Do you have a strong opinion, or disagree with somebody else’s point of view on topics related to the spa industry? If so, Spa Business would love to hear from you. Email your letters, thoughts and suggestions to [email protected]
Interview: Jeremy McCarthy
Mandarin Oriental’s group director
of spa and wellness discusses mental
wellness, spas and technology
Promotional feature: Beautyworld Middle East
Set to take place May 14-16, 2017 in Dubai, Beautyworld Middle East is billed as “three days to rediscover wellness and shake up the industry.”
Promotional feature: ESPA
ESPA has been a leader in the field of therapeutic skincare and luxury spa design and management for 25 years. Founder Susan Harmsworth explains how the company’s recent brand evolution will make ESPA even more relevant to the future of wellness
Promotional feature: Riceforce
Rice Force is set to make further inroads into the spa market in 2017 with the
launch of its new aromatic oils and treatment protocol
Promotional feature: Oakworks
Oakworks’ new Masters’ Collection range, which will consist of over 15 models by the end of 2017, has been designed to offer spa operators the ultimate in modern styling, with solutions and functionality that address each spa’s practical needs
Lasse EriksenDevelopment ManagerFarris Bad Spa Hotel, Norway
Can wellness also include entertainment? I definitely think so, and we see that more and more spas in Europe are offering a ‘welltainment’ approach.
By enhancing your wellness with entertainment, you combine health and caring with the beauty of visuals, sounds, feelings and smells.
Studies show that people actually heal faster by seeing, smelling, tasting and listening to something beautiful.
Our ability to grasp perspectives other than our own is also what makes it so easy for us to enter an imaginative situation such as a story, and it’s within that story that we can guide every individual guest to positive thinking and emotional wellbeing.
VR will help with that as it is used more and more not only within the healthcare system, but also in spas and homes. VR has been in use for many years in hospitals to successfully reduce short-term and chronic pain and to relieve stress, and VR will be an efficient tool for spas to help the increasing unwell population take the first steps towards personal wellness.
Many experiences in a spa can already be categorised as ‘welltainment’: enjoying a good guided meditation, feeling the singing bowls through your chakras, exploring space with VR glasses in a floatation tank, music and sound therapy while you are in water, or feeling the story and heat of the powerful sauna aufguss.
"Many experiences in a spa can be categorised as welltainment"
Many spa experiences, such as the sauna aufguss, are a form of ‘welltainment’
Haiti – ripe for organic wellness development
Charmaine Lang
Charmaine LangPresident & CEOThe Madison Collection
As someone who frequently visits Haiti and has fallen in love with the island, I fully support it being highlighted as a ‘place to watch’ in the 2016 Spa Foresight™ (see SB16/3 p48).The destination is a rich, lush land abundant with natural hot springs and pure, sweet air – all supported by a genteel culture descended of Creole ancestry. Untouched by the modern world, this undeveloped, organic island – from its food to its forests – presents a unique opportunity to spa investors, owners and operators.
As with most Caribbean islands, it’s highly recommended that market entrants work with a reputable law firm that can wade through the legalities of title deeds and land use. But those who take a chance on a culture that is ready, willing and able to work, will be rewarded ten-fold.
Hurricane Matthew’s devastation, although profound, has not hindered the spirit of the island. Re-forestation, the first step, has begun, and more help is critical to complete the healing of the island.
For an environmentally aware visionary, this magical, off-the-grid wellness destination could be a dream come true.
Fast-forward into the near future – a green, sustainable wellness resort is completed: solar panels supply natural energy, rain barrels capture water, guests bathe in the natural hot springs and taste the local organic produce. The design is aligned with nature.
"The destination is a rich, lush land abundant with natural hot springs and pure, sweet air"
SHUTTERSTOCK/PJayG
Haiti is a rich, lush land abundant with natural hot springs
Why prevention is hard
Dr Franz Linser
Dr Franz LinserManaging DirectorLinser Hospitality
People in industrialised countries have achieved higher life expectancies than any generation before them. These ageing societies have completely different needs in terms of health and wellbeing. Today, it’s no longer poverty or epidemic diseases that cause sicknesses and early deaths in these countries, but rather, people’s accelerated and stressful lifestyles in de-naturalised environments.
Spas will therefore have to re-think their offerings. Considering these changes, spas no longer meet the actual needs of an overweight, stressed, sleep-deprived and burned-out society.
But spas have a tremendous opportunity to embrace these new lifestyle issues and implement specific offerings in their spa menus. A growing number of people are asking for concrete solutions rather than nice-to-have pampering sessions.
