In Dubai, money can buy you a room on a refrigerated beach


Sometimes the creativity that blistering hot weather breeds is truly mind-boggling: Pallazo Versace Hotel has decided to create a temperature controlled beach extending out and around its new hotel in Dubai, so that the “top people” (ugh) don’t burn their feet.

“We will suck the heat out of the sand to keep it cool enough to lie on,” says Soheil Abedian, president of Palazzo Versace. Of course, it’s “pure luxury” that the super rich want. REALLY!?

Climate change, eco-tourism, environment, throw them all out the window and you get Dubai, money, and ludicrous.

They’re going to put heat-absorbing pipes under the sand, refrigerate the hotel swimming pool, and have giant air coolers to keep the guests cool in Dubai’s scorching 104F-122F summer heat. The thermostats used in the system will be computer controlled. The hotel is planned to be ready by 2010.

Call it competition, call it thrill, call it whack-job, call it destructive tourism for the filthy rich; do these “top people” for whom this barbarity is being created, care? What is the point? Oh tourism $$$ of course!

Well, environmentalists are more than shrugging: “Dubai is like a bubble world where the things that are worrying the rest of the world, like climate change, are simply ignored so that people can continue their destructive lifestyles,” says Rachael Noble of Tourism Concern. I share the disgust in that statement.

Whether it will actually happen or not is another question, but they way things are here, there leaves little room for doubt.

I am not a saint, nor am I an environmentalist, nor do I do any important activity other than recycle. But when I read stuff like this, as numb as I think I am to crazy Dubai deeds, it always gets the better of me and I fail to understand why I live here. I’m waiting for this bubble to explode. Will it ever?


Think that’s weird? Check out these other unusual hotels:


Tuesday Travel Trivia (Week 8)

Tuesday Travel Trivia (the kids just call it the “Gadling T-Party”) is back for its eighth installment, and if you haven’t noticed it by now, this game is (let’s just say) sweeping the nation. Big congrats go to last week’s winner Sammy1022, as well as honorable mention awards to Matthew O’Connor and Eva, who came up this short.

As always, check out these questions and leave your non-Googled answers in the comments. Then come back next Tuesday for the answers. Here we go…

  1. To what well-known sports league do Manchester United and Chelsea F.C. belong?
  2. Which two Saudi Arabian cities are considered Islam’s holiest?
  3. The 2002 fictional travelogue You Shall Know Our Velocity, about two guys who travel the world handing out large sums of money, was written by whom?
  4. What unusual, travel-related distinction do the following celebrites share: Clint Eastwood, Morgan Freeman, Harrison Ford, Angelina Jolie, Tom Cruise, John Travolta?
  5. Alphabetically, what country comes directly after Mauritania?
  6. The 1993 film Alive was the true story of a rugby team whose plane crashed in the Andes, and who were forced to resort to cannibalism to survive. What country was the rugby team from?
  7. True or false: Norway shares a border with Russia.
  8. What is located on the second and third pages (not including the inside cover) of almost every Lonely Planet guidebook?
  9. The eight-day, free-spirited festival known as Burning Man is located in what western US desert?
  10. The names of two countries contain the letter “q” not followed by the letter “u.” What are they?

Look below the fold for the answers to last week’s trivia…

  1. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is a member of what US government department? Answer: Department of Homeland Security
  2. The titles of at least two 2008 films contained the names of European cities. Name one of them. Answer: In Bruges; Vicky, Christina, Barcelona
  3. In what city is Disneyland located? Answer: Anaheim, California
  4. The 2000 film The Beach, about backpacker culture on an idyllic Thai island, is based on a novel by what author? Answer: Alex Garland
  5. Whom do Italians refer to as Babbo Natale? Answer: Santa!
  6. The world’s largest national park is larger than 163 countries. On what large island is it located? Answer: Greenland
  7. The US has more than 27 million Facebook users, the most of any country. Which country has the second most? Answer: the UK
  8. Once an important post on the Trans-Saharan caravan route, Timbuktu is located in which West African country? Answer: Mali
  9. The Charles Bridge is located in which scenic European capital? Answer: Prague
  10. What term describes the seats occupied by airline crew and personnel during takeoff and landing? Answer: Jump seat

Celebrate the season with an airport karaoke carol. Which is your favorite?

Meg isn’t fond of the idea of airport karaoke. I think it’s the best thing since sliced bread, particularly after I heard the NPR radio story about the small karaoke stages at the George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston. That’s the very karaoke effort that Meg gave a bah humbug review.

By the time I arrived where I was going and had parked my car, the story about the airport karaoke and carol singing had me grinning big time. The story featured some of the singers along with the details of why karaoke has been added to the airport’s offerings.

In the past during the holidays, the airport has featured various local groups singing seasonal ditties. The karaoke is meant to give harried travelers something to do and enjoy while they’re heading home or elsewhere. (See article)

Most carolers weren’t bad. The last one, who belted a rendition of “Santa Baby,” was actually very good. Men and women were crooning in equal measure, although that could be due to the show’s editing.

In a way, this airport karaoke effort is like Improv Everywhere’s Food Court Musical, although it’s real. A real security guard actually belts out holiday cheer. I wonder if there’s any problem getting a person to get off the stage once he or she has been handed a mike?

If I’m passing through Houston, I’m singing “Jingle Bell Rock.” I have some dance moves to go with it. Sorry Meg, although peace and quiet is a good option also.

To listen to the NPR story on All Things Considered, click here.

%Poll-23918%

Frommer’s new blog: Behind the Guides

As part of the community overhaul that Frommers.com is currently undergoing, the company long known for their excellent guidebooks just started a new blog: Behind the Guides. In it, editors from across the spectrum of publications are contributing niblets from their travel worlds in a fun look inside of the minds of their staff.

Topics range from broad green articles about Green Hotels to practical advice about traveling with pets, each article covering a speck in the vast field of travel knowledge that Frommer’s provides.

Checking in on our good friend Stephen Bassman’s most recent article, “Preposterous Press Release: ‘The Dream’ drink celebrates Obama, MLK, drunkenness,” I was initially concerned about the direction of the blog as Steve opened by pasting the content of what looked like a pretty lame press release. To my delight, however, the article goes on to talk about the idiocy of jumping on the presidental bandwagon and is a light hearted essay.

I’m glad that Behind the Guides will have a distinctive voice, an editorial body that will develop as the team continues to post and mature as a blog. We’ll see you around the neighborhood, Behind the Guides. Hopefully soon.

Photo of the Day (12.15.08)


One of my favourite subjects when traveling is shooting portraits — to me, nothing really captures the essence of a country or culture like the faces of its people. That’s why when I saw this image of a man celebrating Buddha’s birthday in the Gadling Flickr pool, I stopped cold: I love his exuberance, his unbridled excitement. What a wonderful memory captured. Nice job, TPB, Esq.

If you’ve got some great travel shots you’d love to share, be sure to upload them to the Gadling pool on Flickr. We might just pick one as our Photo of the Day.