Archive for June, 2009

America’s Best Airport Bars

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

For travelers, it was more bad news: According to tracking service FlightStats.com, 2008 marked the fourth consecutive year that flight delays increased, with the average wait climbing to 57 minutes. If anything, the announcement gives beleaguered voyagers yet another reason to have a drink.

Typically, weary air travelers toss back beers in sports saloons, an experience about as relaxing as napping on a highway median. Recently, though, there’s been a groundswell of upscale airport bars offering wines with charcuterie, microbrews and even exquisite bourbon.

New Belgium Hub Bar & Grill
New Belgium Hub Bar & Grill, Denver International Airport

“We’re moving away from uncomfortable institutional lounges with very mundane offerings,” says Paul McGinn, president of MarketPlace Development, a Boston-based airport retail developer. “Since people are arriving at airports earlier and experiencing more delays, they’re looking for distractions and entertainment.”

One of McGinn’s favorite havens is Vino Volo - Italian for “wine flight” - a chain of sleek, modern lounges located in cities including San Antonio and Seattle. “They’re detached from the hustle and bustle of the airport,” McGinn says. “In contrast to many wine bars, the service is not intimidating and caters to people who understand wine.”

Another favored wine way station is Cibo Bistro and Wine Bar, situated in the Philadelphia International airport. The Concourse B branch is stunning, outfitted with a 45-foot-long onyx bar, 32 wines by the glass and the convivial atmosphere of the finest Italian trattoria.

Should you prefer beer, Denver’s New Belgium Hub Bar & Grill is a microbrew sanctuary. In the eclectic bar decorated with bicycle paintings, travelers sip superb brews from Colorado-based New Belgium, including the easy-drinking Fat Tire amber ale.

At the PDX airport in Portland, Oregon, local brewery Laurelwood has several laid-back branches dispensing their delectable organic brews, such as the caramel-nuanced Free Range Red. For bourbon with the beer, detour through Louisville, Kentucky. There, the Woodford Reserve Bar & Grill serves excellent, oak-aged spirits to customers reclining in leather chairs.

But the boldest experiment in upscale bars is underway at NYC’s JFK airport. Jet Blue’s gleaming Terminal 5 is a return to jet-set glamour, packed with steakhouses, wine-sipping bistros and luxe lounges better suited to Broadway, not the runway.

“We want our restaurants and bars to rival the bars and restaurants you see on the street,” says Rick Blatstein, CEO of airport food and beverage operator OTG Management. “We want to deliver a want, not a need, to go to the airport early.”

To attract early arrivers, the soon-to-open stylish Loft Kitchen & Bar will re-create Manhattan’s SoHo cool, serving killer cocktails and comfort food. New York Sports Grill gives the tired sports bar a contemporary tweak, serving 48 beers on tap including local brews from Brooklyn outfit Kelso. And then there’s the re:vive bars, located near the gates.

“You can have a nice cocktail and snack and wait for the plane,” Blatstein says. “We thought it would take some time to take off - no pun intended - but customers took to it like fish to water.”

Furthermore, Blatstein says, the new breed of airport bars and lounges remind passengers that travel should be about pleasure, not hair-pulling anxiety. “People going on vacation should enjoy themselves,” Blatstein says. “If you’re going to Cancun or the Dominican Republic, why not start the trip with a mimosa or a bloody Mary? It’s a great way to start your travels.”

Author credit : Joshua M Bernstein, Forbes Traveler
Image credit : © Concessions International, LLC

Welcome back!

Would You Consider Marrying for Money?

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

Let’s face it - with times as tough as they have been of late, financial worries are taking a toll on other aspects of our lives, especially relationships.

It’s not easy keeping romance alive when a couple has a home loan to repay, bills to shell out on and a household to run; pay-cuts, pink slips and a lack of job security are playing havoc with most people’s minds at the moment.

Marrying for Money?

So what’s the alternative? Hope for the best and wait it out?

Or begin to wonder what your life would have been like if you had married for money?

There are many people out there who wouldn’t settle for less and are honest enough to admit it - when you crave for or are used to a certain lifestyle, getting hitched to a wealthy partner is one way of ensuring your future security.

Even when it comes to arranged marriages, money matters usually weigh in heavily on the proceedings - parents want to see their children well-settled and comfortable. A well-educated guy with a large salary, or a rich young lady who will inherit her father’s business are deemed highly eligible.

What are your views on marrying for money?

Do you think that it’s despicable or excusable, given how tough some people have it?

Would you consider it if you were not in a relationship?

Do you know of someone who married for financial reasons? How did it work out?

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