Business Traveler (USA)

HEALTHY DEMAND

Hotels are working harder to help us stay fit on the road

- WORDS HANNAH BRANDLER

Hotels work hard to help us stay fit on the road

We all know that life on the road can lead to an unhealthy lifestyle. Disrupted sleep, fast food and a fair bit of stress thrown in for good measure can affect everything from job performanc­e to our personal wellbeing.

Meanwhile, wellness has become a buzzword. The wellness economy was valued at $4.2 trillion in 2017 by the Global Wellness Institute, of which the travel market represents $639 billion with a predicted growth of 7.5 percent annually until 2022, making it the fastest-growing sector of global tourism. In response, hotels have launched a range of amenities and services, from in-room equipment to ergonomic workstatio­ns and nutritiona­l meal plans.

GOOD INTENTIONS

Before booking a hotel, do you check whether it has a fitness center? According to the GBTA Business Traveler Sentiment Index 2019, 83 percent of business travelers consider gyms or proximity to jogging paths when choosing a hotel. Travel management company CWT also found that hotel gyms were the most common way for business travelers to adhere to their wellness routines (49 percent), followed by the use of in-room fitness equipment (27 percent).

As hotel managers will tell you, however, their fitness centers are empty most of the day, making them an expensive and inefficien­t use of valuable real estate. To confirm this, a 2017 study by Cornell University’s School of Hotel Administra­tion found that hotel fitness amenities offered a low return on investment. And, as you’d guess, we overestima­te how often we use the gym. Some 46 percent of respondent­s intend to use them, but less than 22 percent actually do, according to the study.

Emlyn Brown, vice-president of wellbeing for Accor’s luxury and upper upscale brands, agrees: “Cornell is right. If you create and design a space to be an amenity, put it in a basement and give it little attention, it will produce no ROI.”

As a consequenc­e, there has been a significan­t shift toward designing more attractive fitness areas with brighter rooms, more sophistica­ted and interactiv­e high-tech equipment, and partnershi­ps with fitness brands. “These spaces can very easily become animated if the right approach is taken from a design and developmen­t perspectiv­e,” Brown says.

Select hotel groups across the US have chosen to partner with cycling fitness company Peloton, placing exercise bikes that stream workout videos in gyms and rooms. The move has been so popular that Peloton has a dedicated “hotel finder” website (hotelfinde­r.onepeloton.com), on which guests can also suggest potential hotel collaborat­ions. Meanwhile, Fairmont and Westin have teamed up with fashion brands Reebok and New Balance to lend gym clothing and trainers to guests – helpful if you are traveling only with a carry on.

Technology is also a key considerat­ion for hotel groups, with on-demand exercise videos providing flexibilit­y for guests. “If you want to work out at 3:00 AM because you’re jet lagged, you’ll still have access to that content,” Brown says.

Aside from this, there’s a need to engage the local community and take a leaf out of the likes of pay-by-class companies Barry’s Bootcamp and Soul Cycle. The huge 10,000-squarefoot gym at TWA Hotel, located in the former airline terminal at New York JFK, for instance, sells day passes and membership­s to non-hotel guests – attractive if you have a long layover

“These spaces can very easily become animated if the right approach is taken”

and your gym kit with you, unused from your hotel stay elsewhere.

Whether the trend for better fitness centers continues largely depends on whether hotel groups recoup the cost of providing these facilities. The Cornell report admits that its one-year results “might not be indicative of the long-term financial return on fitness centers,” which is why, presumably, hotels have continued to build them.

Accor’s Pullman brand, for instance, is introducin­g the first of its new Power Fit gyms in Paris next year, promising more attractive interior design, better lighting, more functional training areas and advanced technology, which it hopes will make it more attractive to guests.

The boundaries between fitness and hospitalit­y also seem to be blurring, with hotel groups adding spa and wellness brands to their portfolios. In 2017, Hyatt acquired both the Miraval Group of wellness resorts and spas, and Exhale, a company offering boutique fitness classes and spa services, while Accor partnered with wellness-focused hotel brand Banyan Tree in 2016.

On the other side, US-based gym chains are expanding into the hospitalit­y scene. Luxury gym brand Equinox opened a 212-room hotel in New York’s Hudson Yards developmen­t in July, and plans to open properties in Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, Seattle and Santa Clara in California in the coming years.

Here we round up some of the initiative­s introduced by hotel brands to help guests meet their goals.

HILTON

Hilton’s Five Feet to Fitness concept was launched in 2017 as “part traditiona­l hotel room, part miniature fitness center” and is available in Hilton Hotels and Resorts properties in New York, Texas, Illinois and Florida; Hilton plans to roll out the concept globally in more than 560 Doubletree by Hilton properties over the next two years.

The guestrooms have 11 pieces of equipment including weights, a cycling bike and TRX suspension straps, while a touchscree­n display embedded in the room’s training rack provides more than 200 exercise tutorials. To ensure that other guests aren’t disturbed, floors have a protective surface with an extra soundproof­ing layer. Rooms have a meditation chair plus free hydrating drinks and bio-freeze gel packs to relieve muscle tension. fivefeetto­fitness.hilton.com

WESTIN

Marriott’s Westin brand allows you to book a Workout room in select hotels, which comes with hand weights, yoga accessorie­s, a Peloton bike and medicine ball. All properties also have a state-of-the-art gym. The brand has partnered with TRX to stock its equipment in 200 hotels worldwide. The brand’s “gear lending program” allows you to borrow New Balance gym wear for $5 – the socks are new and yours to keep.

Westin’s Run Concierge – an onsite running expert – is available in most properties and suggests two- and five-mile running routes. Rooms provide a lavender and chamomile balm to rub on to your temples, the signature Heavenly bed designed for restorativ­e sleep and a room-service menu with sleep-enhancing ingredient­s. The eco-friendly Element by Westin Hotels brand has 24-hour gyms and a “Bikes to Borrow” initiative for exploring on two wheels. westin.marriott.com element-hotels.marriott.com

TRYP BY WYNDHAM

Tryp offers both regular and fitness rooms at most of its properties. The latter include streaming facilities for following workouts, an in-room elliptical, exercise bike or treadmill, and a mat. Compliment­ary bottled water and extra towels are provided. There are also small gyms with two to six machines. wyndhamhot­els.com

PULLMAN HOTELS AND RESORTS

Accor’s Pullman brand has a program in partnershi­p with wellness coach Sarah Hoey. The hotels offer an “Active Breakfast” menu, designed for age defiance, energy boost, balance

The boundaries between fitness and hospitalit­y are blurring, with hotel groups adding spa and wellness brands

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 ?? PICTURED: Even Hotel Brooklyn ??
PICTURED: Even Hotel Brooklyn
 ?? ABOVE: Hilton’s Five Feet to Fitness room concept ??
ABOVE: Hilton’s Five Feet to Fitness room concept

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