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The Ponte Vedra Inn, Club Spa, a North Florida Landmark since 1928 |
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Hyatt Regency Mission Bay and Blue Marble Spa, San Diego, California |
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The Stoneleigh Hotel & Spa, Dallas, Texas |
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Spa Bali at the Holiday Resort, Tumon, Guam |
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Grand Velas All Suites & Spa Resort, Riviera Maya, Mexico |
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Shane Diet & Lifestyle Resorts at the Honor’s Haven Resort and Spa, New York |
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Don't Miss: Spa Cuisine Recipes of the Month courtesy of the women-only retreat Green Mountain at Fox Run, Vermont
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Dulaya Spa at
The Davis Bangkok Hotel
88 Sukhumvit 24, Klongtoey
Bangkok, Thailand 10110
Tel: (66) 2204 0701 or (66) 2260 8000 Ext 8001
Spa Online:
www.DulayaSpa.com
Hotel Online:
http://www.davisbangkok.net |
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Spa Index
was fortunate to enjoy an unscheduled visit the elegant Davis
Bangkok Hotel and Dulaya Spa this
summer. Travel plans went awry, but
presented our director, Kevin McClain, with two
days with which to enjoy this lovely boutique
hotel, one of our newest members, in the
bustling city of Bangkok. While
Dulaya Spa cannot officially be considered
a "destination spa" due to its compact size
(and its renowned competitors nearby), its does
an exceptionally good job at offering a
comprehensive spa menu in a unique boutique
environment, with impeccable style and
attention to detail. My two
hours in the private Dulaya Spa were
sumptuous, and were it not for my raging
hunger, I would have lingered much longer,
taking in the courtyard and private swimming
available to me. A guest booking in
a stay in the Thai villas, with private
courtyards, chefs in residence, and private spa
experiences, will find a premier spa experience
to rival many other so-called destination spas.
A guest booking a stay in the hotel, with a
visit to the spa, will find the perfect urban
spa experience -- at the perfect cost.
With these two options available to the spa
enthusiast, this is a must-visit spa hotel in
Thailand. |
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THE HOTEL |
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The
Davis Bangkok is a new (2003) boutique hotel with
luxury villas, set in the heart of the Bangkok
business district. It is conveniently
located and easily accessible from both incoming
and outgoing expressways. Having become
increasingly popular over the past year, it is
almost always full, but I was fortunate enough
to book a guest room on short notice.
Bangkok's first boutique hotel is a study in
surprising but harmonious contrasts. I
found it both sleekly modern and warmly
traditional; luxuriously appointed while
comfortable and intimate.
The common areas throughout the
hotel are quite compact, but well-planned and
expertly appointed. The ultra-contemporary
marble lobby takes up the first two levels of
the 9 story hotel. The reception area is on the
ground level, the business center and conference
room son the second level. Both levels are
bathed in beautiful natural light and display
contemporary designs and sculptures.
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All lobby areas
and meeting rooms have a wireless facility with
internet access speeds up to 1,000 Kbps (if
demand is high). Top of the line equipment is
also available within the business centre and
meeting rooms. Rooms have a fax line as
well as data ports for internet access direct
from your room.
My stay at the
Davis Hotel was an unplanned event due to a
change in travel itinerary. What could have been
a irritant turned out to be both a pleasant
opportunity to tour one of our member
properties, but, to experience first-hand a
well-executed business center within a hotel.
Indeed, I fared better with the information
technology available within the property than I
have in many hotels in the United States.
Of marked contrast was a recent experience at a
very popular hotel in New York. I moved to
another hotel in New York just out of sheer
frustration with my inability to stay connected
to my office in San Francisco. That was
not my experience at the Hotel Davis. The
staff was knowledgeable, attentive, and I was up
and running soon after arriving in my guest
room. The business center accommodated all
of my needs for my brief stay, without a single
misstep. |
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THE GUESTROOMS |
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The 164 guest rooms at the
Hotel Davis are broken into several
categories: Superior, Themed, and
Deluxe.
The
Superior rooms are the most economically
priced
and the most conventional by hotel
standards. This is not to suggest
that they are less elegant. Quite the
contrary. While "compact" and "small"
are words often used to describe this
hotel, this is a boutique hotel, and
the space is well-designed. The
Superior rooms are Thai styled with vibrant
colors, and both larger sized and more
elegantly appointed than many other
boutique rooms I've stayed in.
My
superior guest room
offered separate bath and shower cabinet
units, a supply of personal amenities,
along with makeup/shaving mirror, hair
dryer and an extension telephone in the
bathroom. My room was equipped with a
25" Flat Screen TV with remote control
featuring a full selection of local and
satellite TV channels, and I enjoyed
complimentary bottled water and tea.
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The deluxe rooms
(16 of the 164 rooms available) (from $206US)
each feature higher ceilings, and are of a
split-level design. The sleeping area is
contained on the upper level with a short case
leading from the sitting area and bathroom.
While the rooms have the same footprint as the
themed rooms and superior rooms, the split level
design and lofty feeling makes the room feel
more spacious. |
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DULAYA SPA &
FITNESS CENTER |
|
The onsite Spa and
Fitness Facilities were a welcome and
wonderful break in a rushed travel schedule.
