Monday, February 10, 2014

Where to Eat in Central / North Central Phoenix

An Embarrassment of Riches

Updated 3-2016

Southern Rail
Located at The Newton (300 West Camelback) this is the newest restaurant venture by Justin Beckett (Beckett's Table). Built in the old BeefEater's, this restaurant cooks up a modern interpretation of Southern cooking and is truly a joy. I've tried the Sunday brunch (fried green tomato benedict, amazing bourbon caramel banana french toast and beignets, lunch offerings: roast beef po-boy), and dinners (had an amazing chantrelle covered ribeye last night and the Wednesday special is fried chicken). There is a open and lovely dining room, a great selection of AZ wines and lots of outdoor seating. Too crowded at The Yard or at the Postino's? Then head to the Southern Rail (at least until it too gets "found").  ($35/PP) Check it out here. 

Updated 9-2014

Tacos Atoyac 
Some good news for awesome taco fans. The Co-Owner's of Tacos Atoyac at 19th Avenue and Glendale have reopened this little treasure. It is just as great as ever. Clean, safe and a total bargain, don't let its gritty exterior scare you off. ($8-10/PP)

Mucho Macho Tacos
Similarly the other former co-owner of Atoyac (Dan Maldenado) has opened Mucho Macho Tacos at 7th Avenue and Missouri. It is wonderful and a total bargain.  ($8-10/PP)

Taco Guild
A former church, amazingly creative tacos (peking duck!) and terrific happy hours all spell a smash hit for The Taco Guild at Osborn and 7th St. Go for lunch or at off hours and this place is already stunningly crowded at dinnertime. ($14/PP)

Vovomeena
Down at the corner of McDowell and 7th Avenue is Vovomeena. I can truly say my recent Portuguese inspired brunch there included the best pork chop (smoked and oh-so tender) I have ever consumed. Just go there! ($12/PP) 

La Piñata
Well its official La Piñata's decision to move into the old Mary Coyle ice cream shop was a good one. Ever since its opening it has been very crowded. Most of the much loved menu items came with them from the old locale.

Mary Coyle's
And while we're at it Mary Coyle's has reopened for ice cream only (no food) in a modest new shop on Seventh Street just south of Bethany Home. Some great high butterfat homemade goodness (and lots of sundae's to choose from). Glad to ahve them open again.     

Original Post.....
When Roadboy moved to Phoenix 20 years ago, the restaurant scene in downtown, midtown and uptown (north central) was something worse than grim. Sure there were the old favorites like Durants, Pizzaria Bianco, Lon's at the Hermosa and Coupe de Tarts. And over the years some really creative upstarts like Corbins, Such is Life! and Convivo appeared (now sadly just memories).

Despite a perfect restaurant demographic our neighborhood just went on year-in and year-out ignored as new restaurants all went to Scottsdale and followed every new subdivision going up in the burbs. 

We were so desperate we all cheered when an Applebee's and a Boston Market opened. 

Yeah, it really was that bad!

Other than our venerable (and always perfectly consistent) Phoenix City Grille, TexAz and Richardson's there was just nothing much to be treasured in Central / North Central. 

Then things got worse. 

We finally saw some new restaurants going up at 16th St.and Glendale. And just as they were finishing up our brand new Luci's Healthy Market a fire in the kitchen at Richardsons of New Mexico nearly destroyed it. About that same time the wonderful "My Florist" cafe and adjoining Willow Bakery closed. By 2008 the central Phoenix restaurant scene seemed to have hit rock bottom. 

Fast forward to 2014.

In the past five years the proliferation of wonderful new (mostly) one-of-a-kind or few-of-a-kind limited-edition restaurants in Central / North Central Phoenix has been nothing short of dazzling. AND judging by the long waits at all of these new restaurants, we were ready for them!

Here is a list of some of your best choices organized by neighborhood. I did not go as far as downtown as it is a class of its own with wonderful choices like Hanny's and the Arrogant Butcher etc. 

My list starts at Midtown and blooms from there.

You can click on the restaurant title to go to the restaurant's website for the address and hours. Pricing is a loose suggestion for entree and non-alcoholic beverages.


