Hotels, Tourism & Leisure -
As visitor arrival numbers ramp up and tourism gets a second wind, new hotels in Auckland are welcoming discerning guests.
Being the first port of entry for the majority of visitors to New Zealand, host to large sporting and musical events, and with corporate life and conferences back on track, Aucklandâs hotel sector is enjoying strong occupancy.
Around 800 new hotel rooms were added to the cityâs inventory last year and several high-profile openings to date this year have boosted those numbers even further. With bookings open online from July, Horizon SkyCity will see another 303 rooms available for guests, making SkyCity the largest single-site accommodation provider in New Zealand, with 938 rooms across three hotels in its inner city precinct.
Bayleysâ Hotels, Tourism and Leisure looks at two other recent additions to Aucklandâs hotel sector â one under the auspices of a pioneering global luxury brand, and the other independently owned and operated by New Zealand-headquartered entities.
InterContinental Auckland opens
Commercial Bay is a substantial world-class urban mixed-use development by NZX-listed Precinct Properties located on Aucklandâs waterfront near the historic Ferry Building and the heritage Britomart precinct.
The almost two-hectare site is bounded by Quay, Lower Queen, Customs and Albert streets and supports premium corporate office space, a multi-level retail and hospitality centre â and now, the freshly-minted luxury InterContinental Auckland with 139 thoughtfully-curated rooms and suites across levels 6 to 11 at One Queen Street.
The long-awaited and much-anticipated return of the InterContinental brand to the city was celebrated at the hotelâs recent opening â adding to IHG Hotels & Resortsâ luxury and lifestyle collection and extensive portfolio in New Zealand, while also marking the completion of the Commercial Bay precinct.
IHG Hotels & Resorts already has 11 hotels welcoming guests across the country with world-class hotels elsewhere in Auckland, Queenstown, Wellington and Christchurch and spanning the InterContinental, Crowne Plaza, voco, Hotel Indigo, Holiday Inn and Holiday Inn Express brands. IHG is set to open Hotel Indigo Auckland later this year.
IHG Hotels & Resorts managing director Australasia & Pacific, Matt Tripolone, says one of the drivers behind InterContinental Aucklandâs opening was the demand for luxury accommodation in the growing Auckland city landscape that attracts both local and international travellers.
âWe seized this opportunity to grow IHGâs presence within the vibrant city, and the opening of InterContinental Auckland has been met with enthusiasm and excitement from guests and the industry.
âThere is a strong demand in Auckland for accommodation all year round and looking ahead to next summer, forward bookings are looking positive.â
InterContinental Auckland was designed by Warren and Mahoney with five key elements in mind: a focus on New Zealand food and wine; international appeal; ethical and locally sourced materials; seamless transitions from day to night; and acknowledgement of the site and its surroundings.
Location is crucial for a luxury hotel, and being part of the fully-integrated Commercial Bay precinct is a bonus. The carefully-designed and fully-integrated development created an open laneway environment around the hotel facilitating greater connectivity with both the waterfront and the city itself.
With views across the WaitematÄ Harbour, InterContinental Auckland is billed as a luxury haven where guests can be immersed in New Zealandâs rich history, and connect with the tapestry of local culture, art, and cuisine, says Tripolone.
âWe have seen an uplift in global travellers looking for sustainability and wellness when deciding on accommodation post-pandemic.
âTheyâre particularly seeking authentic experiences and connection to the country they are visiting and InterContinental Auckland does this really well through the hotelâs comprehensive art collection prioritising local and Iwi artists, with a heavy influence on MÄori culture.
âWe have works on display by artists such as Fiona Pardington, Beronia Scott and Te PĆ«awai ĆrÄkei Marae â the NgÄti WhÄtua ĆrÄkei weaving collective which has supplied an extraordinary WhÄriki, (woven panel) for each room.
âThese works, and others, offer guests an authentic experience and connection to the country.â
Guest rooms and suites are well appointed with premium bedding, a smart television with casting technology and a Bluetooth soundbar. Ensuite bathrooms feature a rain shower and luxurious Byredo products.
Headed by seasoned and internationally-acclaimed chef Gareth Stewart, InterContinental Aucklandâs signature restaurant Advieh has been described by an industry reviewer as an early candidate for restaurant opening of the year and âinsanely goodâ.
âUnder Garethâs direction, Advieh puts a contemporary twist on Middle Eastern-inspired cuisine while championing New Zealandâs finest produce,â says Tripolone.
While InterContinental Auckland enjoys its fresh arrival in the City of Sails, work is progressing on IHGâs 225-room Hotel Indigo at 51 Albert Street, due to open at the end of this year.
