Saturday, November 23, 2024

‘It’ll be all over Instagram’ – World’s 50 best hotels named for 2024, but no Irish property makes the cut

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The second edition of the World’s 50 Best Hotels was unveiled in London last night

The Capella is among a cluster of new riverside resorts in Bangkok that has skyrocketed the city’s luxury quotient. Rooms are advertised from €645 per night on its website in October.

Every one has a view of the Chao Praya River, and dining venues include a French gastronomic restaurant by Mauro Colagreco and the waterfront Phra Nakhon, which has become something of a legendary brunch scene for chic locals and visitors alike.

The hotel’s pool is so densely surrounded by lush vegetation, it almost feels like instant transport to one of the Thai islands.

Capella Bangkok knocked last year’s No.1, Lake Como’s Passalacqua, into second place, and saw Raffles London at The OWO as its highest new entry at No. 13.

However, for the second year running, no Irish hotels made the cut (read the Irish Independent’s Hot 100 list of the best hotels in Ireland here).

A riverfront room at Capella Bangkok

The title of World’s Best is a subjective one, rather than a scientific determination. To arrive at its results, the World’s 50 Best team asks 600 anonymous jurors to rank the seven best hotels they’ve stayed in over the last 18 months.

It’s a system that necessarily favours easy-to-reach destinations, big cities and new hotels with marketing muscle – there are no rules against jurors taking free stays, so those with big promotional budgets can draw dozens of influencers and media on familiarisation trips to help get the word out, creating a slew of eligible voters along the way.

By contrast, even the best-travelled voters are unlikely to have gone on safari or explored the wilds of Patagonia in that recent period, leaving only a small minority of voters with the ability to cast votes for properties in off-the-beaten track destinations. In theory, a global panel of jurors should help, but none are required to cast even a single vote for hotels in their home regions.

That in some ways explains the results. Much of the list was familiar from last year’s edition, proving that influential travel pros feel the need to see the highest ranked places they have not yet visited, creating a sort of echo chamber of positive opinion.

That made the biggest surprises the most far-flung resorts, like Kokomo Private Island, in Fiji (No. 50); Suján Jawai, in Rajasthan, India (No. 43); and Six Senses Zighy Bay, in Oman (No. 45).

Celebrating the World’s 50 Best Hotels 2024

In this year’s black-tie ceremony at London’s Guildhall, ‘Highest New Entry’, ‘Most Admired Hotel Group’ and ‘Highest Climber’ awards were doled out for the first time. They went to Raffles London at The OWO, Aman and Atlantis the Royal, respectively. The latter climbed from No. 44 to No. 9.

The Raffles London at the OWO is among the hotels that benefits from a substantial marketing benefit – it has extraordinary publicity muscle behind it – though indeed it is a worthy contender, opening last fall after a €1.6 billion renovation of a historic building that that served as a base for British military operations throughout both World Wars.

Last year’s winner, Passalacqua, on Italy’s Lake Como, came in this year at No. 2; overall, half of last year’s top 10 held onto positions within that rarified echelon.

The geographic distribution was also similarly unchanged. If last year sub-Saharan Africa and South America were represented with one measly entry apiece, the 2024 list did only marginally better, with only two hotels in sub-Saharan Africa ranking (Singita Kruger National Park and Mount Nelson, a Belmond Hotel) and one in South America (the Rosewood Sao Paulo).

Raffles at The OWO in London

The rankings also speak to trending destinations. In last year’s inaugural list, it was clear that the jury were among the many travellers thrilled to return to Asia in its long-awaited post-Covid reopening; there were a dozen hotels from the continent on the 2023 list.

This year, the centre of gravity remained firmly in Asia, where the weak yen has driven interest in Japan and upcoming season of The White Lotus has helped extend a travel boom in Thailand (the two countries claimed a total of seven hotels on the list, with Asia now claiming even more hotels than it did last year).

The US also improved its standing, with four entries, up from just two last year, including a first-time recognition for the iconic Carlyle Hotel in New York City, the Four Seasons at the Surf Club in Miami and Dorchester Collection’s Hotel Bel-Air in Los Angeles.