Midtown
Central Avenue Below Camelback

Neo Asian + Martini Bar. This restaurant defies getting dropped in any simple little category. You will either love it or hate it. The menu here starts with a huge selection of Asian tapas (truffle edamame and Asian 5-Spice quail), then moves on into soups salads and entrees all focused on the sauce selected. I found the food to be pretty wonderful. But to enjoy the food you have to endure the Zsa Zsa interior and relentless techno music (think "W" hotel). But then again Roadboy is an old git. ($30/PP)  

Arizona's amazing rustic sandwich house. I can't believe it is now almost 10 years old. A creation by wunderkind Chris Bianco. So Good! They feature just a few offerings each day.  Many feature his homemade mozzarella. This place is casual. There is limited indoor seating plus huge wooden "meet new friends" tables out front. Pane Bianco is right next door to LUX and it is just as easy to miss. Don't ($12/PP)

There are so few perfect independent coffee houses in any city. Places where people linger for hours over great coffee, pastry and weekend brunch. This is a place where barrista's pull the foam on every rich handcrafted latte. In Phoenix we are blessed with Copper Star, Urban Beans, Royal, Jobot, Grinder's and Giant Coffee. But Lux is the place I keep returning to. Open till midnight through the week and (thoughtfully) till 2:00 AM on Friday and Saturday.

A perennial favorite that does everything great. Here you find Lamb on the menu along with burgers, wonderful sandwiches and apricot and pomegranate salmon. Open late and serving brunch on weekends. ($25 / PP). Note its new location south near Margaret Hance Park.

Located right next door to Phoenix's powerbroker home for steaks Durants is funky and totally casual Switch. Switch has a nice outdoor patio and serves up everything from onion rings and amazing sandwiches to lobster and seafood crepes. Open late and serving brunch on weekends.


I've still not been to try Clever Koi on Central, but it is very ncie to look at.  
Gadzooks Enchiladas and the Taco Guild on 7th Street at Osborn are both really great

Also, don't forget to support the old stand-by's (the always wonderful Barrio Cafe, Coronado Cafe etc.)  


Uptown (Central at Cameback)

This is a perfect inside out restaurant. Wendell Burnette created an entirely new space from this 1955 office building.  Many exterior walls simply disappear turning the cafe into the perfect place to be on any warm Arizona evening. The chef uses fresh local ingredients and focuses on rustic breads and pizzas from the wood fired oven.  ($25/PP)

Carole Meyer has perfected making toasted sandwiches where all of the delicious fillings are sealed inside a little bread home. And her kale salad is so delicious! This unpretentious little restaurant serves up sandwiches by the number. And they are guaranteed to please everyone. ($10/PP). Note her new location in Uptown Plaza next to The Flower Child.   

Just up Central from Cameback is the epicenter of Upward Projects amazing cluster of wildly successful new restaurants. They first "tested the water" by opening a second outlet of Arcadia's fabulously successful Postino wine cafe. Our Uptown Postino was created from the old Katz Deli and it features indoor / outdoor seating, great food and, of course, great wine. Very reasonable fare with bruschetta, cheese boards and paninis. (Allow $25/PP)

The second restaurant was the family pleaser Windsor. This restaurant is named after the adjoining history rich Windsor Square neighborhood. It was re-purposed from an old shopping strip into the Windsor cafe and its companion Churn ice cream. Comfort food all the way here. With Buttermilk Fried Chicken on Monday and Tuesday and a full menu of burgers, sandwiches ribs and salmon all week long. Next door at Churn enjoy home made style ice cream and nostalgia candy.  ($30/PP)

The third home run in the Upward Projects playbook is Federal Pizza. This is the trifecta of cool. It is housed in a genuine Al Beadle Building (A building I am very familiar with in that about 15 years ago my partners and I tried to buy it hoping to renovate it into our current architectural offices. It all worked out, and, In retrospect, I am glad that Upward got it! ($20/PP)

Just when we thought they were done, Upward delivered the second Joyride Taco House. I'll post a review soon (as of yet I have not tried it).

