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Locum Destination Review - Issue 7
The journal of record for the global destination industry
Editorial
It is my duty to open this first issue
of 2002 with the sad news that Robert Herber, whose article on retailing
in museums made such excellent reading in the Winter 2001 edition of
Locum Destination Review, was tragically
killed just after we went to press last November. We pay tribute to
Robert’s outstanding contribution to the industry over the last
30 years, and pass on our deepest sympathies to his family and friends.
For four days in March, the leading lights
of the world-wide property and investment market will gather in Cannes
for this year’s MIPIM (the Marché International des Professionels
de l’Immobilier). In anticipation of this major event in the global
destination calendar, we present a series of articles focusing on key
development issues. We begin by interviewing the UK’s most exciting
young property developer, Tom Bloxham MBE, of Urban Splash, whose mixed-use
schemes in neglected inner-city areas of northwest England have earned
him a host of awards – and friends in high places. He explains
the commercial background and business philosophy that has set him from
apart from the majority of UK developers.
Arvind Bajaj of Morgan Stanley offers
an introductory guide to securitisation, a financing tool well known
to US developers. Is there a more prominent role for securitisation
in the development of new commercial destinations in the UK? Locum’s
James Alexander, meanwhile, pleads with developers and investors to
defy convention and look beyond traditional norms in formulating visitor-based
schemes. He urges them to consider the ’destination effect’,
a phenomenon that has become apparent at visitor destinations which
have adopted a brand-led operating framework developed by Locum. Can
the development community at large be persuaded of the benefits that
flow from this new approach?
Award-winning retail designers Rasshied
Din and John Harvey, founders of Din Associates, have worked with some
of the world’s leading retailers, playing a central role in the
evolution of their brand positioning in the market. Here, they share
with us expert insights into the key requirements for successful consumer
environments. Dr Yvonne Court of Healey & Baker investigates another
facet of retail: its growing role in urban renewal programmes across
Europe.
We dedicate the whole of this issue’s
‘Analysis’ section to one central theme: Hospitality and
Individuality. We seek to answer the question ‘How can hotels
offer, and promote, experiences for individuals?’ We begin with
Brandwatch, which traces the evolution of advertising campaigns led
by some of the world’s major hotel operators. How many appear
to understand the individual in today’s market, and how many simply
pretend to? Separately, but still on the issue of branding, we speak
to Paul Simmons, the newly appointed Vice President of the Inter-Continental
brand, part of the Six Continents hotel group. He discusses the challenge
of positioning the Inter-Continental brand consistently in the market,
as the company plans for expansion. We also investigate ‘the boutique
hotel’, from its origins back in the 1970s through to today, and
ask whether such destinations will continue to grow as fast as they
have done. Two leading authorities who remain convinced that well-crafted
‘alternative hotels’ still hold much appeal for the discerning
individual are Robin Hutson, founder of Hotel du Vin, and Olga Polizzi,
designer for RF Hotels and owner of Hotel Tresanton in Cornwall. We
talk to both about the issues which have been central to the success
of their ‘unchained’ hotels.
A final thought for our friends in the
property industry: in the last issue of Locum Destination Review, we
ran a special feature on World Heritage Sites in the UK and Europe,
examining the potential of this UNESCO designation scheme to enable
all types of locations to preserve and promote themselves. It has been
interesting to read in the national press that, since its designation
as Britain’s newest World Heritage Site, land values along the
‘Jurassic Coastline’ in Devon and Dorset have rocketed.
Suddenly the words ‘heritage’ and ‘value’ in
the same sentence don’t seem too odd after all.
Owen Burdekin
Editor
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