy class seats offered for £328, with Premium Economy at £553 for travel between April 13 and July 15. Upper Class costs £2,059 falling to £1,179 when booked several weeks ahead.
Virgin is flying to Dubai four times a week with Airbus A340-600s. There will be five flights a week in May increasing to daily from June 1. The flight leaves London at 2100 arriving in Dubai at 0710 with the return departing Dubai at 1435 reaching Heathrow at 1910.
These timings hardly connect with any onward services from Heathrow but from July 1 the schedules are revised. That's when Virgin's flight will leave Heathrow at 2025 to arrive in Dubai at 0620 the next morning. The Dubai-London service will then depart much earlier at 0820 to reach Heathrow at 1240 which is ideal to connect with domestic, European and long-haul flights.
On his way to Dubai, Sir Richard officially opened the final stage of its clubhouse at Heathrow Terminal 3. Billed as a private members club it is certainly different. A cinema, spa bath, massages, facials and haircuts are all available, and there is even a 'sweet shop' for sweets and popcorn to enjoy whilst watching the screen. If you need refreshment you can get a drink from the coughtail bar and when hungry there is a brasserie with choices such a shepherds pie or a deli selection. The office / library has a good number of desks, some with workstations and seating / reading material, and is also quieter than the rest of the clubhouse. If you do want to work, choose your spot carefully as noise levels vary. It is a lounge for work, rest and play.
For more information go to VS website
Report by Julian Gregory
New routes from Cardiff with Eastern Airways
Commuter carrier Eastern Airways has announced three new routes from Cardiff International Airport. Starting April 24, the Humberside based airline will offer three flights each weekday to Brussels from the Welsh capital, two to Newcastle, and a daily flight to Aberdeen.
The niche airline will service the new routes from Cardiff using 29-seater Jetstream 41 aircraft, taking over the routes from Air Wales which last week announced the suspension of its scheduled services from the same airport. Says Darren Roberts, Communications Manager for Eastern Airways:
"We looked at the routes made available by the withdrawal of Air Wales, and felt that Newcastle, Brussels and Aberdeen fitted into our schedule well. We are already the biggest operator out of Aberdeen airport, with the oil operators making up a lot of our market in that area, and expect the majority of passengers using these routes to be business travellers looking to avoid overnight stays."
Eastern Airways has carved a market for itself by plying domestic routes with poor surface connections, such as Inverness from Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds, and Norwich – Manchester / Aberdeen. The latter route takes 1hr 20mins, giving passengers the opportunity to undertake a day trip that would be impossible by road or rail.
The expansion follows the commencement of the airline's London City - Newcastle route, which began on January 31. Says Roberts:
"The important thing with this route was to give passengers a large enough choice of flights, and we believe that four flights daily is what the market needed. We have been please with the support from local business communities, and operating out of London City has given workers in and around Canary Wharf a convenient option of travelling by air to Newcastle."
The airline is not impervious to competition though, with its Stansted – Manchester route having been dropped earlier this year following the start of Air Berlin flights on the same route. Roberts said that the route had been withdrawn due to "a significant drop in passenger numbers since the arrival of Air Berlin."
On of the reasons for this is that flights with Eastern Airways are not cheap - when Business Traveller checked this week, a fully flexible day return fare Birmingham - Inverness was £381.90, departing BHX at 0855 and arriving in Inverness at 1035, with the return leg departing at 1635 and arriving in BHX at 1815.
A similar flight departing Cardiff – Newcastle in early May was £307.70, departing Cardiff at 0835 and arriving in Newcastle at 0950, returning at 1700 and arriving back in Cardiff at 1815. Timetables for the Cardiff – Brussels / Aberdeen routes have yet to be finalised, although they should be available for booking online next week. Readers should also note that all tickets with Eastern are non-refundable, although fully flexible tickets can be rebooked for travel up to six months after the original flight date.
Of course the airline has not based its model on the low-cost offering – fully flexible passengers enjoy BA Terrace lounge access when departing Birmingham, Bristol and Newcastle, and fastrack security clearance at certain airports including Southampton and Leeds Bradford. In addition all passengers receive complimentary bar snacks and champagne onboard, and a copy of 'Spectator' magazine.