Just a few blocks west on 7th Ave at Missouri is arguably the best sushi restaurant in Phoenix. Despite its quality (they tell you where their fish is sourced) this restaurant is totally unpretentious. It is also BYOB yet charges $0 corkage fee! Got to love that. Expect a wait. ($30/PP)


7Th Street from Missouri to Glendale
This little corner has just blossomed with great restaurants. There are the old standby's Pizza Heaven, Ticoz Restobar and the venerable Scott's Deli. And then there are the amazing newcomers at The Yard.

The Yard is built in an old neighborhood car repair shop. The garage featured a huge covered outdoor staging area for the class rides that used to be repaired there. Later it was the Dealership for Ducati Motorcycles. Now that canopy provides share for all sorts of outdoor games. Ping pong, shuffle board etc. Totally family friendly. It also houses two great restaurants: Culinary Dropout, Barrio Urbano and Little Cleo's. Culinary Dropout offers modern takes on all sorts of comfort food. Little Cleo's offers New Orleans inspired seafood. PoBoys anyone? The most recent addition to The Yard is Barrio Urbano (the newest restaurant by Sylvana Salcido Esparza whose award laden Barrio Cafe has always offered creative, serious and gutsy Mexican cuisine. The Yard is part of Sam Fox's chain of restaurants that include North, Sauce, Olive and Ivy, Gallo Blanco Tacos, True Food, and, most recently "The Henry". You can't go wrong at any restaurant that is part of this chain. 

Otro 
This place is easy to miss residing in an anonymous little strip mall just north of the auto parts store at Bethany Home Rd. on 7th Street. But for those that take the time to find it, a unique brunch, lunch or dinner awaits. You'll know it too as soon as the first whiff of rich aromatic wood smoke hits your nostrils as soon as you enter. Then you look at the menu and see local vegetables showcased. There is a Paella Mexicana the amazing Inca Salad with dried cranberries, quinoa, pepitas and yulu seeds. The Naco Torta is filled with grilled rib eye, two fried eggs and aji aoli. Oh, so perfect for a Sunday brunch. 

Christos
Hardly new, this is a consistently excellent, locally owned, Italian restaurant. After 20 plus years it still serves flawless service and perfect dinners every night. 

Sierra Bonita Cafe
I believe this restaurant was originally created by the folks from Phoenix City Grille (note the family lineage includes that wonderful buttermilk pie on the desert menu). With new owners  it is just as good as ever. Don't let its apparent tiny size fool you, there is a lot of great food and drink waiting for you shoehorned on an impossibly small site just south of Glendale Avenue. Just pull in, let the valet take care of your car, then sit down to some green chile posole, fish tacos or chocolate and espresso rubbed pork tenderloin. Nice patio seating too.


16th St and Bethany Home
This corner sat almost totally devoid of life for almost a decade after the Bashas store closed. Then a thief murdered the beloved proprietor of the legacy Schmidt Jewelry store. Meanwhile the TexAZ Cafe kept selling its chicken fried steaks and Phoenix City Grille just kept being wonderful.

Finally a Starbucks moved in and quickly became one of the top grossing units in AZ. People woke up. This gave the confidence in 2008 for Luci's Healthy Market (which within weeks of opening was destroyed in the Richardson's fire). Luckily Luci's rebuilt. Then came The Vig. And on and on it went.

By 2014 something of a miracle has transformed this corner. So much so that the businesses on all 4 corners are complaining about the lack of parking. Of course in my mind the best possible problem to have in this market is a full house and an overcrowded parking lot!

What happens when you renovate a landmark mid-century bank,convert its drive-thru banking lane into a bocce ball court and add a great bar and grille? ($25/PP)

Luci's Healthy Marketplace and Cafe
75% healthy food market. 25% cafe and coffee bar. Here you'll enjoy great food an extensive gluten-free menu all presented in a totally unpretentious atmosphere. 

You could drive by The Garage every day and easily miss this little gem. Take the time to find it. They have a menu that I just love. I mean Deviled Eggs finished with truffle oil and apple cider bacon! Then you move on to flatbreads, burgers, and entrees that include steaks and chops. It is open late and offers weekend brunches with $5  ($25/PP).

