October soft opening for Australia’s Wolgan Valley (July 2009)
Scheduled for soft opening in
October, Emirates Hotels & Resorts
conservation based Wolgan Valley
Resort & Spa in Australia’s Great Dividing Range is gearing up to open all visitor gates come November 1.
The resort in the Blue Mountains
World Heritage Area occupies two
per cent of a 4,000 acre conservancy
reserve. Joost Heymeijer general
manager of Wolgan Valley, who has
been working with this project for
the past four years, is “like a kid in
a candy store” when asked if he is
excited about its opening.
“I can smell the finish line – which
in reality is the starting line too,”
Heymeijer told TTN. “I can’t wait
but I’m also enjoying this time at
the moment.”
He essentially wears two hats:
that of hotel project manager as well
as general manager. Staff recruitment
has been a recent priority,
most recruits coming from within
Australia and speaking a variety of
languages to suit the customer mix.
Initially Heymeijer was anticipating
70 per cent of the business to be
international with 30 per cent domestic,
but since the credit crunch
he expects the domestic percentage
to be higher in both the leisure and
MICE markets.
Bookings soared after ITB in
March and there are a “good
number” of bookings from the UK
for the Christmas season and into
early 2010. While Australia offers
many attractions
to the
Middle East
market, most
prefer the
lure of the
Gold Coast for
longer stays
of three to
four weeks.
However, “the pattern of travel from
the Middle East to Australia is very
promising – up 6 per cent every
year,” said Heymeijer. He believes
the resort will attract the more discerning
traveller that appreciates
its many ecotourism aspects.
Wolgan Valley is surrounded by
two National Parks. It features 40
individual villas surrounded by private
decks, each having its own indoor/
outdoor swimming pool, and
a spa. Its architecture is reminiscent
of a traditional rural Australian
homestead.
As Emirates Hotels & Resorts’
first hospitality development outside
Dubai, the project was developed
using similar principles of Al
Maha Desert Resort & Spa. Most of
the area is operated as a wildlife reserve,
and the Wolgan conservancy
project protects the region’s indigenous
and endangered species,
which had previously been under
pressure from introduced flora and
feral predators, the major causes of
species extinction in Australia.
Thousands of native trees have
also been planted. Environmentally
sustainable practices are an integral
part of the Wolgan Valley Resort &
Spa development. Rainwater collection,
grey water recycling and the
use of solar panels are incorporated
into the architecture, and resort will
ultimately have over 100 solar energy
units.
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