NewsBite

21 must-see destinations for 2015

FROM the jungles of Costa Rica to the breathtaking waters of Zanzibar, these are the places you really won’t want to miss next year.

Christmas traditions and cruising

FROM the mountain tops of China to the jungles of Costa Rica or the breathtaking waters of Zanzibar, these are some places you really won’t want to miss next year.

Here’s your ultimate what, where, how and why guide to travel in 2015.

Angama Mara. Maasai Mara, Kenya

Angama Mara.
Angama Mara.

This high-end safari camp opens in May, just in time for the annual Great Migration of wildebeests and zebras. Its 30 tented rooms and suites perch on a soaring escarpment where Bernardo Bertolucci filmed Out of Africa, at the very edge of the Great Rift Valley, their window walls and wooden decks overlooking the land below. (Angama means “suspended in midair” in Swahili.)

Twice-daily expert-led game drives bring guests out into the Maasai Mara National Reserve, tracking wildlife, with walking safaris and hot air ballooning also available. The project comes from Steve and Nicky Fitzgerald, the husband-and-wife duo who until recently ran the top-flight Africa outfitter andBeyond.

From $912 per person.

The Ritz Paris

Ritz-Carlton Hotel Paris. Picture: Ritz Paris
Ritz-Carlton Hotel Paris. Picture: Ritz Paris

Many of Paris’s palace hotels have recently shuttered for major renovations and restoration, not least of all this Place Vendôme grand dame, which will debut its much-anticipated facelift early next year, after a three-plus-year closure — its first since Cesar Ritz first opened it in 1898. When the curtain comes off, guests will find the public spaces and 143 wood-panelled rooms and suites reimagined by French designer Thierry W. Despont, who’s reinstalling the Ritz’s collection of furniture and art in a newly pastel-hued mise en scene.

The hotel has also added an informal restaurant and a clear retractable roof over a formerly open-air courtyard, as well as a third kitchen at its cooking school, a new ballroom and a completely rethought spa.

Park Hyatt Zanzibar. Stone Town, Tanzania

Park Hyatt Zanzibar.
Park Hyatt Zanzibar.

The island of Zanzibar — a popular post-safari sand-and-surf destination just off the coast of Tanzania — will get a fresh dose of contemporary international style this March, when a Park Hyatt opens in its main town’s historic centre, a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Just chilling in Tanzania.
Just chilling in Tanzania.

Blending Arabic, Persian, Indian and European design influences, the beachfront resort’s 56 rooms and 11 suites include many with Indian Ocean views, as will the outdoor infinity pool. The restaurant will take a globe-spanning point of view and the three-suite spa comes from the Asian brand Anantara.

From $547.

The Rock Restaurant in Zanzibar. Picture: Rod Waddington
The Rock Restaurant in Zanzibar. Picture: Rod Waddington

Four Seasons Resort Oahu at Ko Olina. Oahu, Hawaii

Four Seasons Resort Oahu at Ko Olina. Picture: Ko Olina Resort
Four Seasons Resort Oahu at Ko Olina. Picture: Ko Olina Resort

With hotels on Maui, Lanai and the eponymous Big Island, Four Seasons is no stranger to Hawaii, but with this oceanfront hotel, meant to open by the end of 2015, it’ll have its first outpost on Oahu. Located on the island’s west shore, near Honolulu airport, the 400-plus-room stay will reimagine the Ihilani, a modern, gleaming-white 17-storey hotel tower first opened in 1993, most recently a J.W. Marriott and originally designed by noted California architect Edward Killingsworth.

For its $304 million, year-long redo and expansion, Four Seasons turned to a standout team of aesthetic arbiters, including 2013 Pritzker Prize-winning Tokyo-based architect Toyo Ito and local interior-design maven Mary Philpotts McGrath. When complete, the hotel will add another draw to the massive Ko Olina development, which also includes a beach club, seaside white-sand lagoons, a deepwater marina and award-winning Ted Robinson-designed 18-hole golf course. (Rates not yet available

Baha Mar. New Providence, Bahamas

This massive, $4.2 billion resort development just west of the Bahamian capital city of Nassau comprises five hotels, including four brand-new ones — a Rosewood, SLS, Grand Hyatt and the Baha Mar Casino & Hotel — and a renovated Melia property.

When all five open in the late spring, their wealth of 2200 rooms will offer a variety of price points and experiences, but the hotels are just the tip of the iceberg. Baha Mar also boasts 40 restaurants, an 18-hole golf course and a racquet club with clay, grass and hard tennis courts, plus the Caribbean’s biggest casino and a 2787 square netre ESPA.

Lenny Kravitz is designing the Baha Mar Casino & Hotel’s Baha Mar Ultra Villa Roxie and the development’s nightclub.