Tucked between Luci's healthy food market and Koller Hardware is Dick's Hideaway.  Here the owner's chile policy is your order it, you own it. They are serious about New Mexico Cuisine. And that means the food can go nuclear. It also means it can be wonderful. ($25/PP)

This corner also features one of the Z Tejas chain and a rather awful noisy and awful sports bar that I'll leave nameless in hopes that it disappears.

Venture up 16th street just a few blocks and you'll find the new home of Richardsons of New Mexico and The Rokerij. 

All new again but with all the character of the original and the same great food. And, thanks to Phoenix's firm anti-smoking law, I can now actually enjoy it (the owner was always defiant declaring his old restaurant to be 100% smoking). ($30/PP)

This is what happens when the Richardson team renovates a basement into a fine dining room and kicks its cuisine up a notch. It is excellent. This one works for special occasions. ($45/PP)  



19th Ave. and Bethany Home
19th Avenue from Bethany Home North to Dunlap houses my favorite taco shop (Tacos Atoyac), my favorite Chinese restaurant, my favorite Vietnamese restaurant and one by one they were bought out for light rail construction or just simply didn't make it. But there is one exception that just keeps on trucking

The Original Wineburger
This is the best burger joint in Phoenix. Forget the rest. The Original Wineburger has been serving up joy using 100% Angus beef since 1965. Brave the light rail construction. Go hungry and add a basket of their beer batter fries and maybe a lemon shandy on tap. I had to crack up, the windows still have an ad for Hamm's Beer. I don't think I've seen a Hamm's beer in the west since its San Francisco brewery closed in the 70's.....


North Mountain
For some reason the North Mountain sunnyslope area rarely gets the recognition it deserves. It has three restaurants you should know about.

Corbins bar and grille has it all. This community spirited restaurant offers a great menu, the freshest ingredients, a full bar, an owner who's constantly checking on everything, weekend specials, sunday brunch and a wonderful patio.  This is the restaurant you'll want to return to time and time again. ($25/PP)  
Update 5-2014
Corbin's closed suddenly. Sad to lose one of  Sunnyslope's "Points of Pride". The good news is that Corbin's is being reworked into a new restaurant concept form the folks who owne/run The Vig. Stay Tuned

So hard to find and so worth finding. Quite simply the perfect restaurant for that quiet special lunch or dinner. This restaurant housed in an old fire station was formerly the wonderful Bombero's wine bar. With the new owners it has a superb wood fired oven but lost the espresso machine ;-( This restaurant is frequently empty at lunch and jammed for happy hour. When the weather permits its fantastic outdoor courtyard is hard to beat. Amazing breakfast flatbreads for brunch ($20/PP)

For two decades this has been my families favorite neighborhood Mexican cafe. Simple and unpretentious. This family owned restaurant has a great menu with Navajo tacos, green chile and cheese tamales and wonderful hot sopapilla's for desert. When you enter just seat yourself. But beware it gets crowded on friday nights and (again being family centered) it closes early 8 PM during the week and 9 PM on Friday and Saturday. They also close on Sundays and some national holidays. If you are just changing planes here El Bravo operates an outlet in Sky Harbor (recognized by CNN as one of the "Top 20 Best Eats" at America's busiest airports!) ($12/PP)

Greektown
A locally owned Greek restaurant in an old Pizza Hut serving wonderful, healthy, Mediterranean fare with love and OPA for five decades!  


Camelback East
This area is slowly filling with chain restaurants. But one independent cafe stands out.....

Cherryblossom is always a perfect eclectic slamdance. They offer bakery goods plus Japanese and Italian cuisine. Yakisoba with your Bolognese? It all seems to work just fine and taste great. It is a bargain and comes with long waits on Friday and Saturday nights. ($25/PP) 

Come enjoy Phoenix. And come hungry!


Roadboy's Travels © 2016

Friday, January 17, 2014

Sold!

Scenes From the 2014 Barrett Jackson Scottsdale


While the rest of the nation suffers from the Polar Vortex, we in the Valley-of-the-Sun bask in blue skies and days of perfect 74° F.

And, along with warm days, every January our azure skies fill with private jets delivering America's 1% for their annual automotive shopping spree.

In anticipation of their arrival our poshest resorts quietly hike up their room rates and our best restaurants see wait times edging towards forever.

