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Souvenir Sunday: treats from Narita Int’l Airport

It’s Souvenir Sunday: the day we take a look at some of the fun, inexpensive, “of” a city items for sale at airports.

This week’s treats come from Tokyo’s Narita International Airport.

This sumo wrestler doll caught my eye -

Narita Airport doll

As did these dainty containers filled with face cream:

Narita Airport Face Cream

But my pick for Souvenir Sunday this week is this timeless gag gift.

Proof – in any language – that corny is universal.

Narita Airport "pull my finger" gag gift

Got sheep? Hotel concierges fill wacky requests

sheep

In my column this week on msnbc.com – Got Sheep? Concierges fulfill bizarre requests – I share just a few of the stories hotel and airplane (yes, airplane) concierges recently shared with me about the lengths they go to please customers.

In an age when some hotels are moving to self check-in and toying with the idea of removing the front desk, it seems surprising that hotels would still offer this concierge service. But many still do – and the people who staff the concierge desk have some wild stories.

Here’s what I found out:

If you need to deposit a check at the bank, get a boarding pass at the airport or fill up your gas tank at the service station, a self-service kiosk can be a real time-saver.

The same goes for checking in at a hotel.

“Some guests prefer the convenience and the anonymity that a self-service check-in kiosk offers. Other are just shy and don’t want to talk to anyone,” said Carl Winston, director of the School of Hospitality and Tourism Management at San Diego State University.

But what if you’re in Southern California and the Australian sheep dogs you’re traveling with need a flock of sheep to herd? And where would you turn if you only spoke Russian and had a dental emergency while staying in a New York City hotel on a holiday weekend?

There are no buttons on the self-service kiosks for those situations.

That’s when a hotel concierge can come in handy.

“We were able to locate some sheep for those Australian sheep dogs to herd and arranged for a car to bring the dogs to the sheep,” said Jessica Foster, a concierge at the Four Seasons Resort The Biltmore Santa Barbara.

And when a Russian-speaking guest at the Pod Hotel in New York City had a dental emergency during Christmas, head concierge Bryan Raughton called the Russian consulate, who found a translator in Brooklyn whose neighbor just happened to be a Russian dentist. “He set up the guest with an extraction and a night in Brooklyn, numbed with vodka,” reports Raughton.

Concierges at hotels large and small can recount similar “we aim to please” stories.

In Los Angeles, the concierge service at the Peninsula Beverly Hills Hotel begins at LAX airport. There “airport concierge” Jimmy Bardolf is on duty to smooth the journey to the hotel.  “Our job is to set the tone for their hotel experience when a guest arrives and to leave them with a fond memory of the hotel when they leave,” says Bardolf, whose desk is a briefcase that includes emergency supplies such as Visine, Band-Aids and Krazy glue to fix broken nails.

At the Pfister Hotel in downtown Milwaukee, Chef Concierge Peter Mortensen has done everything “from running out to purchase socks and underwear for special guests to tracking down a sugar maple seedling for an ambassador to take home.”

In Tokyo, a foreign guest at the Ritz-Carlton wanted to take home about $6,000 worth of the unusually-flavored Kit-Kat bars (green Tea, wasabi, strawberry, etc.) that are popular in Japan. “It was two hours before the guest’s departure,” said chief concierge Mayako Sumiyoshi, “And the [Kit Kat] warehouse is on the outskirts of Tokyo. So the concierge team visited all the local shops, convenience stores, etc., to purchase as many candy bars as possible.”

At The Stafford London, Executive Head Concierge Frank Laino arranged to ship a red double-decker bus from London to Texas.

At XV Beacon, an upscale boutique hotel in Boston, a concierge visited a series of museums and amusement parks to reconstruct the flat penny collection a guest’s son lost during his stay.

And at the Four Seasons Hotel Boston, members of Chef Concierge Maggie O’Rourke’s team have flown to New York and back to retrieve a holiday dress left behind, assisted in marriage proposals in the hotel and in the nearby Public Garden and even placed eye drops in a guest’s eyes.

“We are here to fill in the blanks and make memories,” says O’Rourke, “And as long as it is not illegal or immoral, we will do all we can to make requests happen!”

“Guests don’t really need a concierge to give directions or a list of the ten best restaurants in town. The Internet and GPS navigation systems do that now,” says Jessica Foster of the Four Seasons Resort The Biltmore Santa Barbara. “Our job is to weed through all the information and help with specialized requests. If you can dream it up, we can make it happen.”

But given the economic doldrums the hotel industry is in, can making memories and figuring out how to grant wishes be enough of a payoff for a hotel and its concierge staff?

“Some hotels are trying to cut corners by offering outsourcing their concierge desk services to companies such as Expedia,” says Carl Winston of the School of Hospitality and Tourism Management at San Diego State University. Others are supplementing limited service with a branded on-line app.

But at the Hotel Galvez in Galveston, TX, the payoff of having an in-house concierge is “return visits and referrals to friends,” says Jackie Hasan, a concierge who flew to Panama to deliver the luggage a couple left behind when they set out on a cruise.

For other hotels, it can be that much sought-after, glowing on-line review.

After Chef Concierge Anthony Baliola of Seattle’s Hotel Vintage Park brought soup to a guest who’d fallen ill, the guest posted a rave TripAdvisor review that reads, in part, “…Other reviews talks about the beautiful rooms, wonderful beds, great location… All true, but the Chef Concierge was a godsend. Recommend the hotel to friends? No. I would insist!”