From $425.

Brown Beach House. Tel Aviv, Israel

Brown Beach House.
Brown Beach House.

When it opened a few years back, the Brown TLV hotel took Tel Aviv by storm, combining a masculine, mid-century residential look and feel with great food, cosseting service and seriously cool cachet. No wonder Claire Danes made it her home when shooting Homeland’s first few seasons.

Now, the folks behind that seductive spot are headed to the city’s coveted coastline, opening this 40-room spot as Tel Aviv’s first small-scale, high-style hotel right on the city’s Mediterranean coastline. When it debuts in February, guests will find a retro beachy vibe (think Miami in the 1950s), water views from nearly all the rooms, the restaurant is fresh fish and grilled focus, an indoor bar with a surf club feeling and sand floor and an alfresco spa lounge dotted with cabanas, chaises and a huge hot tub.

From $237.

AltaGracia. Pérez Zeledón, Costa Rica

AltaGracia.
AltaGracia.

About two-and-a-half hours drive from the international airport in the capital of San Jose (or 25 minutes by chartered plane), this hotel, opening in January, breaks new ground in the relatively unexplored mountains of southern Costa Rica.

It will bring to the area something of a luxe-safari experience, with hiking, horseback-riding and other adventures offered alongside the largest spa in Central America, seven different dining options and 50 one- and two-bedroom red-tile-roofed villa-like casitas, each blending influences colonial and contemporary and providing their own private panoramic terraces.

From $803; half board.

Baccarat Hotels & Residences New York. New York, New York

This luxe 114-room stay, opening in Midtown Manhattan in February, across the street from the Museum of Modern Art, represents a rebirth for the 250-year-old brand that bears its name.

Starwood founder Barry Sternlicht acquired the French crystal company a few years back, and with this hotel turns it from luxury product into luxury lifestyle brand, one largely created in sumptuous New-meets-Old World style by Parisian interiors darlings Gilles & Boissier.

Beyond the rooms, there’s also a French restaurant helmed by Michelin-starred chef Shea Gallante. If you like your stay, Baccarat is selling equally posh — and pricey — condos.

From $1094.

The Lanesborough. London, UK

The Lanesborough. Picture: Lanesborough
The Lanesborough. Picture: Lanesborough

When this Hyde Park Corner icon reopens in the spring, following an 18-month closure, it won’t just have a top-to-bottom redo to show for itself. The grand 93-room hotel — once an aristocratic mansion built adjacent to what would become Buckingham Palace — will also now be the first British outpost of the Paris-based Oetker Collection of luxury hotels, whose City of Light flagship, Le Bristol, is a fashionable favourite.

Designed by decorator Alberto Pinto, in one of his final projects before his death in the fall of 2012, the redone Lanesborough will retain its classic Regency aesthetic, with decadent details such as marble floors, crystal chandeliers and embellished wood and plaster ceilings. An expanded spa will arrive in 2016.

From $1095.

Six Senses Qing Cheng Mountain. Dujiangyan, Sichuan, China

Six Senses Qing Cheng Mountain.
Six Senses Qing Cheng Mountain.

Nestled at the base of western China’s Qing Cheng Mountains, adjacent to the UNESCO World Heritage site of Dujiangyan and a 60-minute drive from the major city of Chengdu — which has a rising profile and wealth of new hotels of its own — this May-opening spa resort will be wellness- and sustainability-minded, Bangkok-based Six Senses’ first hotel in mainland China. The 113-suite resort’s modern design and pristine parklike setting combine ancient and modern, mixing pagoda-roofed structures and natural materials with clean lines and a soothing, contemporary palette.

Major draws include the large gardened spa and two beautiful pools, as well as the nearby giant panda centre and access to the cultural, natural and antique wonders of the surrounding area. From $413 including breakfast.

Virgin Hotels Chicago, US

Another beloved brand making its first foray into the hotel space, Virgin enters the hospitality world on January 15. It will launch in Chicago’s Central Loop district, with a four-star spot in a converted 1928 bank building that brings the contemporary cool of the airline’s upper-class airport clubhouses to 250 rooms and suites.

There will also be a glammed-up American diner, Italian coffee and wine bar and the Commons Club, a lounge, bar, restaurant and public gathering space with a member-only feel. A rooftop izakaya and cocktail joint will open in the spring.

From $250.

2015’s top spots for every travel taste, according to experts

For romance

Over water bungalows at French Polynesia.
Over water bungalows at French Polynesia.