For more information visit Eastern Airways
Report by Mark Caswell
Bmed launches sixteenth destination
Ankara is the latest destination to be served by British Airways. Flights to the Turkish capital began last Sunday operated by BA's partner Bmed. There are six services a week from London Heathrow with the flights continuing to Khartoum (Sudan).
Until the arrival of Bmed's direct service, passengers flying to Ankara had to change planes in mainland Europe or Istanbul, a process which could make the trip eight hours compared with today's three and a half hour journey.
It has been 15 years since British Airways last served Ankara, and that service was via Istanbul too. Michael Roberts deputy head of mission at the British Embassy in Ankara says that the new service: " ...speaks volumes about the growing relationship between our two countries and Turkey joining Europe."
Bmed's new flight uses Heathrow's Terminal 4 so that connections can be made on to some of the world's most important business destinations, though flight times (because of slot restrictions) vary depending on the day of the week you fly. Nevertheless, there are good connections in London on to BA's transatlantic, domestic and European services. It means a transatlantic traveller leaving Ankara at 0940 would reach New York or Chicago at 1510 the same day following a 50 to 95 minute transfer within T4.
Chief executive of Bmed, David Richardson says: "At the moment around fifty per cent of our passengers fly on to the US so I imagine it will be the same from Ankara to America."
But for transatlantic passengers wanting to fly on to Turkey, the schedule could mean a bit of a wait at Heathrow, with the earliest flight leaving at 1500 on Mondays and the latest on Tuesdays at 2125 arriving 0320 local time.
An added comfort of flying on Bmed's A320 and A321 is the old-style Club World seats which offer long-haul business class-type seating on short-haul routes, something which no other airline currently offers.
Bmed says the new route is down to the strengthening relationship between the UK and Turkey as well as Europe.
Richardson says: "Air links with Turkey have traditionally been focused on Istanbul but we have identified an increasing demand for direct access to Ankara. Increasingly, our key markets in the UK and US are becoming aware of the great business and leisure potential within Turkey."
But the timing also falls in-line with Ankara's Esenboga International airport expanding. To be completed by October this year, the new terminal will have e-ticketing facilities, something Bmed is quick to praise.
Richardson adds: "We are very much looking forward to the new development. We would have probably come here anyway because we see it as a very good opportunity but the new technology and the new terminal helps."
The main exports from Turkey to the UK are textiles, food, car parts and IT while the UK has interests with BP and Shell and Vodafone has recently bought Turkey's second biggest mobile phone company Telism for around £2.5 billion.
Currently Bmed has six flights a week via Ankara, rising to daily in July with the delivery the second A321 of seven on order.
A visa is needed for Turkey and this can be arranged on arrival at a cost of £10.
Lead in fares are from £268 in economy and £613 in business including tax. When Business Traveller checked Bmed return prices for travel out of London on April 5 returning on April 7, 2006 the economy fare was £233.60 and business was £722.60 including taxes. For more information or to book visit BA website or call the reservations team on 0870 850 9 850 (if in UK) or visit your local travel agent.
Report by Felicity Cousins and Alex McWhirter
Air Berlin breaks Star Alliance monopoly
Air Berlin is poised to enter the important 180-mile Frankfurt-Zurich business route currently monopolised by Lufthansa and Swiss.
The budget German airline will fly four times a day on weekdays and once daily at weekends. Flights commence on April 24 with lower fares and business traveller friendly timings.
Conventional wisdom had it that Frankfurt's main International airport had been closed to budget carriers because suitable "slots" were impossible to find.
But Air Berlin has become an exception to the rule. According to an Air Berlin spokesperson, the EC competitions' department has instructed Lufthansa to release a number of Frankfurt slots because it is the process of buying out Zurich-based Swiss which will end any competition between the two carriers. Swiss will also join the Star Alliance next week.
Air Berlin flights will depart Frankfurt at 0645, 1130, 1455 and 1900. From Zurich, the services will leave at 0905, 1305, 1645 and 2105. Flight time is 60 to 70 minutes.
When Business Traveller checked Air Berlin return prices for travel out of Frankfurt on April 24 with a return from Zurich on April 25, we were quoted €60 for off-peak and €88 for peak time flights. By contrast, Lufthansa was charging a competitive €99 for off-peak flights (a new lower tariff introduced in response to Air Berlin) but peak time services were priced at a hefty €608.
