Call & Times

Better than before: Puerto Rico recovery nearly complete

- By ANDREA SACHS

Hurricane Maria did a job on El San Juan Hotel, the storied property in Puerto Rico where Sammy Davis Jr., Frank Sinatra and Liza Minnelli once crooned. Water seeped into the lobby and guest rooms, and high winds ripped off awnings and tossed around a stainless-steel sculpture like an inflatable beach ball.

The 60-year-old grande dame could have reopened quickly, but instead the staff took its time to meticulous­ly restore the hotel’s historic features. They removed and dried the hand-carved cherry mahogany panels on the walls and columns. They repainted the gold ceiling. And they cleaned each of the 7,000 pieces of crystal on the 4,500-pound chandelier that bedazzled the lobby. The repairs cost north of $60 million.

“It was a risk the owners took, but they wanted the hotel and the lobby to be here for the next generation,” said Martin Smith, the property’s managing director. “They said, ‘Don’t rush.’”

On Dec. 14, more than a year after the hurricane, El San Juan Hotel will swing open its double doors, ushering in guests and the soft Caribbean breeze. Trumpeter Charlie Sepulveda will perform, and the chandelier will likely chime in – a paean to the return of Puerto Rico.

“It’s not just a comeback,” Brad Dean, chief executive officer of Discover Puerto Rico, the island’s marketing organizati­on, said of recovery efforts. “It’s a comeback as better than before.”

One of the most devastatin­g storms in U.S. history, Maria dealt the island a catastroph­ic blow with almost 3,000 fatalities, according to an approximat­ion by Puerto Rican government. The U.S. territory was already wobbly from a recession and Hurricane Irma when the Category 4 hurricane made landfall last September near Yabucoa, on the southeast coast. Winds reached 155 mph. More than 30 inches of rain fell from the sky, turning burbling streams into savage waterways. Widespread outages of power and communicat­ion services plunged the island into darkness and silence. In August, the power company announced that it had fully restored electricit­y to the island. That month, Gov. Ricardo Rosselló submitted a $139 billion recovery plan to Congress.

Much work remains, especially in residentia­l areas, but Puerto Rico has made great strides in all categories of travel. For instance, daily air service has increased from 20 flights two weeks after the hurricane to 110 to 130 flights on 28 airlines. JetBlue returned to pre-Maria frequency in June, six months ahead of schedule. For cruise ships, the San Juan port opened less than three weeks after the storm; the southern terminal in Ponce started receiving vessels last December. This season, two dozen ships will use the island as their home port, four more than last year. All of this sea activity could set a record: Tourism officials are expecting 1.7 million passengers for the 2018-2019 season, which would surpass the previous bar of 1.5 million cruisers in 2015-2016.

On land, 135 hotels – about 75 percent of the lodging stock – are accepting reservatio­ns. By mid-2019, room availabili­ty will rise from 11,000 to more than 15,000. Short-term rentals of the Airbnb kind have increased from 7,700 to 8,700. Since eating and playing are as essential as sleeping and showering, travelers can choose among 4,000 restaurant­s (including 1,885 in San Juan), 190 attraction­s, 16 casinos and 13 golf courses. And, finally, the nearly 250 beaches along the 272-mile coastline are back to model form, with pearly white sand and baby blue water.

“New Orleans took eight years to recover,” said Dean, referring to the period after Hurricane Katrina. “Puerto Rico can’t wait eight years.”

Clearly, you won’t have to delay a vacation to Puerto Rico until 2025, but visitors with specific hotel preference­s will have to hang tight for a bit longer. Several properties are in the final stages of renovation­s, including Candelero Beach Resort, St. Regis Bahia Beach Resort, Melia Coco Beach, Condado Plaza Hilton, Caribe Hilton San Juan, Ritz-Carlton San Juan and El Conquistad­or, A Waldorf As- toria Resort and Spa. A few are brand-new to the scene, such as O:LV Fifty Five Boutique Hotel, Aloft Hotels (in San Juan and Ponce) and Four Seasons Cayo Largo. And two – a JW Marriott in Dorado and Dreams Resort and Spa in Guanica – are in the pre-constructi­on phase. Opening dates range from this month to 2020.

Next year, one of the island’s most anticipate­d attraction­s will shake up the Convention District, near Old San Juan. District San Juan will pack an array of entertainm­ent options – urban zip lines, performanc­e venues, hotels, restaurant­s, bars and a day-night disco – into a fiveacre space. Dean described the complex as “L.A. Live! with a Latin feel.”

“A kind of exciting time has come out of the terrible devastatio­n of Hurricane Maria,” he said.

Those who want to look backward can still see remnants of Maria. Bob Gevinski, an islander who worked in the hotel industry, said visitors flying into San Juan’s Luis Muñoz Marín Internatio­nal Airport can still spot the Federal Emergency Management Agency-issued blue tarps on rooftops. At El Yunque National Forest, park officials warn of traffic delays and temporary closures while crews repair the trails. The isle of Vieques, off the east coast, runs on four generators, and routine maintenanc­e checks can cause outages. Its largest property, the 156-room W Hotel, remains shuttered and cloaked in a mystery: Will it or won’t it reopen? (One theory: Management is waiting for the utility to repair the underwater cable to the mainland.)

“You will notice things,” he said, “but it’s not going to prevent you from doing anything.” The hurricane was awful, but not wholly. Some positive developmen­ts did materializ­e in the aftermath. The biolumines­cent bay in Vieques, for one.

“The bay went dark after Maria,” Gevinski said, “but it has never been brighter than right now.” (The Vieques Trust is studying the bay to figure out why.)

The post-Maria climate also generated a flurry of new enterprise­s and expansions and has sparked an entreprene­urial spirit. One example: ferry service to Vieques. Previously, the boat from Fajardo, on the mainland, took 90 minutes. In October, a high-speed catamaran started transporti­ng passengers from the new departure point in Ceiba, trimming an hour off the journey. When the terminal on Mosquito Pier on Vieques opens, the trip will take 15 minutes. At the moment, a one-way ticket costs the same as its pre-hurricane price of $2.

“The communitie­s are taking the experience of the hurricane and making the most of it,” said Annie Mayol, president of the Foundation for Puerto Rico. “They are taking charge of their own destinies.”

Mayol’s nonprofit organizati­on collaborat­es with four municipali­ties on projects with a tourism streak. (It will expand to 10 next year.) One involves the zip line at ToroVerde adventure park in Orocovis – which, before Dubai nosed in, claimed the title of longest in the world.

The owner, who reopened the attraction in March, added restaurant­s and lodging, offering visitors a place to quiet their beating hearts after soaring through the jungle at 60 mph. On the Sausage Route, dining spots injected Puerto Rican culture into the trail of pork, introducin­g live music and artists showcasing and selling their work. On Dec. 1, a farmer in Orocovis started inviting diva campers to glamp on his property, Finca Oro Rojo. When not lounging in their chic tents, guests can set off on nature walks, practice yoga and learn about plantain production.

 ?? El San Juan Hotel photo ?? Beachside pools at El San Juan Hotel in Puerto Rico.
El San Juan Hotel photo Beachside pools at El San Juan Hotel in Puerto Rico.

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