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Wednesday, February 16, 2011



Art is making here it's own way. This massive metropolis captures Russia at her most extreme: her communist austerity and her capitalist indulgence; her devout orthodoxy and her uninhibited displays of wealth and power; her enigmatic ancient history and her dazzling contemporary culture. Moscow is the seat of political power in Russia, but it is also the country’s cultural and commercial center. From the storied streets surrounding Red Square to the modern new Moscow-City, the Russian capital is crammed with artistic, historic, and otherwise sacred sites. Sometimes intellectual and inspiring like vision of dream, sometimes debauched and depraved, it is always eye-opening.

Hotel Budapest: www.hotel-budapest.ru

Hotel Ozerkovskaya: www.ozerkhotel.ru

Oksana Hotel: www.dinaoda.ru

Sovietsky Hotel: www.sovietsky.ru

East-West Hotel: www.eastwesthotel.ru

Sretenskaya Hotel: sretenskaya.ru

Hotel Metropol: www.metropol-moscow.ru

Golden Apple: www.goldenapple.ru


Ararat Park Hyatt Moscow: www.moscow.park.hyatt.com
Tuesday, February 15, 2011



Take a look on the hub of technology. Mention Tokyo and the images come fast and furious: the whoosh of the bullet train, hundreds of thousands of commuters texting on tiny mobile phones, the precision of a sushi chef, a sumo wrestler thumping the ground. The world’s largest metropolis—nearly 34 million people in commuting distance—may be a blur, but it’s a very genteel and trustful one. Look closer and you’ll notice refined touches everywhere: fashion, architecture, manhole covers (yes, manhole covers), the exquisite wrapping of a package, or the way your shoes are magically turned in the right direction when you’re ready to leave the city. All this and Hello Kitty too.

Hotel Asia Center of Japan: www.asiacenter.or.jp

Mitsui Garden Hotel Ginza: www.gardenhotels.co.jp/eng/ginza

Yamanoue (Hilltop) Hotel: www.yamanoue-hotel.co.jp


Hotel Claska: www.claska.com

Ginza Yoshimizu: www.yoshimizu.com

Royal Park Shiodome Tower: www.rps-tower.co.jp

Keio Plaza Hotel: www.keioplaza.com


Monday, February 14, 2011



Lovely people with friendly habits. What’s not to love about Cape Town? From iconic Table Mountain, several hundred million years in the making, to the hip watering holes of Camps Bay, South Africa’s “Mother City” is the brightest light in the reborn rainbow nation. Inspirational landscape, sugary sand beaches resist you to stay, centuries old vineyards, and colonial mansions, plus a host of adrenaline-pumping outdoor activities are among Cape Town’s many blessings. Factor in a colorful creative vibe and a lively social scene—manifesting itself in outstanding places to stay, eat, shop, and party—and you’ll soon realize why the city is South Africa's favorite playground.

Long St. Backpackers: www.longstreetbackpackers.co.za

The Backpack: www.backpackers.co.za

Daddy Long Legs: www.daddylonglegs.co.za

De Waterkant House: www.dewaterkanthouse.com


Cape Heritage Hotel: www.capeheritage.co.za

Vineyard Hotel & Spa: www.vineyard.co.za

Winchester Mansions Hotel: www.winchester.co.za

Mount Nelson Hotel: www.mountnelson.co.za

Kensington Place: www.kensingtonplace.co.za

Sunday, February 13, 2011



You like dance you like to make fun where ever you want this is really place like that and their people also contribute with u to make your fun remember able. Buenos Aires is often called the “Paris of South America,” for its soaring architecture and rich European heritage. But the city and its people, known as porteños, are a study in contrasts: European sensibilities and Latin American passion; wide boulevards and cobblestone alleys; steamy tango and romping rock and roll; sidewalk cafés and soccer fanatics; bejeweled ladies draped in fur coats and children rummaging through garbage for cardboard scraps. Buenos Aires,full of people who know how to enjoy, which sprawls over 78 square miles (202 square kilometers) and has a population of about three million, is a patchwork of distinct, fascinating communities, from the frenetic downtown and working-class tanguero neighborhoods such as La Boca and San Telmo, to wealthy districts such as Recoleta and trendy Palermo, to middle-class barrios such as Belgrano and Caballito.

Mansion Dandi Royal: www.mansiondandiroyal.com/

The Cocker: www.thecocker.com

1555 Malabia House: www.malabiahouse.com.ar

Castelar Hotel and Spa: www.castelarhotel.com.ar

Bobo Hotel and Restaurant: www.bobohotel.com



Esplendor Boutique Hotel: www.esplendorbuenosaires.com


Faena Hotel and Universe: www.faenahotelanduniverse.com
Saturday, February 12, 2011



A country thats rising like sun visit it.
Like any great harbor town, Sydney takes its prompts from beyond its shores as much as from within. A multicultural metropolis of 4.3 million people, Sydney, with its sunny days and sparkling waters, offers world-class dining, shopping, and nightlife.It surround your once you get in. The ocean seems to be everywhere: sea vistas, surf beaches, and quiet harborside parks abound. “Sydneysiders” take full advantage of this wonderful setting: Life happens on the streets, and any excuse is good enough for a swim at the beach.