The return on maintaining concierge service can also take place up in the air.

In 2008, Air New Zealand began adding a concierge to the crew of many long haul flights; the first airline to do so.  The team now includes almost 50 in-flight concierges. “They are empowered to solve problems by dealing with issues as they happen, in the air or on the ground,” said Roger Poulton, Vice President, Air New Zealand – The Americas.

“That can mean offering a bottle of wine, a six-month cinema pass or some other sort of compensation to a passenger whose entertainment systems is broken,” explained London-based in-flight concierge Stephen Wareham, who makes a point to visit passengers in all cabins of the airplane. “My job is to make sure problems don’t fester away during a flight.”

While costly, the in-flight concierge program appears to be paying off. Air New Zealand’s Roger Poulton said, “Whether it’s delivering a sick passenger’s luggage to the hospital …or simply being helpful and making a fuss of our customers, we’ve seen our unsolicited compliments this past year increase …and our complaints drop.”

Have you had a concierge help you out of a jam? Share you story here.

Giant spider webs at Philadelphia Airport

Philadelphia International Airport presents a marvelous and diverse program of both permanent and changing art exhibitions throughout the terminals.

In keeping with the season, one installation to seek out right now is The Repairer - eight large-scale glass spider webs created by artist Sharyn O’Mara in memory of the artist Louise Bourgeois (1911-2010).

PHL Spiderweb Sharyn O'Mara

Photo credit: Richard McMullin, Philadelphia International Airport

Here’s some background on the installation from the airport website:

Described as a “Grande Dame of American and European art,” Bourgeois is best known for her series of monumental metal spiders – the largest stands more than 30 feet tall. Although primarily a sculptor, Bourgeois also liked to draw. It was another medium to express her fascination with spiders and, in particular, their webs. Bourgeois had said that drawing was similar to a spider’s web: “it’s like the thread…it is a knitting, a spiral.“

Like Bourgeois’ gigantic spiders, O’Mara has fabricated similarly sized glass webs influenced by the late artist’s web drawings. O’Mara’s installation was inspired by Bourgeois, whose parents restored tapestries. Bourgeois once said, “The spider is a repairer. I came from a family of repairers. If you bash into the web of a spider, she doesn’t get mad. She weaves and repairs it.”

Look for Sharyn O’Mara’s The Repairer post-security in Terminal A-West through February 2011.

To see what else there is to do at Philadelphia International Airport, see my guide to Philadelphia International Airport on USAToday.com.

And, in the spirit of Halloween, here are two great cartoons my buddy Bob Rini found and posted on his highly entertaining blog, The Nine Pound Hammer.

This one is a Betty Boop cartoon that was banned in the 1930′s.

And this one is a very early Mickey Mouse cartoon.

Thanks, Bob!
And Happy Halloween.

Tidbits for travelers: Harley sale at PHL, desserts at MIA

witch on motorcycle - Halloween

At Philadelphia International Airport (PHL) on Friday (Oct. 29th) the Harley-Davidson shop in the B/C Connector is celebrating Halloween with refreshments and Halloween gift bags (with purchase). The shop will also be offering 20% off all merchandise, including clearance items.

And at Miami International Airport (MIA), the Icebox Café – a popular local South Beach restaurant that was featured on the Oprah Show -  has opened a new branch in the North Terminal, near Gate D-8.

Miami Airport Icebox cage oprah cake

In addition to breakfast, lunch and dinner, the quick-serve deli-bakery also serves up the restaurant’s nationally recognized cakes and desserts – and will even ship desserts home for you from the airport.

(Pictured above: Ice Box Cafe’s Coconut Buttercream Cake , featured on “Best Cakes in America” Oprah Show-May 2006)

All about Alain de Botton’s book: A Week at the Airport

Aaron Britt, the senior editor over at Dwell Magazine has been reading Alain de Botton’s book, A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary, and was pretty sure fans of Stuck at the Airport would be interested in his two-part review.

Heathrow

He’s right. de Botton’s book is all about the time he spent as writer-in-residence at the British Airways terminal in London’s Heathrow Airport.

If you haven’t got your own copy of the book yet, you can read an excerpt in the New York Times and then wing your way over to Britt’s review.

Here’s an excerpt from that:

My favorite bit comes when he gets to Richard Roger’s eye-goggling architecture itself. He lucidly declares that the building’s soaring supports “were endowed with a subcategory of beauty we might refer to as elegance, present whenever architecture has the mnodest not to draw attention to the difficulties it has surmounted. On top of their tapered necks, the columns balanced the 400-metre [sic] roof as if they were holding up a canopy made of linen, offering a metaphor for how we too might like to stand in relation to our burdens.” Nice stuff.

Britt plans to post the second part of his review on Thursday and says:

I think that the second half, dominated by an assessment of what’s beyond the security gate is far more fruitful for de Botton. His natural position of informed ruminator gets going as he takes us on more of a guided tour of the security zone, shopping area, and first class lounge. He’s best when making connection between physical spaces and desire then when focusing on individual people. The space itself, and more importantly, our rituals in it show through better in the second half, the throat-clearing of the early pages now nicely laid to rest.


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