Sheraton
Hotels to Get Makeover
Posted on April 24, 2008
WHITE PLAINS -- Sheraton Hotels & Resorts is getting
a billion dollar makeover to revitalize its hotels and add new
locations.
Sheraton -- owned by Starwood Resorts -- is undertaking an
aggressive multi-year strategy to improve the quality and consistency
of the brand portfolio that includes $1.3 billion in renovations,
$400 million in key brand initiatives and $2 billion in new hotel
openings. Sheraton will upgrade 100 hotels in the U.S.
nearly half its North American portfolio renovate 50,000
guestrooms and re-design more than 100 new lobbies. The plan
is part of a global initiative to revitalize the iconic Sheraton
brand and differentiate the guest experience at each of its 406
hotels across 71 countries.
"With awareness among upscale guests at 92%, the Sheraton
brand is iconic," said Hoyt Harper II, Senior Vice
President for Sheraton Hotels and Resorts. "We are leveraging
Starwood's proven history of building great lifestyle brands
to enhance the entire guest experience for the company's most
global, recognized brand."
Guests will first observe Sheraton's efforts to revitalize
its properties in the lobby that will be brought to life and
re-designed as a destination for guests. Inspired metaphorically
by the great public parks of the world, Sheraton's new lobby
space will provide guests with a sense of belonging, warmth and
community. A significant component and heart of the lobby re-design
is the "Link @ Sheraton," a signature lobby-based communications
hub that enables guests to stay connected and fully productive
while traveling and away from their offices. The Link@Sheraton
is a unique environment that meets the needs of Sheraton's core
guest by enabling them to work, relax and remain connected to
family and friends during their travels. It provides an online
experience, including free Wi-Fi and Internet-enabled computer
stations, allowing them to email, search the Web, review local
attractions and even print up boarding passes.
Adding to the social aspect of the new lobby design a communal
table at the lobby's center allows several groups of guests to
work independently of one another within the same space, while
game tables and oversized chairs encourage playful interaction
or rest and relaxation. Guests will also be surrounded by a distinct
ambiance created through new sensory elements, including a clean
"open air" scent, music, lighting and botanical designs.
Sheraton will extend its revitalization beyond the lobby to
its guest rooms, creating a signature experience through new
designs and enhanced amenities. Led by D.B. Kim, Sheraton's
vice president of design, the brand's in-house design team is
working with New York-based George Wong Design, to renovate more
than 50,000 guestrooms using one of three distinct design templates
classic/timeless, simple/aesthetically streamlined and
relaxed/casual that showcase a new palette of familiar
colors inspired by nature, including, off-white, yellow, terracotta,
cool blues, brown and green.
In response to guests' preferences for flexible room design,
Sheraton will remodel its rooms to be innovative and familiar
through four distinct zones: a welcome area, a "connection"
zone, an area to rest and a space to re-energize. Upon entering
the room, guests arrive in the "welcome center," a
residential inspired entryway featuring a free-standing custom
designed luggage bench and streamlined organizational wall shelf
where guests can unpack and organize with ease. Directly adjacent,
in lieu of a traditional closet, is a new wood paneled wardrobe
that offers multiple compartments, hanging space and a full-length
mirror.
The connection zone, designed to facilitate work or entertainment,
consists of desk space that is modular and movable to accommodate
a guest's need for individual work, meeting space or dining.
A built-in flat screen TV showcases "Scene@Sheraton,"
Sheraton's special access in-room entertainment content, while
a charging station enables guests to connect and refresh their
technical gadgets. Guests will recharge in the most comfortable
bed in the industry the new "Sheraton Sweet Sleeper
II" -- that boasts a luxurious mattress, a redesigned ensemble
of all-white, 300 thread count pillow cases and sheets, and a
new duvet.
Guests will re-energize in a refurbished bathroom with a free-standing
vanity that is designed to minimize clutter and maximize space.
Wall-mounted shelving holds "Shine by Bliss," a new
bath amenities line created exclusively for Sheraton by Bliss,
while undermounted cubbies conveniently store extra towels and
a hair dryer. Traditional overhead vanity lights are replaced
with side lighting that is soft, yet efficient. New bath and
shower fixtures and a dual-flush commode are environmentally
friendly, reducing resource usage by up to 30%.
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