Pensione Hotel: www.pensione.com.au

Hotel Altamont: www.altamont.com.au

Ravesi’s: www.ravesis.com.au

Hughenden Hotel: www.hughendenhotel.com.au


Hilton Sydney: www.sydney.hilton.com

Manly Pacific Sydney: www.manlypacificsydney.com.au

InterContinental Sydney: www.sydney.intercontinental.com

Park Hyatt Sydney: www.sydney.park.hyatt.com

Four Seasons Hotel: www.fourseasons.com/sydney
Thursday, February 10, 2011



you will watch a slit nice combination between history and technology. "History is present everywhere in Montreal, a city teeming with architecture and culture from the past three centuries. Canada’s second largest, third oldest, and most cosmopolitan city is also a hub for technological innovation is flowing and avant-garde art—there’s an ultramodern, global sensibility here that coexists with a sense of the past. Similarly, French and English, once considered the “two solitudes,” have intermingled to make a culture of easy bilingualism that is now a fait accompli for most Montrealers. Montreal is, at once, consummately European and also grounded in New World enthusiasm. It’s also known as the “city of festivals,” with year-round celebrations of food, film, music, and culture. “We’re a bread and circuses kind of town, and we contain multitudes,” says Bill Brownstein, city columnist, the
Gazette, the city’s only English daily.


Anne Ma Soeur Anne: www.annemasoeuranne.com

Pierre et Dominique Bed & Breakfast: www.pierdom.qc.ca

Hotel Gault: www.hotelgault.com

Hostellerie Pierre du Calvet: www.pierreducalvet.ca

Hyatt Regency Montreal: montreal.hyatt.com

Hotel Nelligan: www.hotelnelligan.com

Le Place d’Armes Hotel & Suites: www.hotelplacedarmes.com

Le Ritz-Carlton Montreal: www.ritzmontreal.com

Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth: www.fairmont.com/queenelizabeth/
Wednesday, February 9, 2011



A cultural and productive place you may go and find your own status really. Budapest—a city of thermal baths, cafés, striking turn-of-the-century architecture, and most of all, a city of the Danube, “whose gentle waves,” according to the great Hungarian poet Attila József, “embrace past, present, and future.” Straddling the wide river, which separates hilly Buda from level Pest, the Hungarian capital offers one of the most striking metropolitan panoramas in Europe. Budapest is a city of music, from the classics of Bartók and Kodály to the contemporary fusion of folk, klezmer, jazz, and Gypsy sounds. Long hidden behind the Iron Curtain, Budapest is rightfully regaining its reputation as one of the most vibrant capitals of central Europe. Feel every thing for you.

Medosz Hotel: www.medoszhotel.hu

Hotel Mohácsi Panzió: www.hotelmohacsipanzio.hu

Hotel Victoria: www.victoria.hu

Corinthia Grand Hotel Royal: www.corinthiahotels.com

Radio Inn: www.radioinn.hu

Budapest Marriott Hotel: www.marriott.com

art’otel: www.artotel.hu

Danubius Hotel Gellert: www.danubiushotels.com/gellert

New York Palace Hotel Boscolo: www.boscolohotels.com

Four Seasons Hotel Gresham Palace: www.fourseasons.com/budapest
Tuesday, February 8, 2011



You like privacy or wanna play on beach or love modern architecture so you are on right place. A seaside paradise and the nation’s youngest big city (founded in 1896), Miami, Florida is America’s Casablanca—capital of the exotic, inhabited by a larger percentage of foreign-born than any other city, according to the United Nations. Called the “Gateway to Latin America” the area’s population is 60 percent Hispanic, made up of Cubans, Nicaraguans, Colombians, Puerto Ricans, and Venezuelans—all influencing the city’s rich cultural offerings. Considered an international hub, Miami has reached a sophistication to rival Manhattan’s with hip Miami Beach at its heart boasting a classic Art Deco District and North Beach’s Miami Modern architecture. In Miami itself, a melange of worthwhile neighborhoods welcome visitors including the Cuban-inspired Little Havana, the art-driven Design District, architecturally rich Coral Gables, and the laid-back beachfront community of Coconut Grove. Feel as you want. The area’s tropical climate makes it a year-round destination.

The Tropics Hotel & Hostel: www.tropicshotel.com

The Clay's Hostel: www.clayhotel.com/hostel


Hotel St. Michel: www.hotelstmichel.com

Crest Hotel Suites: www.cresthotel.com

The Biltmore: www.BiltmoreHotel.com

Mayfair Hotel & Spa: www.mayfairhotelandspa.com



Ritz-Carlton Key Biscayne: www.ritzcarlton.com
Monday, February 7, 2011



Love to art and culture you may find here allot. Few have immortalized the awesome impression made by the city of St. Petersburg as passionately as the poet Alexander Pushkin: “I love thee, city of Peter’s making, I love thy harmonies austere, And the Neva’s sovereign waters’ breaking, Along your banks of granite sheer.” The power of the relationship between this “capital of the north” and the forbidding nature of its site is unique. An emphatic testament to the man whose vision St. Petersburg was, Tsar Peter the Great, the city is a planned microcosm of modern, fine beauty, cosmopolitan Russia. It is built on 42 Neva Delta islands that were essentially swamps until its creation in the 1700s. Inspired by Amsterdam and compared with Venice, its thoroughfares comprise a mix of broad embankments, scything avenues, gridiron streets, and curving canals. The combination of the imperial and cultured, refined and rugged, traditional and advanced, give it an aura all of its own. Those who experience it, wrote author Lev Lur’e, “witness buildings that seem like stage decorations from a previous century and feel that they have become characters from some novel or play rather than being real people here and now.”

Art-Hotel: www.art-hotel.ru

Park Inn Pribaltiyskaya: www.pribaltiyskaya.parkinn.com.ru

Aster: www.hon.ru


Pushka Inn: www.pushkainn.ru

Kempinski Hotel Moika 22: www.kempinski.com



Grand Hotel Europe: www.grandhoteleurope.com

Taleon Imperial Hotel: www.taleonimperialhotel.com