The following month sees Air Berlin add additional flights to Helsinki and open two new routes to Denmark. Flights will operate once daily from May 2 between Berlin Tegel and Helsinki. On the same day there will also be new services to Copenhagen from both Berlin Tegel and Hamburg.
For more information go to Air Berlin website
Report by Alex McWhirter
Developments to Central and Eastern Europe
Malev, CSA, Central Wings and SkyEurope are all improving their UK services this summer.
Hungary's Malev is doubling the number of flights between London and Budapest by adding a new B737 service from Gatwick. Flights will operate up to twice daily from May 1 with departures from Gatwick at 0840 and 1900 and with the inbound services from Budapest timed to leave at 0600 and 1635.
When Business Traveller checked fares on the route for a return flight out on May 2 and back on May 4 we were quoted an online fare of £176 return. Says Malev's UK country manager Doros Theodorou: "The new Gatwick flights will offer good connections at our Budapest hub for onward destinations in Central and Eastern Europe." Malev's existing twice daily flights from Heathrow continue as before.
Czech airline CSA is upgrading its London to Prague service by introducing brand new 162-seater Airbus A320s. CSA has 12 of these state-of-the-art planes on order and they set the Czech national carrier apart from regional rivals Malev and LOT who all use the ubiquitious B737.
The A320s feature a slightly wider cabin than the B737. The first plane to join the fleet will fly on CSA's flagship London Heathrow route. From April 1, you will (barring any last minute changes) encounter the A320s when taking flights OK651 at 1440 and OK649 at 2115 out of Heathrow and OK650 at 1235 and OK652 at 1845 from Prague.
CSA's third daily service on this route, namely OK653 from Heathrow at 0740 along with OK648 at 2110 from Prague is expected to be converted to A320 operation from May 1.
Meanwhile, Central Wings (a Polish budget airline backed by LOT) has just added its first B737 flights from Leeds and Edinburgh. On March 26 it began flying Leeds-Warsaw followed by Edinburgh-Gdansk on March 27 plus Edinburgh-Katowice (near Krakow in Southern Poland) on March 28. Flights on all these routes operate thrice weekly.
Slovakia's SkyEurope is poised to launch two new routes to Krakow using B737s. A twice weekly service from Birmingham will commence on April 12 followed by a thrice weekly link from Edinburgh on April 13.
For more information visit Malev, CSA, Centralwings or Skyeurope
Report by Alex McWhirter
Westin guests can buy their bed
Westin guests resident in Europe now have the chance to buy beds from the hotel chain by ordering online with delivery to the door. Guests who are resident in the US have been able to do just this for the past few years and now the hotel chain is making the same offer to guests in Europe.
The Westin bed in question is the highly acclaimed 'Heavenly Bed', supposedly one of the most comfortable as well as being able to provide a good night's sleep. The bed was modelled after the one used by former chairman and CEO Barry Sternlicht at his US home.
It certainly doesn't come cheap at a price of €2,900 for the king size version. Smaller sizes, such as a Double, cost €2,200, while a Full size (the smallest) costs €1,750. However, bear in mind that price buys just the mattress and box spring. You will have to spend hundreds more Euros to fit the bed with Westin cotton sheets, a duvet, pillows and so on.
Fans of the Westin bathroom can buy a shower head for €150 along with bath robes for €115 or towels for €50.Toiletries are readily available at €14 for shampoo and €14 for body wash. The cheapest item is a bar of Westin soap for €3.
Westin is part of the global Starwood Group comprising brands such as Sheraton, the Luxury Collection and Four Points. There are over 120 Westin hotels around the world including 22 in Europe, the Middle East and Africa. The UK is represented by only a single Westin:Turnberry near Ayr in Scotland.
For more information go to Westin Hotels at Home website and select the European site.
Report by Alex McWhirter

I'll include the 31 March stories in this thread as well:
Inaugural Virgin flight to Dubai
Virgin Atlantic this week began flying to Dubai, its first Gulf destination, with a lavish inaugural trip attended by CEO Steve Ridgeway and Sir Richard Branson, as well as corporate guests and the UK press. As usual, the airline isn't backward in coming forward. Despite entering an extremely competitive market with prices being driven to an all time low by new entrants (see online news March 23), Sir Richard Branson spoke of his ambition to win a 10% market share.