Forward-thinking spas should, therefore, help people to change their everyday lives and prevent these lifestyle diseases. Spas are the perfect places to do so by offering both physical help – through their therapists – and emotional support, through their specifically designed settings.
However, spas should not put their focus on preventing diseases, but on achieving optimal health, life energy and joy. Focusing on the positive aspects of life will attract and motivate people more than just living preventatively in the sense of not getting a disease.
"A growing number of people are asking for concrete solutions rather than nice-to-have pampering sessions"
COMPANY PROFILES
instantprint
We’re a Yorkshire-based online printer, founded
in 2009 by Adam Carnell and James Kinsella. [more...]
Taylor Made Designs
Founded in 1993, Taylor Made
Designs supply corporate clothing
and brand-enhancing merchandise
to [more...]
IDEATTACK
IDEATTACK is a full-service planning and
design company with headquarters in
Los Angeles. [more...]
Alterface
Alterface’s Creative Division team is
seasoned in concept and ride development,
as well as storyte [more...]
An opportunity to reimagine one of the UK’s most recognisable towers has been formally
opened by Rivington Hark, as St Johns Beacon invites operators and partners to shape its
next phase. [more...]
Do you have a strong opinion, or disagree with somebody else’s point of view on topics related to the spa industry? If so, Spa Business would love to hear from you. Email your letters, thoughts and suggestions to [email protected]
Interview: Jeremy McCarthy
Mandarin Oriental’s group director
of spa and wellness discusses mental
wellness, spas and technology
Promotional feature: Beautyworld Middle East
Set to take place May 14-16, 2017 in Dubai, Beautyworld Middle East is billed as “three days to rediscover wellness and shake up the industry.”
Promotional feature: ESPA
ESPA has been a leader in the field of therapeutic skincare and luxury spa design and management for 25 years. Founder Susan Harmsworth explains how the company’s recent brand evolution will make ESPA even more relevant to the future of wellness
Promotional feature: Riceforce
Rice Force is set to make further inroads into the spa market in 2017 with the
launch of its new aromatic oils and treatment protocol
Promotional feature: Oakworks
Oakworks’ new Masters’ Collection range, which will consist of over 15 models by the end of 2017, has been designed to offer spa operators the ultimate in modern styling, with solutions and functionality that address each spa’s practical needs
Lasse EriksenDevelopment ManagerFarris Bad Spa Hotel, Norway
Can wellness also include entertainment? I definitely think so, and we see that more and more spas in Europe are offering a ‘welltainment’ approach.
By enhancing your wellness with entertainment, you combine health and caring with the beauty of visuals, sounds, feelings and smells.
Studies show that people actually heal faster by seeing, smelling, tasting and listening to something beautiful.
Our ability to grasp perspectives other than our own is also what makes it so easy for us to enter an imaginative situation such as a story, and it’s within that story that we can guide every individual guest to positive thinking and emotional wellbeing.
VR will help with that as it is used more and more not only within the healthcare system, but also in spas and homes. VR has been in use for many years in hospitals to successfully reduce short-term and chronic pain and to relieve stress, and VR will be an efficient tool for spas to help the increasing unwell population take the first steps towards personal wellness.
Many experiences in a spa can already be categorised as ‘welltainment’: enjoying a good guided meditation, feeling the singing bowls through your chakras, exploring space with VR glasses in a floatation tank, music and sound therapy while you are in water, or feeling the story and heat of the powerful sauna aufguss.
"Many experiences in a spa can be categorised as welltainment"
Many spa experiences, such as the sauna aufguss, are a form of ‘welltainment’
Haiti – ripe for organic wellness development
Charmaine Lang
Charmaine LangPresident & CEOThe Madison Collection
As someone who frequently visits Haiti and has fallen in love with the island, I fully support it being highlighted as a ‘place to watch’ in the 2016 Spa Foresight™ (see SB16/3 p48).The destination is a rich, lush land abundant with natural hot springs and pure, sweet air – all supported by a genteel culture descended of Creole ancestry. Untouched by the modern world, this undeveloped, organic island – from its food to its forests – presents a unique opportunity to spa investors, owners and operators.
As with most Caribbean islands, it’s highly recommended that market entrants work with a reputable law firm that can wade through the legalities of title deeds and land use. But those who take a chance on a culture that is ready, willing and able to work, will be rewarded ten-fold.
Hurricane Matthew’s devastation, although profound, has not hindered the spirit of the island. Re-forestation, the first step, has begun, and more help is critical to complete the healing of the island.
