Calgary Herald

Hotel loungewear ups the pizzazz factor

- ABHA BHATTARAI

Most hotel rooms are a blur, says Maxwell Young. But there is one part of his stay at the Hotel Palomar in Washington, D.C., that he will always remember: the leopard- and zebra-print robes hanging in his room.

“It was like I opened the closet and rays of sunshine poured out,” he said of the bathrobes, which he later raved about on Twitter. (“Snow may have put a crimp in our D.C. plans, but this zebra robe at @Kimpton Palomar Hotel is really lifting my mood.”)

Young, who works in marketing, spent the rest of his business trip working in his animal-print robes. By checkout time, he had made plans to buy a similar robe for a friend.

As hotel chains look for new ways to attract younger travellers, bathrobes have become one more way to add pizzazz to an otherwise predictabl­e stay. Gone are the onesize-fits-all robes of earlier decades. In their place: Seersucker, houndstoot­h and periwinkle blue, all perfectly suited for sharing on social media.

“It’s no longer just about putting the hotel logo on a floppy, loosefitti­ng white robe,” said Greg Eubanks, vice-president of hospitalit­y at Standard Textile, where robe sales to such companies as Marriott Internatio­nal and Hilton Hotels & Resorts have tripled in the past two years. These days, he said, the company’s robes have sewn-in belts and pockets deep enough to hold smartphone­s. They’re slimmer, too, and tend to be shorter.

“For years, we sold robes that were about operationa­l efficiency,” Eubanks said. “These days, guests want to feel special — sexy, even — in their robes.”

To that end, executives at Four Seasons Hotels spent three years fine-tuning the chain’s newest offerings, which are more tailored and less bulky than their predecesso­rs. They also have slimmer sleeves to make it easier for women to style their hair in their robes. (“We know customers are pleased because so many of our robes walk away,” one executive said.)

Marriott, meanwhile, has replaced many of its white robes with charcoal grey versions that are shorter and have wider sleeves. And at Hilton — where 18 per cent of guests say that “lounging around in hotel robes all day” is their favourite part of being on vacation — lighter-weight resort robes have taken the place of plush terry.

Perhaps the boldest bathrobes can be found in Kimpton Hotels & Restaurant­s’ 65 properties. For 15 years, the San Francisco-based company has stocked its guests’ rooms with leopard-, giraffe- and zebra-print robes. Now it is going a step further, introducin­g a dozen new patterns and designs to its boutique properties, which include the Hotel George and Carlyle Hotel in Washington.

The Hotel Monaco in Philadelph­ia, for example, now has Rocky Balboa-inspired hooded robes, while rooms at the Buchanan Hotel near San Francisco’s Japantown come with kimono-style robes. In New Orleans, guests are greeted with seersucker robes. Other hotels carry herringbon­e and pinstriped prints as well as robes with hoods and shawl collars.

“As we developed more unique properties, we thought robes should become more interestin­g as well,” said Diana Martinez, Kimpton’s design director.

“It seems like a small detail, but it makes a big impact for guests.”

Finding the right bathrobes can, however, be a years-long challenge for hotels. The pieces must be durable enough to withstand commercial washing and inexpensiv­e enough to replace fairly frequently.

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