âIHG is set to triple our presence in Auckland with the opening of Hotel Indigo which draws inspiration from local artists for its design, service, amenities and food and beverage offering,â explains Tripolone.
âIt will be an intriguing boutique hotel that takes guests on a treasure hunt, discovering Auckland's past, present, and future from century-old pubs to hip, gentrified alleyways.â
Find out more: auckland.intercontinental.com/
Bringing an Abstract idea to life
In Aucklandâs Upper Queen Street, near its junction with eclectic Karangahape Road, stands Abstract, an innovative new hotel with overtones of cosmopolitan New York â a far cry from the former electrical store and vintage t-shirt shop that originally stood on the site.
Intensive rezoning under the Auckland Unitary Plan meant that a multi-storey new-build hotel was possible for the area and seasoned developer Nigel McKenna who heads up one of New Zealandâs largest development companies, Templeton Group, purchased the site in late 2018.
Templeton identified the market opportunity for an affordable, mid-sized, multi-storey hotel in the heart of Aucklandâs most exciting and vibrant inner-city community, and adjacent to one of the cityâs major transport hubs â the soon-to-open Karanga-a-Hape Station in Mercury Lane, which is part of the new City Rail Link project.
âTo match those fundamentals, we envisaged a Brooklyn-style of building, delivering far more than would normally be expected from a traditional affordable hotel.
âExtensive external brickwork cladding visually connects Abstractâs design to the Victorian and Edwardian buildings that typify nearby Kâ Roadâs architectural heritage, while exterior foliage aligns the building with green spaces to the east.
âFrom the moment you arrive in the cobbled laneway of the hotelâs porte cochĂšre, you will recognise it as a chic urban space, designed for modern living and cleverly tailored to combine stylish, intimate interiors with carefully considered utility.â
The Kâ Road precinct is effectively a commercial extension of neighbouring Ponsonby Road and has always marched to the beat of its own drum. Likewise, Abstract offers spaces that are full of personality with welcoming communal amenities that are well-considered, generous and each with its own character.
Thereâs the Wintergarden outdoor garden bar with fireplace, sophisticated Terrace Bar, Library Lounge, Collage restaurant, gallery and workspace, gym and a studio which serves as a boardroom or private dining room â described by McKenna as âdeeply charmingâ.
There are four types of hotel rooms: studios, family rooms, plus one- and two-bedroom units. McKenna says describing Abstract Hotel as âboutiqueâ doesnât fully reflect the quality and range of the amenities available to guests or the design flair evident at every turn.
âThereâs nothing ordinary about Abstract. Itâs positioned as an affordable inner-city hotel with compact rooms, a distinctive and engaging personality and outstanding shared amenities.
âWhile compact, the rooms are extremely well appointed, each with a microwave, hob, espresso coffee maker and Chromecast-enabled screens and from dĂ©cor, colour and comfort to water pressure and bag storage, real attention to detail marks every aspect of the accommodation.
âThe fit-out, bedding and linen, in-room facilities and equipment, are comparable to those of a five-star hotel, with warm, friendly service and not a trace of hauteur and because it is independently owned and operated, thereâs an individuality and intimacy that global chains cannot match.â
According to McKenna, Abstract appeals to international free independent travellers, business people working in the CBD, visitors attending concerts, conferences and sports events in Auckland, and people transitioning to New Zealand who may like to take up residence at Abstract for an extended stay.
Abstract also hosts an outstanding standalone luxury spa facility for in-house guests and visitors. Sa-Ni Spa and Wellness Centre sees co-founder and director Sarisa Nasinprom guiding a team of master therapists, adept at treating body and mind through the ancient art of Thai massage and other signature beauty and therapeutic packages.
With Kâ Road attracting the artistic and creative communities, Abstract Hotel honours New Zealand art in unique ways, starting in the arrival lobby where dramatic bronze drapes sit theatrically behind Fraser Clementsâ iconic portrait of Graeme Maunsel.
The integration of art and architecture is repeated in the restaurant, with two large Hayley Brown abstract pieces -- Flight 1 and 2 â echoing the soft furnishings, while Auckland-based urban artist, Ross Liewâs work, âThe Name Itselfâ hangs near the elevators.
Beside this, and repeated on each floor above, is a set of four black and white photographs in an ascending linear series, with each set retelling a scene from one night in Kâ Road, starting and ending in Abstract.
Works by other Auckland artists including Daniel Blanshard, Judi Bagust, Simon Lewis Wards, and Marcus Capes are also in pride of place â along with underwater photographs by Spanish-born, Nelson-based Jose Canos, and abstract paintings by Wellingtonâs Amanda Wilkinson.
Find out more: abstracthotel.co.nz/