Chattanooga Times Free Press

Joy of State

Tourism leaders expect strong summer travel season

- BY ALLISON SHIRK STAFF WRITER

On a sunny Friday afternoon in April, the Miles family walked between buildings at the Tennessee Aquarium downtown, which was the first stop on their three-day vacation to Chattanoog­a. From the Clarksvill­e area, Haley and Keith Miles were in town with their 22-month-old twin sons, Cooper and Owen, with plans to also visit Rock City and the Chattanoog­a Zoo in the coming days.

Attendance at Chattanoog­a’s top attraction­s in March was up 9 percent over March 2017, said Dave Santucci, marketing vice president for the Chattanoog­a Area Convention and Visitors Bureau. April figures are not yet available.

“It’s good, consistent growth for Chattanoog­a,” Santucci said. “There’s no reason to be overly positive or negative.”

After a strong spring break for tourism in the area, tourism officials said they are already seeing a positive response to the city’s new tagline — Chattanoog­a “In a State of Joy” — that was released in February, and they are expecting a steady increase in summer visitors. Chattanoog­a’s $1.1 billion-a-year tourism industry is busiest in the summer months.

While the number of couples attracted to the area is growing, Santucci said Chattanoog­a still remains the “affordable family weekend getaway” compared to bigger cities, such as Nasvhille and Atlanta.

Officials said “In a State of Joy” won out over the 100 taglines originally proposed and promotes Chattanoog­a as being a “joyful” experience while also capitalizi­ng on the fact that

Tennessee is becoming more of a destinatio­n in the region.

The visitor’s bureau spends about $2 million of their roughly $8 million budget on advertisin­g, and a majority of that comes from the county hotel and motel occupancy tax given to the tourism agency. Occupancy tax collection­s rose 60 percent in the past 10 years from $4.5 million in 2008 to $7.6 million last year.

“We want to be responsibl­e stewards and make sure every dollar generates some return,” said Barry White, president and CEO of the tourism bureau. White came from the CVB in Augusta, Ga., after former president and CEO Bob Doak retired last year.

Figures from 2017 show Chattanoog­a hotels sold over 2 million hotel rooms and the area saw 3.5 million visitors overall. The tourism bureau has launched television ads in those markets and pushed the new tagline out over the radio, Facebook, YouTube and other social media.

“We have a lot of competitio­n in the tourism market,” Santucci said. “We have to remind people to come or they will stop coming.”

The new tagline was created before White began his post, but the new tourism head said they’ll keep it around as long as it is resonating with tourists. The visitor’s bureau will also begin a strategic planning process in the coming months – the first time the bureau has undergone one in several years. The bureau will hire an outside firm to create a three-year rolling plan, which will be updated annually.

Tennessee Aquarium spokesman Thom Benson said attendance was up 5 percent this year at Chattanoog­a’s biggest attraction downtown compared to attendance during the spring break period a year ago. Benson said thanks to “aggressive marketing efforts” by the aquarium, the Convention and Visitors Bureau and features in national publicatio­ns, there has been a rise in visitors from outside the primary markets within a 2- to 3-hour driving radius.

For the summer months, the aquarium will hire more employees as tourists flock to the new lemur forest exhibit, free programs offered with admission and special screenings coming to the IMAX theatre, he said.

With local gas prices up by more than 40 cents a gallon from a year ago, industry leaders said they still don’t anticipate the rise in fuel prices to negatively impact hotels and attraction­s. About 75 percent of tourists to the Chattanoog­a area travel from markets within a 2-to-3-hour drive, like Atlanta, Nashville, Birmingham and Knoxville.

“People aren’t likely to change their vacation or weekend plans because of an extra $5 cost of gas,” Santucci said.

Susan Harris, president of See Rock City, said the mountainto­p attraction had a successful spring break and she is looking forward to a successful summer season, as well. Rock City will be holding their Southern Blooms Festival and Founder’s Day celebratio­n this month, and this summer the attraction will host a summer music concert series featuring country and bluegrass acts.

It also won “Travel Attraction of the Year” in April at the Southeast Tourism Society conference.

“We saw strong visitation during the primary spring break weeks, and have been pleased with our guests’ responses to our spring event calendar,” Harris said. “We are looking forward to a successful summer season as we welcome visitors to beautiful Rock City Gardens, Battles for Chattanoog­a and Lookout Mountain.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Top: The sunset reflects in puddles around the Tennessee Aquarium. above: Cory and Rachel Shain, left, of Columbus, Ohio, experience the sturgeon touch tank with their children Solenne, Manny and Simon. right: Tammy and Johnny Mitchell, left, from...
Top: The sunset reflects in puddles around the Tennessee Aquarium. above: Cory and Rachel Shain, left, of Columbus, Ohio, experience the sturgeon touch tank with their children Solenne, Manny and Simon. right: Tammy and Johnny Mitchell, left, from...
 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY TIM BARBER AND STAFF FILE PHOTO ??
STAFF PHOTOS BY TIM BARBER AND STAFF FILE PHOTO
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER ?? David Johnson of Canton, Ga., enjoys watching the otters at the Tennessee Aquarium River Journey building.
STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER David Johnson of Canton, Ga., enjoys watching the otters at the Tennessee Aquarium River Journey building.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States