Upgrading the face value
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Deirdre Newman
The Hilton is the latest hotel in the city to revamp its look in the
hopes of attracting more business clients to its facilities.
The $15-million face-lift began in October on the heels of
multimillion dollar renovations by the Westin South Coast Plaza and
the Holiday Inn.
To keep up with the changing needs and moods of their visitors,
hotels have to perpetually enhance their appearances to stay
competitive, said Dan Pittman, spokesman for the Costa Mesa
Conference and Visitor Bureau.
“The hotels understand they need to improve their own products to
stay competitive and I think the fact that new hotels come [on-line]
gives our hotels the incentive to continue to do the kinds of
upgrades and renovations that are needed,” Pittman said. “It’s
certainly not static.”
The Hilton has gone through an identity crisis since it opened in
1997. It was owned by two different chains before it became a Hilton.
The renovations, which are in the final stages, imbue it with an air
of elegance.
The entire hotel has been renovated including all of the guest
rooms, the meeting facilities and the restaurant / bar area.
Highlights of the renovation include gold carpeting in the lobby with
colorful nautical and plant motifs and comfy leather recliners in all
the rooms.
“We want to keep it up to the standards that Hilton expects and we
want to be competitive with the hotels that we’re competing against,”
said Shannon Young, marketing coordinator. “We want, of course, to be
a nicer, more suitable hotel. It’s a beautiful hotel. The renovations
have made it better.”
All 484 guest rooms have been upgraded and two more suites have
been added. The 48,000 square feet of meeting space has also been
spiffed up and wireless Internet access is now available in this
area.
One of the most dramatic changes awaiting visitors is in the open
restaurant area where four 32-foot petrified palm trees have been
installed to bring the beach atmosphere indoors. The new restaurant,
called the Bristol Palms, a California Bistro and Bar, will include
more than 500 square feet with a wine bar, hand-thrown wood fire
pizza and a coffee bar, the Java Coast. It is expected to open at the
end of the month.
Before the Hilton’s face-lift, the Westin started its renovation
with the addition of Pinot Provence restaurant in 1998 and finished
with the upgrading of its guestrooms in the spring of 2000.
The $13-million face-lift was part of its renovation plan and just
happened to coincide with the Westin’s new guestroom design, so all
the rooms received a makeover from wall covering to carpet to new
furniture.
The hotel experienced an immediate upsurge in guests, said Bill
Allison, director of marketing.
“The economy in those days was still strong and we saw an
immediate response,” Allison said. “People just fell in love [with
the hotel], especially business travelers with the [new] beds and all
the work areas with ergonomic chairs.”
In 1999, before the rooms were renovated, the occupancy was 68%.
For 2000, with the new rooms, it jumped to 73%.
The Holiday Inn, which was renovated almost two years ago is also
reaping the reward of becoming more competitive, said general manager
Joe DeDio.
“With the market being a little soft, we’ve been able to maintain
and even do better than some of the other properties around us,”
DeDio said. “It has helped us immensely.”
The hotel also underwent a total transformation including removing
balconies outside the rooms to make the rooms five feet larger and
added glass to the facade to make it appear more modern.
After the upgrades, the hotel’s occupancy increased from 70% to
74%, DeDio said. The renovation also enabled the hotel to win a slew
of awards from hotel associations.
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