For an environmentally aware visionary, this magical, off-the-grid wellness destination could be a dream come true.
Fast-forward into the near future – a green, sustainable wellness resort is completed: solar panels supply natural energy, rain barrels capture water, guests bathe in the natural hot springs and taste the local organic produce. The design is aligned with nature.
"The destination is a rich, lush land abundant with natural hot springs and pure, sweet air"
SHUTTERSTOCK/PJayG
Haiti is a rich, lush land abundant with natural hot springs
Why prevention is hard
Dr Franz Linser
Dr Franz LinserManaging DirectorLinser Hospitality
People in industrialised countries have achieved higher life expectancies than any generation before them. These ageing societies have completely different needs in terms of health and wellbeing. Today, it’s no longer poverty or epidemic diseases that cause sicknesses and early deaths in these countries, but rather, people’s accelerated and stressful lifestyles in de-naturalised environments.
Spas will therefore have to re-think their offerings. Considering these changes, spas no longer meet the actual needs of an overweight, stressed, sleep-deprived and burned-out society.
But spas have a tremendous opportunity to embrace these new lifestyle issues and implement specific offerings in their spa menus. A growing number of people are asking for concrete solutions rather than nice-to-have pampering sessions.
Forward-thinking spas should, therefore, help people to change their everyday lives and prevent these lifestyle diseases. Spas are the perfect places to do so by offering both physical help – through their therapists – and emotional support, through their specifically designed settings.
However, spas should not put their focus on preventing diseases, but on achieving optimal health, life energy and joy. Focusing on the positive aspects of life will attract and motivate people more than just living preventatively in the sense of not getting a disease.
"A growing number of people are asking for concrete solutions rather than nice-to-have pampering sessions"
Hotel de France, located on the British Isle of Jersey, has created a wellness retreat package
that includes a hot yoga session that will take place in Jersey Zoo’s butterfly sanctuary.
A new immersive attraction designed to transport visitors into the final hours of ancient Pompeii
is preparing to open near the world-famous archaeological site in southern Italy.
Experience design company, BRC Imagination Arts, has completed a transition that sees founder
Bob Rogers pass ownership of the business to four long-serving senior executives, while
remaining actively involved with the company.
Movie Park Germany has opened a new Paramount Pictures-themed attraction as part of its 30th
anniversary celebrations, using immersive storytelling and adaptive reuse to reinforce the park’s
longstanding “Hollywood in Germany” positioning.
Therme Manchester’s 28-acre development, which will include interconnected glass pavilions
that measure 65,000sq m, will be the largest bathing and wellbeing attraction in the world once
complete, according to prof David Russell, CEO of Therme UK.
Efteling has opened Hooghmoed, a new family drop tower designed to broaden the appeal of its
recently launched Sirene Island themed area and introduce younger visitors to thrill attractions.
A proposed Puy du Fou development near Bicester and Universal Destinations and Experiences’
planned resort in Bedford are emerging as part of a wider transformation of the Oxford–
Cambridge Growth Corridor into a major centre for UK leisure and tourism inv
Shedd Aquarium has opened the Immersion Theater developed in partnership with SimEx-
Iwerks, as part of a wider strategy to enhance the guest experience and create additional
revenue opportunities.
The UK government has announced a temporary reduction in VAT on visitor attractions and
children’s meals as part of a summer cost-of-living support package designed to stimulate the
visitor economy and encourage family days out.
As designer Yinka Ilori prepares for his first solo gallery show in London, he speaks exclusively
to CLADmag about his mission to spread joy, the power of play, and his bold approach to using
colour (including the colours you won’t see in his work).
The government of Thailand is exploring plans for a THB300bn (£6.3bn, US$8.3bn)
entertainment complex in the country’s Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC), with officials
proposing a large-scale theme park and sports destination as part of a broader tourism and
economic development strategy.
+ More news
COMPANY PROFILES
instantprint We’re a Yorkshire-based online printer, founded
in 2009 by Adam Carnell and James Kinsella. [more...]
Taylor Made Designs Founded in 1993, Taylor Made
Designs supply corporate clothing
and brand-enhancing merchandise
to [more...]
IDEATTACK IDEATTACK is a full-service planning and
design company with headquarters in
Los Angeles. [more...]
Alterface Alterface’s Creative Division team is
seasoned in concept and ride development,
as well as storyte [more...]
An opportunity to reimagine one of the UK’s most recognisable towers has been formally
opened by Rivington Hark, as St Johns Beacon invites operators and partners to shape its
next phase. [more...]