And while the bidders drink beer and ogle the amazing cars their spouses visit our best shopping malls. And no one spends more freely than a spouse who was summarily dumped at Saks or Nieman Marcus.

2014's Arizona collector car auction season had a pretty amazing lineup. And by weeks end nearly $240,000,000 in collector cars changed hands.

The Gooding Auction:
Gooding took up residence at the Scottsdale Fashion Square. Gooding loves Ferrari's and this year they sold a 1956 Ferrari 410 Superamerica SI Coupe for $3.3 M, a 1997 McLaren F1 GTR for $5.28 M and a 1958 Ferrari 250 GT Cabriolet for $6.16 M

Russo and Steele:
Russo and Steele pitches a seres of huge white tents along the SR 101 freeway. From this locale they sold around 700 collector cars.

RM:
Over at the stately Arizona Biltmore RM auctioned off some prized rolling stock. This is the auction that in 2013 sold a Ferrari for $8.14 M. This year they sold a 1961 Porsche 718 RS Spyder for $2.75 M and a 1958 Ferrari 250 GT California LWB Spyder that blew through last years record (selling for $8.8 M). Looks like we'll soon see sales approaching $10 M!

Bonhams:
The British auction house Bonham's conducted it's auction at the tony Westin Kierland. It sold a 1966 Ferrari 275 GTB/6C Coupe for $2.64 M. They also sold an exquisite 1931 Alfa Romeo 6C 1750 Gran Sport for $3.08 M and a 1951 Ferrari 212 Export Coupe for $3.19 M.

Silver:
The Silver Auction takes up residence in Fountain Hills. It sells "modest" collector cars. No records to be set here.

Barrett Jackson:
And while all of the above auctions were dropping gavels, the "Barrett Jackson" (which takes place at Scottsdale's Westworld), remained the largest single collector car auction. Westworld (yes, it is the exact same name as that old Sci Fi movie) is the event center Scottsdale set up to host its annual Arabian horse show. And, while the horse shows are in decline, the annual car auction just gets bigger each year.

Again this year I visited the auction mid-week. Call me cheap, but I feel the $45 weekend admission rate is absurd.

My usual routine changed this year as the whole venue site has been reconfigured. The main improvement is a big new permanent auction building. The permanent building is flanked by a series of tents attached (including the huge old auction tent - which now shelters the bulk of the high dollar "Salon" Collection).

1936 Packard 120 Convertible Sedan
Viewing into the Smaller Section of the Salon Collection Tent
No Reserve: Sold for $104,500

Ford still owned the front door with its noisy dragster challenge and they still presented high quality free T-shirts to anyone who registered on their computer network. There were fewer new car "dealers" this year (no Rolls or Bentley's). But there were the usual Aston Martin and McLaren's all were surrounded by the usual kitsch.

There were venders selling scary looking knives, restored slot machines, bright old neon signs, trips to Canadian fishing lodges, classic car insurance and, my favorite, the larger than life buffalo and Jesus on-the-cross made entirely from square nails.

To the mix, throw in tons of jewelry and clothing (so burdened with sparkly crap that it must have killed many a glue gun) and some overstuffed fat-boy electric massage chairs and you have the picture.

After clearing through the "acres-o-kitsch", we arrived at the new auction hall. Here the flanking tents form an "L' and with the balance of the big tents housing the gorgeous salon cars, a few glossy wooden boats and, this year, a pristine 1922 Spillman antique carousel!

After touring the main tents I drifted outside and discovered that the 6-7 open sided tents had also been moved. They are now all located conveniently up the hill.

Residing in all these tents stacked 4 deep were the cars we (mere mortals) remember from our youth.

After about two hours I stopped for a big carton of "Island Noodles" (an annual stop for me).

This year the Barrett-Jackson's biggest sales were both corvettes. A 1969 Corvette for $2.68 M and a 1967 Corvette L88 for $3.85M.

Anyway, enjoy some photos!