Being on the list can be a game-changer not just for the hotels that rank but also the destinations or the brands they’re from, said Kristina Snaith-Lense, general manager of Hong Kong’s Upper House, which ranked fourth last year and fifth this year.

“It’s been a great story for Hong Kong – to highlight our recovery after Covid after all the closures,” she explained.

The fact that Aman, Rosewood and Four Seasons collectively claimed 11 out of 50 spots adds lustre to all of the hotels across those brands’ portfolios. Maybourne, Raffles, Oetker Collection and Dorchester Collection all performed well, too, with multiple properties on the list.

But privately, some hoteliers admit it’s now stressful to retain their rankings, saying that the accolade has become valuable for positioning their properties against the competition – and the presence of so many deeper-pocketed, branded properties makes it even harder for independent resorts to break through.

Capella Bangkok

Making it onto the list gives a great sense of pride, says Vincent Billiard, managing director of the Parisian palace Hôtel de Crillon, a Rosewood Hotel, which this year ranked 15th.

It’s also an important marketing tool, he said: “We have the plaque outside the hotel, write it on every letter we communicate, and it’ll be all over Instagram.”

For consumers, the list may be little more than a confirmation of their existing hotel bucket list. If the original goals of the World’s 50 Best list, according to its executives, were to spark discovery and media buzz, this year’s list cements the fact that the former far outweighs the latter.

When asked if she was satisfied with the geographic diversity of last year’s list – or concerned by the lack thereof – Emma Sleight, head of content for World’s 50 Best Bars and Hotels says simply that “there are only 50 spots that we can call out.”

Asked again whether there was any interest in tweaking the voting system to make it more equitable, she argued that 50 Best is “not an arbiter of the list but a reflection of the current travel industry.”

She added that the company creates year-round content separate from the 50 Best list to give visibility to great hotels that don’t make the cut via its Discovery platform, though it heavily features hotels, restaurants and bars in cities rather than remote locales.

Here’s the list of the World’s 50 Best hotels in full:

  1. Capella Bangkok
  2. Passalacqua, Lake Como, Italy
  3. Rosewood Hong Kong
  4. Cheval Blanc Paris
  5. The Upper House, Hong Kong
  6. Raffles Singapore
  7. Aman Tokyo
  8. Soneva Fushi, Maldives
  9. Atlantis the Royal, Dubai
  10. Nihi Sumba
  11. Claridge’s, London
  12. Mandarin Oriental Bangkok
  13. Raffles London at The OWO
  14. Four Seasons Bangkok at Chao Phraya River
  15. Hôtel de Crillon, Paris
  16. Chablé Yucatán, Chocholá, Mexico
  17. Hotel du Cap-Eden-Roc, Antibes, France
  18. Belmond Maroma, Riviera Maya, Mexico
  19. Four Seasons Firenze, Florence
  20. Borgo Santandrea, Amalfi Coast, Italy
  21. Desa Potato Head, Bali
  22. Bulgari Tokyo
  23. The Lana, Dubai
  24. Rosewood Sao Paulo
  25. The Calile, Brisbane
  26. The Siam, Bangkok
  27. Park Hyatt Kyoto
  28. Mount Nelson, Cape Town
  29. One&Only Mandarina, Riviera Nayarit, Mexico
  30. The Carlyle, New York City
  31. La Mamounia, Marrakech, Morocco
  32. Four Seasons Madrid
  33. Capella Singapore
  34. Four Seasons Surf Club, Miami
  35. Hotel Bel-Air, Los Angeles
  36. Eden Rock, St. Barths
  37. Aman New York
  38. Royal Mansour, Marrakech, Morocco
  39. Amangalla, Sri Lanka
  40. Le Bristol, Paris
  41. Gleneagles, Scotland
  42. Castello di Reschio, Umbria, Italy
  43. Suján Jawai, Rajasthan, India
  44. Singita Kruger National Park, South Africa
  45. Six Senses Zighy Bay, Oman
  46. The Connaught, London
  47. The Brando, Tetiaroa, French Polynesia
  48. Hotel Esencia, Tulum, Mexico
  49. The Tasman, Hobart, Australia
  50. Kokomo Private Island, Fiji

– Additional reporting by Pól Ó Conghaile

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