China Daily

A FAIRY-TALE VACATION: OPENING ARMS TO KIDS

As family travel becomes increasing­ly popular, hotels are adding special amenities for younger guests

- By YE JUN yejun@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese hotels are presenting special programs for children as family travel becomes a major trend in the Chinese tourism market. As the summer heat sweeps across China, Marriott Internatio­nal announced on Tuesday that kids will be able to listen to well-chosen fairy tales with a few easy clicks on their mobile devices, so long as their family is staying at one of the more than 250 hotels of the brand name on the Chinese mainland.

At a news conference held in Sanya, Hainan province, Lawrence Ng, Marriott Internatio­nal’s vice-president of sales & marketing Greater China, said the company will cooperate with Citic Press Group to create the “Time to Share, Memories to Remember” Kids Reading Journey, a children’s travel reading plan. He said it would be “the first” in the industry.

It is considered an upgrade to the hotel group’s loyalty program for members and hotel guests, including Marriott Rewards MAX! Kids program, Ritz Kids, SPG Mini and Le Meridien Family, at its sub-brand name hotels.

“More and more consumers choose to travel with their family in today’s Chinese tourism market,” Ng said. “They hope their kids can discover the world through traveling, and take travel as another class to exercise the body, cultivate their psychologi­cal quality and broaden their cultural prospect.”

A residents tourism expectatio­n survey by the China Tourism Academy, a profession­al research institutio­n under the National Tourism Administra­tion, shows that family tours make up 60 percent on the tour planning list.

And with growing awareness of education, many families have made reading activities a priority for their kids.

In another investigat­ion about children’s reading in China last year, nearly half of kids prefer reading on electronic devices, the news conference revealed.

Ng said the cooperatio­n combines Marriott Internatio­nal’s rich experience in the needs of traveling family guests, and Citic Press Group children’s book section’s concept in offering books that are not only interestin­g, but also offer good knowledge and taste.

Starting from Aug 1, hotel guests and members of Marriott’s loyalty program can log on an audio book website by scanning on a QR code and start “reading” with their children. Members can also bookmark the website on their mobile phones and take the stories home.

Citic Press Group will provide six audio stories in a quarter, a total of 24 in the following year.

These include award-winning tales from the Bologna Children’s Bookfair, and those from popular Chinese storytelle­rs including Wang Kai, dubbed uncle Kai, a former

Lawrence Ng, Marriott Internatio­nal’s vice-president of sales & marketing Greater China

anchor with China Central Television.

Electronic reading is just one among many activities hotel brands under Marriott Internatio­nal offer to their guests. Summer camps

At Sanya Marriott Yalong Bay Resort & Spa’s internatio­nal summer camp, children are happy to learn surfing, assisted by profession­al trainers with internatio­nal background­s.

Parents could be surprised if their children unexpected­ly stand up on the surfing board, encouraged by a considerat­e team of trainers.

The hotel has cooperated with Canadian outdoor activity company Insight Adventures to launch a mini day camp for children aged 6 to 14, from last Monday through Aug 26.

Kids will learn outdoor survival skills and develop problem solving abilities through activities such as raft building and pitching a tent.

There are also plenty of activities for the whole family. Summer camp families can go together to a picnic on a lawn, where food and various games for the kids are ready. The lawn is also good for a barbeque

They hope their kids can discover the world through traveling, and take travel as another class ...

in the evening. After that, they can visit the Quan Spa for an interestin­g fish treatment session where small fish come nibbling on your feet in a tub.

Then, the kids will always like to play on the hotel’s beach, known for its fine sand, which is comfortabl­e to tread on, while the adults can use electric beach carts.

The sea waves might be a bit too big to swim in the sea in summer, but it is always fun to accompany children as they play with sand, collect shells, and discover traces of small crabs in the evening.

In Sanya alone, Marriott Internatio­nal has nine brand names and 13 hotels.

The SPG Mini program, which covers all Starwood hotels on the Chinese mainland, offers free lunch buffet or dinner for children younger than 12.

Children who check in at Westin, Meridien and St. Regis brand name hotels will be greeted with specially offered foods, lovely souvenirs, and a bathrobe and slippers specially designed for kids.

Small details for the benefit of children abound at the Westin Sanya Haitang Bay Resort. A swim ring for kids, a plastic bucket with small tools to play with sand, and a cartoon figure toothbrush, and cushions on the edges of furniture to protect children — these are the sorts of well-thought-out amenities that win the hearts of both kids and their parents.

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Marriott Internatio­nal will cooperate with Citic Press Group to launch the “Time to Share, Memories to Remember” program designed for children across its hotels on the Chinese mainland on Aug 1.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Marriott Internatio­nal will cooperate with Citic Press Group to launch the “Time to Share, Memories to Remember” program designed for children across its hotels on the Chinese mainland on Aug 1.
 ??  ?? With the growing popularity of family travel among Chinese tourists, more hoteliers are offering special experience­s to attract this newly targeted group.
With the growing popularity of family travel among Chinese tourists, more hoteliers are offering special experience­s to attract this newly targeted group.
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 ??  ?? Children participat­e in rock climbing under the protection of trainers.
Children participat­e in rock climbing under the protection of trainers.

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