The Phnom Penh Post

Airbnb app offers extended service

- Stephanie Rosenbloom

AIRBNB, the peerto-peer accommodat­ions site where travellers book everything from single rooms to entire villas, has spent the past couple of years branching out. It has teamed up with airlines like Delta and Virgin America to give miles to travellers who book stays. And it has teamed up with travel management companies including American Express Global Business Travel on its Airbnb for Business program, which includes homes with business essentials such as WiFi and laptop-friendly workspaces.

Now, the company has unveiled its most ambitious endeavour yet – Trips – designed to help travellers not only book accommodat­ions but also book activities like cooking and painting lessons; take audio walking tours; and attend meetups. Soon users will be able to make restaurant reservatio­ns through the Airbnb app. And the company says car rentals, grocery deliveries and even flights are in the works, further propelling Airbnb toward being a fullfledge­d travel company.

“This is literally just the beginning,” Brian Chesky, Airbnb’s chief executive, said in November at the Airbnb Open in Los Angeles, where the company’s leaders discussed what’s in the pipeline. So far, Trips has experience­s available in a dozen cities worldwide: Los Angeles, San Francisco, Miami, Detroit, Havana, London, Paris, Florence, Nairobi, Cape Town, Tokyo and Seoul. Chesky said that it would expand to more than 50 cities next year.

Trips includes three categories (for now), which appear at the top of the Airbnb app: Experience­s (activities such as following a member of the Tuscan Truffle Hunters Associatio­n through a forest in Italy); Places (online local guides for, say, finding authentic tacos and scenic trails); and Homes (Airbnb offers about 3 million rentals). It plans to add additional categories such as flights, although exactly what that might include remains to be seen.

What awaits you in Trips? Let’s take a look.

Experience­s

While researchin­g flights and hotels online has become second nature, few companies have managed to offer a worldwide variety of local experience­s and make them easy and attractive to browse. Few sites offer consistenc­y when it comes to particular­s like photos, clutter-free pages and reviews. And not all sites offer the chance to communicat­e with a guide in advance.

Airbnb’s “Experience­s”, which you can browse in thumbnails that call to mind old movie posters, are clear and fleshed out and allow travellers to post reviews and contact hosts in advance. Experience­s vary in length and cost, such as “Biking Hidden Tokyo”, a three-day cycling tour for $301, or “Bubbly With a View”, a four-hour wine estate tour and tasting of Methode Cap Classique, a South African style of wine, in the Franschhoe­k wine valley for $73. Half the experience­s offered on Airbnb are below $200, Chesky said.

Airbnb divides experience­s into multiday “immersions” or single experience­s (just a few hours). You can filter by interest, such as “food & drink”, “history”, “nature”, “wellness,” “fashion”, “sports”, “arts” and “social impact”, which are experience­s offered for the benefit of nonprofit organisati­ons like the Nelson Mandela Foundation and Facing Change: Documentin­g Detroit.

Beginning last month, wouldbe hosts in the dozen cities mentioned above, as well as in nearly 40 more – including Berlin, Cartagena, Chicago, Dubai, New Delhi, Reykjavik, Singapore, Tel Aviv and Toronto – could begin asking to list their experience­s with Airbnb.

An experience purchased through the site can be cancelled within 24 hours of booking for a full refund. If you cancel 30 days or more before the experience, you are also eligible for a full refund. If, however, you cancel less than 30 days before the start date, you won’t receive a refund, unless the spot is booked and the experience completed by another guest.

Places

The “Places” category focuses on sightseein­g. This includes free themed guides written by local influencer­s about their own cities. A pianist in Havana, for instance, writes about where to hear live music like salsa and jazz. A booking agent in California writes about the Los Angeles rock scene. So far, there are 100 such guides in six cities: Los Angeles, San Francisco, Havana, Nairobi, Detroit and Seoul.

In addition to guides, Places also offers audio walking tours. Airbnb partnered with Detour, which creates GPS tours of cities. Right now the tours are available only in certain areas of downtown Los Angeles and can be downloaded free. In the spring of 2017, additional city tours will include San Francisco, Paris, London, Tokyo and Seoul.

Under “Places”, users may also find Meetups – free get-togethers for Airbnb users hosted by local businesses. A feature called Nearby Now offers tips and advice for places around you, like restaurant­s. For those on the go, a partnershi­p with a restaurant booking platform called Resy will soon allow travellers to book tables at such restaurant­s through the Airbnb app. Resy said the feature will be available in early 2017.

Homes

The “Homes” tab includes Airbnb’s rentals. In the future, users will be able to use the “Homes” tab to have groceries delivered to their Airbnb. They will also be able to book rental cars.

 ?? JOHN MACDOUGALL/AFP ?? A woman browses the site of US home-sharing giant Airbnb on a tablet in Berlin.
JOHN MACDOUGALL/AFP A woman browses the site of US home-sharing giant Airbnb on a tablet in Berlin.

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