Sir Richard sees Virgin's main competitor on the route as being British Airways rather than local carrier Emirates, perhaps wary of upsetting the home carrier. He is also bullish that the Upper Class product will win over customers at the front of the plane, while at the back he intends to compete on price with economy fares which are 15% cheaper, something that will be a real achievement given current prices. Sir Richard also said that once the route has established itself, the airline would be looking elsewhere in the region. Some options might be Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi and Lebanon.
A current Virgin Atlantic seat sale (book by March 30) sees economy class seats offered for £328, with Premium Economy at £553 for travel between April 13 and July 15. Upper Class costs £2,059 falling to £1,179 when booked several weeks ahead.
Virgin is flying to Dubai four times a week with Airbus A340-600s. There will be five flights a week in May increasing to daily from June 1. The flight leaves London at 2100 arriving in Dubai at 0710 with the return departing Dubai at 1435 reaching Heathrow at 1910.
These timings hardly connect with any onward services from Heathrow but from July 1 the schedules are revised. That's when Virgin's flight will leave Heathrow at 2025 to arrive in Dubai at 0620 the next morning. The Dubai-London service will then depart much earlier at 0820 to reach Heathrow at 1240 which is ideal to connect with domestic, European and long-haul flights.
On his way to Dubai, Sir Richard officially opened the final stage of its clubhouse at Heathrow Terminal 3. Billed as a private members club it is certainly different. A cinema, spa bath, massages, facials and haircuts are all available, and there is even a 'sweet shop' for sweets and popcorn to enjoy whilst watching the screen. If you need refreshment you can get a drink from the coughtail bar and when hungry there is a brasserie with choices such a shepherds pie or a deli selection. The office / library has a good number of desks, some with workstations and seating / reading material, and is also quieter than the rest of the clubhouse. If you do want to work, choose your spot carefully as noise levels vary. It is a lounge for work, rest and play.
For more information go to VS website
Report by Julian Gregory
New routes from Cardiff with Eastern Airways
Commuter carrier Eastern Airways has announced three new routes from Cardiff International Airport. Starting April 24, the Humberside based airline will offer three flights each weekday to Brussels from the Welsh capital, two to Newcastle, and a daily flight to Aberdeen.
The niche airline will service the new routes from Cardiff using 29-seater Jetstream 41 aircraft, taking over the routes from Air Wales which last week announced the suspension of its scheduled services from the same airport. Says Darren Roberts, Communications Manager for Eastern Airways:
"We looked at the routes made available by the withdrawal of Air Wales, and felt that Newcastle, Brussels and Aberdeen fitted into our schedule well. We are already the biggest operator out of Aberdeen airport, with the oil operators making up a lot of our market in that area, and expect the majority of passengers using these routes to be business travellers looking to avoid overnight stays."
Eastern Airways has carved a market for itself by plying domestic routes with poor surface connections, such as Inverness from Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds, and Norwich – Manchester / Aberdeen. The latter route takes 1hr 20mins, giving passengers the opportunity to undertake a day trip that would be impossible by road or rail.
The expansion follows the commencement of the airline's London City - Newcastle route, which began on January 31. Says Roberts:
"The important thing with this route was to give passengers a large enough choice of flights, and we believe that four flights daily is what the market needed. We have been please with the support from local business communities, and operating out of London City has given workers in and around Canary Wharf a convenient option of travelling by air to Newcastle."
The airline is not impervious to competition though, with its Stansted – Manchester route having been dropped earlier this year following the start of Air Berlin flights on the same route. Roberts said that the route had been withdrawn due to "a significant drop in passenger numbers since the arrival of Air Berlin."
On of the reasons for this is that flights with Eastern Airways are not cheap - when Business Traveller checked this week, a fully flexible day return fare Birmingham - Inverness was £381.90, departing BHX at 0855 and arriving in Inverness at 1035, with the return leg departing at 1635 and arriving in BHX at 1815.
A similar flight departing Cardiff – Newcastle in early May was £307.70, departing Cardiff at 0835 and arriving in Newcastle at 0950, returning at 1700 and arriving back in Cardiff at 1815. Timetables for the Cardiff – Brussels / Aberdeen routes have yet to be finalised, although they should be available for booking online next week. Readers should also note that all tickets with Eastern are non-refundable, although fully flexible tickets can be rebooked for travel up to six months after the original flight date.