A 1929 Duesenberg Dual Cowl Phaeton
(Met Reserve: Sold for $1,430,000)

A 1961 23 Window Volkswagen "Walk-Thru" VW Bus
Included the Following Options: A Horn, Back-up Lights and Front Seat Belts
No Reserve: Sold for $148,500 

The 1954 Plymouth Belmont Concept Car
An Exner Car - Only One Ever Produced
Met Reserve: Sold for $1,320,000 

Lalique Crystal Hood Ornament 
1932 Auburn Boattail Speedster
No Reserve: Sold for $484,000

1932 Rolls-Royce Phantom II Kellner Salamanca
No Reserve: Sold for $440,000

The 1955 Messerschmitt KR200
Set International Speed Records and Delivers 85 MPG
No Reserve: Sold for $55,000

1950 Crosley Hot Shot Convertible
No Reserve: Sold for $26,400

Custom Roadster
HEMI Powered Roadster Built From the Wing Tip From a Lockheed Super Constellation
No Reserve: Sold for $110,000

Hood Art 1941 Packard Super 8 Touring Limousine
No Reserve: Sold for $60,500

Hood Art 1919 La Bestioni Torpedo Roadster

The 1919 La Bestioni
No Reserve: Sold for $99,000

We finished up by watching a few "Wednesday" cars go under the gavel. We saw a couple of 70's era Corvettes, a Plymouth Prowler and an AMC AMX sell. The AMC sold for $55,000! Go Figure.

For Roadboy's photos from 2010, 2012 and 2013 (I didn't post for 2011) Click Here:


See you next year Scottsdale!


Roadboy's Travels © 2014

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Signs and Everyday Art

Like Steam On A Mirror

Wherever mankind travels we leave telltale marks behind. The marks can be anything from ruts left by Conestoga wagons bringing pioneers west to cave paintings or stone petroglyphs.

Some of our marks are instructional like signage. Some marks are temporary like the finger drawings we make on a steamy mirror or the sandcastles we build on a beach.

A big part of my travel experience is the (almost unconscious) absorption of everyday art and signage I encounter along the way. The problem is that we can become inured to it. So much so that we frequently don't even "see" it anymore.

So this blog post is dedicated to examples of the art and signage I've encountered while traveling. Some made me laugh. Some (like the tags painted on historic buildings) made my heart ache.

A lot of it made me stop and think.

I'll admit that some made me break down and cry.

There are times I now kick myself for not stopping and snapping photographs.

Such was the case a few years back when I saw a big two-sided sign in rural North Carolina. On one side it proclaimed boldly "Jesus Rocks!". Then as I drove past in my rear view mirror I saw that the back of the sign just as loudly shouted "Satan Sucks!".

I ask you, who could not be impressed by the intellectual, yet direct, tenor of such a message? 

So in no particular order.....  

Cocktail Attire - Melrose Style 
"T-Shirts Are Permitted With Jacket"
(Los Angeles CA)

Indeed it Does
(North Aurora, IL)

A Particularly Good Paste Up
(Berlin)

Simple, Direct, Honest
(Berlin)

Serious Sidewalk Chalk Art 
(Florence)

Think!
(Berlin)

Utility Art 
(Kamakura Japan)

Utility Art
(Berlin)

Utility Art
(Ueno Park, Tokyo)

"Got Your Nose" A Face on The Wall
(Venice)

"I Hate War"
FDR Memorial
(Washington DC)

The Murrah Building
Team 5 Graffiti
(Oklahoma City) 

Light Standard
(Salt Lake City, UT)

Life Takes Time
(Savannah, GA)

Petroglyphs
(Valley of Fire, NV)

Aviation Reflection 
(Turnagain Arm, Alaska)

Restaurant Mural
Per James Joyce
(Restaurant Baltimore, MD)

And I'm Still Here
(Berlin)

A Wall Tribute to the Comic Artist
(In Angouleme France - Home of the International Comic Arts Festival)

Bari Gotic Wall Stencil
(Barcelona, Catalonia)

Wall Art
(Berlin)

LBJ Library and Gardens
(Austin TX)

Burn The Rich
(Vienna, Austria)

informational Sign 
"How to Wash Your Buttocks"
(Tokyo)

The Last Sign We Leave
The Ghiradelli Crypt 
(Mountain View Cemetery Oakland, CA)

So Do I! 
(Philadelphia)

Sign: How to Feed The Deer
(Nara, Japan)

Santa Barbara County Courthouse
(Santa Babara, CA) 

Child Stencil
(Amsterdam)

Love Me
(Los Angeles)                                            

Just some of the marks we leave.