With drastically improved airlift and the recent openings of boutique private-island luxury hotels — not least of all the new eco-conscious Brando — offering intimate, exclusive, but fully inclusive experiences, Fiji and French Polynesia are where I’m focused for 2015. I was once told as many people visit the Hawaiian islands in one day as visit French Polynesia in a year, and that as many people visit Fiji in a year as visit French Polynesia in a month, and it certainly feels that way! — Julia P. Douglas, founder Jet Set World Travel

For Families

Colombia is the new Caribbean for those after a shot of culture with their kid-friendly fly-and-flop winter vacations. The recently opened W Bogota offers a stylish start in the capital followed by a quick flight to Cartagena, where chic boutique hotels as well as high-end brands like the Four Seasons are claiming their piece of this seafront colonial city.

For those who prefer the countryside, tiny Hacienda Bambusa just reopened in the country’s picturesque coffee-growing highlands. — Henley Vazquez, co-founder and CEO, Feather+Flip

For Culture-Seekers

When in Italy ...
When in Italy ...

Italy’s the place to be for travellers interested in art, history, food and culture, especially in 2015. EXPO Milan, the World’s Fair, runs for six months starting May 1, exploring the theme “Feeding the Planet, Energy for Life” and featuring cutting-edge architecture, international cuisine and many other interesting elements.

The Venice Biennale will take place around the same time next year, making for an irresistible combination.” — Ashley Isaacs Ganz, founder and CEO, Artisans of Leisure

For cruisers

The top 2015 cruise spot is Southeast Asia: Myanmar and cruising along the Mekong River in Vietnam and Cambodia are especially hot, now offering safe, reliable and luxurious modes of river travel with such companies as Uniworld, Trails of Indo-China and AmaWaterways.

With extensive touring best for slightly younger, fit and active travellers, this area and these cruises provide an exciting, interesting and culturally enriching opportunity. — Tom Baker, president, CruiseCenter.com

For adventure junkies

The opening up of the Ogasawara Islands makes Japan especially attractive for exploration-ready nature lovers in 2015. Designated a UNESCO World Heritage site, the 30 tropical islands of various sizes are reached in 25 hours by boat from Tokyo. Today 36 per cent of all plants, 28 per cent of all insects and 94 per cent of all land snails found in the archipelago are endemic to the islands. — Justin Wateridge, managing director, Steppes Travel

For foodies

Cuba is experiencing an explosion of privately-owned restaurants, providing residents and tourists with exciting new food options, particularly in Havana. Leading this charge is two of the world’s best chefs, Basque chef Andoni Luis Aduriz of Mugaritz and Mexico’s Enrique Olvera, who are set to open restaurants in 2015.

This wave of food luminaries, which even includes returning Cuban emigrants, are putting a creative spin on traditional Cuban dishes that is bound to attract foodies from around the world. — Philippe Brown, founder, Brown + Hudson

For history buffs

Cape Town's beautiful port and Table Mountain
Cape Town's beautiful port and Table Mountain

2015 is the perfect time to visit South Africa, as the country commemorates 25 years since the end of apartheid. The recent unveiling of the SunStar in November 2014 is one example of how the country is looking at its past — and towards its future. The impressive sculpture situated atop Cape Town’s Signal Hill was constructed primarily with steel from the fence that used to surround Robben Island, where Nelson Mandela was imprisoned. An ingenious way to transform a piece of history into a thing of beauty. — Dennis Pinto, managing director, Micato Safaris

For big spenders/luxury hounds

Private jet trips across the vast expanses of Chile have come on the radar of wealthy travellers because they offer incredible natural landscapes, from the Patagonia to the Atacama Desert, as well as fabulous lodges like those from Awasi and the new Viña Vik in the Millahue wine valley. You get stunning unspoilt beauty and very cushy retreats with fabulous food and wine. — Melissa Biggs Bradley, founder and CEO, Indagare

For wallet watchers

Merida is being rediscovered by those seeking a cultural vacation on a budget. Most people think of Mexico and the beach for a vacation, but Merida, with its colonial history, provides a culturally rich city-centric experience without having to fly to Europe. It’s been called the second Paris or the Paris of Mexico, but it’s much cheaper. Come for January’s arts festival or February’s Carnaval, and stay at Hacienda Misné or Mansion Merida on the Park. — Sean Murphy, editor in chief, Jetsetter

For couch crashers

Among Airbnb travellers, we’ve seen that some of the fastest-growing destinations are next-door alternatives to popular ones. For instance: Andorra — instead of Spain or France — proved to be a top trending destination with over a 300 per cent increase in bookings. — Chip Conley, head of global hospitality and strategy, Airbnb.

For more news go to the New York Post.

Andorra.
Andorra.

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-ideas/best-of-travel/21-mustsee-destinations-for-2015/news-story/7b9d924f8e7853e2c4a0d46d687712d6