Of course the airline has not based its model on the low-cost offering – fully flexible passengers enjoy BA Terrace lounge access when departing Birmingham, Bristol and Newcastle, and fastrack security clearance at certain airports including Southampton and Leeds Bradford. In addition all passengers receive complimentary bar snacks and champagne onboard, and a copy of 'Spectator' magazine.
For more information visit Eastern Airways
Report by Mark Caswell
Bmed launches sixteenth destination
Ankara is the latest destination to be served by British Airways. Flights to the Turkish capital began last Sunday operated by BA's partner Bmed. There are six services a week from London Heathrow with the flights continuing to Khartoum (Sudan).
Until the arrival of Bmed's direct service, passengers flying to Ankara had to change planes in mainland Europe or Istanbul, a process which could make the trip eight hours compared with today's three and a half hour journey.
It has been 15 years since British Airways last served Ankara, and that service was via Istanbul too. Michael Roberts deputy head of mission at the British Embassy in Ankara says that the new service: " ...speaks volumes about the growing relationship between our two countries and Turkey joining Europe."
Bmed's new flight uses Heathrow's Terminal 4 so that connections can be made on to some of the world's most important business destinations, though flight times (because of slot restrictions) vary depending on the day of the week you fly. Nevertheless, there are good connections in London on to BA's transatlantic, domestic and European services. It means a transatlantic traveller leaving Ankara at 0940 would reach New York or Chicago at 1510 the same day following a 50 to 95 minute transfer within T4.
Chief executive of Bmed, David Richardson says: "At the moment around fifty per cent of our passengers fly on to the US so I imagine it will be the same from Ankara to America."
But for transatlantic passengers wanting to fly on to Turkey, the schedule could mean a bit of a wait at Heathrow, with the earliest flight leaving at 1500 on Mondays and the latest on Tuesdays at 2125 arriving 0320 local time.
An added comfort of flying on Bmed's A320 and A321 is the old-style Club World seats which offer long-haul business class-type seating on short-haul routes, something which no other airline currently offers.
Bmed says the new route is down to the strengthening relationship between the UK and Turkey as well as Europe.
Richardson says: "Air links with Turkey have traditionally been focused on Istanbul but we have identified an increasing demand for direct access to Ankara. Increasingly, our key markets in the UK and US are becoming aware of the great business and leisure potential within Turkey."
But the timing also falls in-line with Ankara's Esenboga International airport expanding. To be completed by October this year, the new terminal will have e-ticketing facilities, something Bmed is quick to praise.
Richardson adds: "We are very much looking forward to the new development. We would have probably come here anyway because we see it as a very good opportunity but the new technology and the new terminal helps."
The main exports from Turkey to the UK are textiles, food, car parts and IT while the UK has interests with BP and Shell and Vodafone has recently bought Turkey's second biggest mobile phone company Telism for around £2.5 billion.
Currently Bmed has six flights a week via Ankara, rising to daily in July with the delivery the second A321 of seven on order.
A visa is needed for Turkey and this can be arranged on arrival at a cost of £10.
Lead in fares are from £268 in economy and £613 in business including tax. When Business Traveller checked Bmed return prices for travel out of London on April 5 returning on April 7, 2006 the economy fare was £233.60 and business was £722.60 including taxes. For more information or to book visit BA website or call the reservations team on 0870 850 9 850 (if in UK) or visit your local travel agent.
Report by Felicity Cousins and Alex McWhirter
Air Berlin breaks Star Alliance monopoly
Air Berlin is poised to enter the important 180-mile Frankfurt-Zurich business route currently monopolised by Lufthansa and Swiss.
The budget German airline will fly four times a day on weekdays and once daily at weekends. Flights commence on April 24 with lower fares and business traveller friendly timings.
Conventional wisdom had it that Frankfurt's main International airport had been closed to budget carriers because suitable "slots" were impossible to find.
But Air Berlin has become an exception to the rule. According to an Air Berlin spokesperson, the EC competitions' department has instructed Lufthansa to release a number of Frankfurt slots because it is the process of buying out Zurich-based Swiss which will end any competition between the two carriers. Swiss will also join the Star Alliance next week.