Roadboy's Travels © 2014

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Roadboy's 2014

Should Be Exciting


Roadboy consistently avoids making New Years Resolutions. I find them to be a waste of time.

Instead on New Years I bring out a spreadsheet that I've updated for years. I use it as a planning tool to contemplate long-term travel plans. It overlays work and anticipated family milestones with opportunities for travel. I also use it to confirm prior year goals.

The key is to write things down. When I write my goals down, they seem much more likely to become real.

Well, my list is full!

And (with any luck) will stay full till I die!

I still have South America (Brazil, Patagonia, Mendoza, and Iguazu Falls) on my list. I still plan on a 6 month sabbatical to live in Guadalajara Mexico where I will take cooking and Spanish Language immersion classes. There is Machu Picchu awaiting. Across the ocean there is Tahiti, Bora Bora and the South Pacific. I still have a return visit to mainland China on my list. There is an African photo safari in there somewhere. And finally here is a trip to Istanbul and the Greek isles.

As the last few years of my life have been a bit chaotic, some of my goals have moved forward and some unexpected and spontaneous trips have emerged.

This year my daughter has decided to relocate to London for 6 months starting in the Spring. So I'll be using that opportunity to visit the UK. The trip will also allow time for a "roots" tour of Ireland.

Happy New Year!


Roadboy's Travels © 2013

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Looking Toward 2014


Peering Into Roadboy's Crystal Ball.....


Well for us road warriors, 2014 will clearly usher in significant change.

Hotels:
Expect to see lots of change in the hospitality industry. The seeming avalanche of "rebranding" will continue. What used to be a Hilton hotel may well be a Doubletree on your next trip. It seems like some hotel chains are finding it much easier to upgrade and rebrand their tired flagship properties, rather than undertake the type of renovation needed to maintain 'flagship" quality. So we can expect a lot of superficial paint and finish upgrades. The old toilet will remain but the shower will be surrounded in new tile.

As sad as this can seem, I must admit I prefer re-branding to what happened to many old Sheraton properties a couple of decades ago when the once venerable "Sheraton" brand was allowed to rapidly deteriorate. It got to the point where a visit to a Sheraton was an inconsistent hit-or-miss affair that spanned from great to really decrepit.

Hilton is the chain I'll watch the closest in 2014. Hilton was "flipped" (again) in late 2013 by its private equity owners. Sadly, when hotels slip into a series private equity potato tosses, they tend to simply extrude short term profits at any cost. Room rates go up and maintenance goes down. It may well also result in the degradation of the perks enjoyed by their most loyal customers. I am a diamond Hilton HHonors member, so I hope I'm totally wrong.

However, if I am right this situation will pose a dynamic window of opportunity for Starwood and/or Hyatt to attract many fXus once loyal Hilton HHonors clients ands sprint ahead in market share.

Hotels Become More Global
2014 will almost certainly witness the rapid transformation of an increasingly worldwide hotel industry. More boutique international chains will likely venture into the US. Hopefully even smaller chains like the wonderful Spanish Room Mate chain will choose to expand in key US markets. Even Ikea is starting a hotel chain.

And, some high dollar recent expansions suggest that the superb Asian Langham Hotel chain is positioning itself for substantial growth in North American. And while domestic chains seem bent on  reducing the value of our points (pissing off their most loyal customers), Langham has developed an amazing loyalty program.

Co-Branding
Marriott seems to be steadily enhancing its selection of fine Autograph and Edition "code sharing" properties. I can only say "awesome!" Marriott also announced it will soon introduce America to Europe's design-forward and meticulously run AC Hotels.

Repackaging to the Millennials
Many hotel chains are currently working very hard in their "design labs" to create a new generation of hotels that are xvzmore stylish, techno friendly and functional.

While I certainly welcome creative enhancements I have to stress that hotelier's keep their eyes on the ball. In my last three stays in Homewood Suites and two Doubletree's I had one toilet that didn't flush, one heater that didn't heat, and one shower drain that didn't drain....

