Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Chukka’s Good Hope — attraction­s company spends millions to undertake property upgrades

- BY KELLARAY MILES Business Reporter milesk@jamaicaobs­erver.com

Chukka Caribbean adventures said it has invested over us$500,000 or almost $80 million to carry out significan­t upgrades and renovation­s at its Good hope property in Trelawny, ahead of what many tourism operators are anticipati­ng to be a busy summer season.

The 2000-acre property, which was reopened early this month, underwent a US$250,000 upgrade along with the installati­on of new infrastruc­ture.

“Summer is here and Good Hope is now open. We’ve changed the product offering where it’s now all about nature, relaxation and is a real eco-adventure park,” said Marc Melville, chief executive officer (CEO) of Chukka Caribbean, during a recent interview with the Jamaica Observer.

“We spent US$150,000 on some riverside cabanas and another US$130,000 on a bridge running across the Martha Brae river at our Good Hope property, so overall we have gone over half a million to facilitate these projects including some new additions stemming from our latest partnershi­p with Appleton Rum,” Melville told the Business

Observer.

Under the recent deal with Appleton, the facility is to benefit from the introducti­on of a new tasting room, a themed style marketplac­e gift shop, an Appleton rum museum along with five riverside cabanas retrofitte­d with butler service.

Melville noted that as the summer tourist season officially begins, a reopening of its properties in Belize, the Dominican Republic and Barbados was undertaken last week in order to capitalise on pent up demands.

He further cited the Us$2million Sandy Bay Hanover nature adventure park opened late last year as one of the properties driving significan­t growth for the company.

“There has been an increase in appetite where people are getting out to experience the

country and spend money and we’re seeing this in the participat­ion levels where capture rates have gone up,” he said.

The business, which suffered significan­t falls in revenues after some 16 months of little to no activity as a result of the pandemic, the CEO said, was steadily progressin­g towards PRE-COVID levels. He said that some major informatio­n technology system upgrades done during the down period has also started to pay off allowing for greater efficienci­es across the company’s operations and driving optismism in its future outlook.

“By the end of 2022, we should be very comfortabl­e in profitabil­ity as we believe that’s when full recovery will begin. We are not yet out the woods but by the last quarter of this year, we feel very optimistic that we’ll be seeing levels of sales very close to that of 2019 per month,” the CEO said in his outlook, noting also that a memorandum of understand­ing (MOU) signed last year with the Supreme Ventures Group (SVG) was still in the works despite being slowed by the pandemic.

Through this partnershi­p, Chukka’s clients will participat­e in tours at Caymanas Park — Jamaica’s horse racing centre, operated by Supreme Ventures Racing Limited (SVRL), a subsidiary of SVG.

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 ??  ?? MELVILLE…SUMMER is here and Good Hope is now open.we’ve changed the product offering where it’s now all about nature, relaxation and is a real ecoadventu­re park
MELVILLE…SUMMER is here and Good Hope is now open.we’ve changed the product offering where it’s now all about nature, relaxation and is a real ecoadventu­re park
 ??  ?? A section of Chukka’s Good Hope property in Trelawny. The newly renovated eco-adventure park was reopened on July 2.
A section of Chukka’s Good Hope property in Trelawny. The newly renovated eco-adventure park was reopened on July 2.
 ??  ?? The recently renovated bridge over Martha Brae River, which runs through the Good Hope property
The recently renovated bridge over Martha Brae River, which runs through the Good Hope property

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