Air Berlin flights will depart Frankfurt at 0645, 1130, 1455 and 1900. From Zurich, the services will leave at 0905, 1305, 1645 and 2105. Flight time is 60 to 70 minutes.
When Business Traveller checked Air Berlin return prices for travel out of Frankfurt on April 24 with a return from Zurich on April 25, we were quoted €60 for off-peak and €88 for peak time flights. By contrast, Lufthansa was charging a competitive €99 for off-peak flights (a new lower tariff introduced in response to Air Berlin) but peak time services were priced at a hefty €608.
The following month sees Air Berlin add additional flights to Helsinki and open two new routes to Denmark. Flights will operate once daily from May 2 between Berlin Tegel and Helsinki. On the same day there will also be new services to Copenhagen from both Berlin Tegel and Hamburg.
For more information go to Air Berlin website
Report by Alex McWhirter
Developments to Central and Eastern Europe
Malev, CSA, Central Wings and SkyEurope are all improving their UK services this summer.
Hungary's Malev is doubling the number of flights between London and Budapest by adding a new B737 service from Gatwick. Flights will operate up to twice daily from May 1 with departures from Gatwick at 0840 and 1900 and with the inbound services from Budapest timed to leave at 0600 and 1635.
When Business Traveller checked fares on the route for a return flight out on May 2 and back on May 4 we were quoted an online fare of £176 return. Says Malev's UK country manager Doros Theodorou: "The new Gatwick flights will offer good connections at our Budapest hub for onward destinations in Central and Eastern Europe." Malev's existing twice daily flights from Heathrow continue as before.
Czech airline CSA is upgrading its London to Prague service by introducing brand new 162-seater Airbus A320s. CSA has 12 of these state-of-the-art planes on order and they set the Czech national carrier apart from regional rivals Malev and LOT who all use the ubiquitious B737.
The A320s feature a slightly wider cabin than the B737. The first plane to join the fleet will fly on CSA's flagship London Heathrow route. From April 1, you will (barring any last minute changes) encounter the A320s when taking flights OK651 at 1440 and OK649 at 2115 out of Heathrow and OK650 at 1235 and OK652 at 1845 from Prague.
CSA's third daily service on this route, namely OK653 from Heathrow at 0740 along with OK648 at 2110 from Prague is expected to be converted to A320 operation from May 1.
Meanwhile, Central Wings (a Polish budget airline backed by LOT) has just added its first B737 flights from Leeds and Edinburgh. On March 26 it began flying Leeds-Warsaw followed by Edinburgh-Gdansk on March 27 plus Edinburgh-Katowice (near Krakow in Southern Poland) on March 28. Flights on all these routes operate thrice weekly.
Slovakia's SkyEurope is poised to launch two new routes to Krakow using B737s. A twice weekly service from Birmingham will commence on April 12 followed by a thrice weekly link from Edinburgh on April 13.
For more information visit Malev, CSA, Centralwings or Skyeurope
Report by Alex McWhirter
Westin guests can buy their bed
Westin guests resident in Europe now have the chance to buy beds from the hotel chain by ordering online with delivery to the door. Guests who are resident in the US have been able to do just this for the past few years and now the hotel chain is making the same offer to guests in Europe.
The Westin bed in question is the highly acclaimed 'Heavenly Bed', supposedly one of the most comfortable as well as being able to provide a good night's sleep. The bed was modelled after the one used by former chairman and CEO Barry Sternlicht at his US home.
It certainly doesn't come cheap at a price of €2,900 for the king size version. Smaller sizes, such as a Double, cost €2,200, while a Full size (the smallest) costs €1,750. However, bear in mind that price buys just the mattress and box spring. You will have to spend hundreds more Euros to fit the bed with Westin cotton sheets, a duvet, pillows and so on.
Fans of the Westin bathroom can buy a shower head for €150 along with bath robes for €115 or towels for €50.Toiletries are readily available at €14 for shampoo and €14 for body wash. The cheapest item is a bar of Westin soap for €3.
Westin is part of the global Starwood Group comprising brands such as Sheraton, the Luxury Collection and Four Points. There are over 120 Westin hotels around the world including 22 in Europe, the Middle East and Africa. The UK is represented by only a single Westin:Turnberry near Ayr in Scotland.
For more information go to Westin Hotels at Home website and select the European site.
Report by Alex McWhirter