So....I ask Hotelier's to, first and foremost, remember that what Road Warriors really want are:
• Quiet rooms with acoustically rated doors.
• Great beds made up with great linens (Most of us don't care if we get 50 pillows).
• Rooms that have no smell of mold or mildew.
• TV remote controls that actually work.
• Luxury shampoo's and conditioners.
• At least two decent sized trash cans and one decent sized recycle bin.
• Robust WiFi that delivers netflix.
• AC's that cool quietly in summer.
• Heater units that heat quietly in winter without smelling like burning dust.
• Toilets that effectively flush and do not run all night.

And most of all.....
• Showers and sinks that drain (standing in water YUK!)

Frequent Flier /Loyalty Programs
Ever notice that as fast as most of us assemble frequent flier points, the airlines and hotel chains are annually increasing the redemption requirements for our points making sure that our hard-won points become less and less valuable.

So start using them!

Airlines:
The "New" American
The slowly improving US Airways will soon evaporate just like America West did before it.

As soon as the federally imposed 4-year moratorium expires, expect the "new" American to immediately recompose its hub and spoke airports. There will likely be some big winners and there will be some big losers (remember how PIT was decimated after the collapse of the old US Air?). I am confident Sky Harbor will not be one of the losers.....

I mean being that most fliers hate LAX almost as much (if not more than) Atlanta and O'Hare, preserving Sky Harbor seems logical.

I also predict the new American will absorb all of the bad characteristics of American's rather awful frequent flier and first class upgrade policies, while allowing all of US Airway's best perks to evaporate. New American! Please make this Chairman a liar!

Southwest
In 2014 Southwest will end its much loved free checked baggage policy. They will also institute change fees. Deal with it.

Southwest's cabins will also lose that beloved legroom as their planes undergo reconfiguration. Seat cushions will shrink and an additional row of seats will get jammed into all those 737's.

As I've lamented in the past, IMHO Southwest has lost its way. All of the distinguishing features that made it special are continuing to disappear one by one. I'm sure a lot of the die hard Southwest fans will still keep flying it. But, it now frequently offers the highest fares and is rapidly becoming "just another airline".

Violence in Coach
New and reconfigured airplanes cabins are being designed to serve an increasingly poor America.

Hence, already cramped coach cabins are going to become (impossible you say!) even more cramped. Expect to see the end of reclining seats.

Sadly, as all studies show, such conditions will result in increasing violence.

Business / First Class Become More Lavish
Just as the evaporation of our middle class is resulting in more hellish coach cabins, the increasing concentration of wealth by America's uber rich is resulting in airlines starting to add lavish (and breathtakingly costly) new classes of business and first class cabins on domestic transcontinental flights.

On the other side of the drapes the 1% that does not own their own private jets will enjoy new business and first class cabins similar to those offered on long-haul transoceanic flights. Imagine Jet Blue with a section in front featuring lay-flat beds. Well Jet Blue's slumber suites are on the way.

The 1% have made it clear they are more that happy to pay whatever it takes ($3,000 to $4,000) to avoid having to share the misery found in the back of the plane.

Luxury Buses
As airline coach cabins become more and more awful, I expect more and more of the point-to-point luxury bus lines to emerge. Where they are starting to appear, they run from downtown to downtown, offer clean spacious cabins in new buses. They offer power for your tablet and free wifi. As travelers become more aware of their service I believe they will expand mainly in high traffic corridors.

Rental Cars
Rental car companies are in a state of absorption. And product identity just gets more and more confusing. All of the big legacy rental car companies struggle to figure out how to market their newly acquired "leisure" market rental companies.

Expect some new names too ("Firefly" has emerged at many of Thrifty's locales.)

And, as the big car rental firms price themselves into oblivion, expect to see the continuing expansion of the upstarts. Fox, EZ and Advantage all seem to be improving while offering rental rates that are typically 1/2 what you'll pay at Avis or Hertz. And their cars are frequently newer and cleaner. Of course the shuttle experience on the upstarts is typically spotty and miserable.

Ahhh Roadboy's crystal ball is now becoming cloudy....


Roadboy's Travel © 2013