Eight treatment rooms, a fully equipped gym, two
steam rooms, a rooftop whirlpool (the view of
the Bangkok skyline from the whirlpool is not to
be missed), and an outdoor swimming pool with
separate changing areas are available for male
and female guests.
Spa and fitness
facilities for Hotel Davis are available
both on the 9th floor of the hotel, and in the
"Baan Davis" Thai villas, where private villas,
dining rooms, a private swimming pool, and spa
services are also located.
Arriving at the
private Dulaya Spa in the Baan Thai
Villas was a unique experience. After
leaving the ultra-modern lobby of the Hotel
Davis, you travel through a garden corridor to
what is a remarkably beautiful and private Thai
village within the hotel grounds. I felt
as if I'd left one area of a contemporary adult
hotel and traveled to a luxury spa theme park of
impeccable taste.
I learned that
that a "Baan" is a complex of several Thai
styled houses or villas, with a pavilion and an
entrance gate, surrounding a common courtyard.
Our western styled "private bungalows" are the
equivalent of a Baan village, but nearly as
beautiful. The Baan Davis, a little
"getaway within the hotel", offers 10 Thai style villas with
meticulous details in each villa, 2-3 bedrooms,
in-villa dining, and other amenities.
Two of these villas have merged
to create the private spa treatment area within
the Baan -- this is the wonderful Dulaya Spa.
I enjoyed the spa's "Coffee
Wonder" package ($48US) as an early morning
treat after having spent 6 hours on
airplanes the preceding day. My "morning
coffee" took on a new twist, as my therapist
mixed ground coffee and essential oils to first
scrub my skin for 45 minutes, after which I
received an hour long expert massage. the
aroma of the ground coffee and oils was
energizing, although I admit it also energized
my appetite, which was a bit distracting. I
hadn't eaten and the aroma of the coffee made me
hungry for breakfast.
When I asked, my
Dulaya Spa therapist told me that
Dulaya means
"balance." The spa works hard to give its
clients a balance between the body, mind, and
soul, which it believes is vital to a wholesome,
healthy and energetic lifestyle. Dulaya Spa offers an
experience of authentic Thai culture and
heritage through the integration of the four
vital elements of the Thai Traditional Medicine:
Water, Fire, Earth, and Air. The spa
experiences include Body Wraps and Scrubs;
Classes and Programs, including water aerobics;
Couples Services; Consultations; Facials; Full
Hair Services; Hydrotherapy; Cosmetic Services,
including Brow and Lash Tint; Manicures and
Pedicures; Massage, including tandem Thai
Massage and Reflexology; Waxing; Online Booking;
Membership Benefits; and Privacy Suites.
While Dulaya
Spa cannot officially be considered a
"destination spa" due to its compact size (and
its renowned competitors nearby), its does an
exceptionally good job at offering a
comprehensive spa menu in a unique boutique
environment, with impeccable style and attention
to detail. My two hours in the
private Dulaya Spa were sumptuous, and
were it not for my raging hunger, I would have
lingered much longer, taking in the courtyard
and private swimming available to me.
A guest booking in a stay in the Thai villas,
with private courtyards, chefs in residence, and
private spa experiences, will find a premier spa
experience to rival many other so-called
destination spas. A guest booking a stay
in the hotel, with a visit to the spa, will find
the perfect urban spa experience -- at the
perfect cost.
My impromptu visit
didn't me time to schedule interviews with the
spa's director or hotel management, but I do
know VSM
Solutions Co Ltd operates the Dulaya Spa,
and, has been officially commissioned by the
Department of Export Promotion of The Ministry
of Commerce Thailand to formulate a franchise
business model of a contemporary "Thai Spa".
Dulaya Spa was set up as the first model of
a contemporary "Thai Spa" and coincided with the
national policy of the Royal Thai Government to
make Thailand a Wellness Center of Asia.
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THE RESTAURANTS |
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The Gallery Cafe
(pictured at left) at the lobby level of the
Hotel Davis offers traditional Thai specialties,
as well as International choices, buffet style,
and operates 24 hours daily. Not wanting
to "experiment" before flying back to the United
States, I enjoyed the traditional vegetarian Pad
Thai and a light broth soup with fresh lime,
both of which were basic but good. I noted
a number of Americans dining on traditional
fare, including pastries and griddle options.
Other choices include Club 88 which is an
after-hours club offering bar food and
cocktails. The pool bar offers healthy
fare and cocktails and smoothies, and room
service is available 24 hours per day.
In-room chefs are provided to guests staying in
the Baan Thai villas with kitchens.
Within steps of the hotel and spa
is "Camp Davis" -- the name given to a complex
of businesses available to guests. The
omnipresent Starbuck's is here, as well as Pola
Pola Restaurant (Italian), Sukothai (Thai), Yum
Tum (a noodle shop), Fuse (cocktails and
appetizers), and Absolute (club). |
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LOCATION |
Situated within
the heart of Bangkok's business district on
Sukhumvit 24, you are a short distance to major
commercial centers, shopping centers and the
convenient Bangkok Transit System (BTS)
sky-train by way of Prompong station. The Davis
can be accessed from both Sukhumvit Road and
Rama V Road, providing close proximity to the
access points of in bound and outbound
expressways as well as direct routes to the
Silom and Sathorn areas.
- Bangkok
International Airport - 30 km., 30 minutes by
car
- Hua Lampong
Railway Station - 10 km., 30 minutes by car
- Skytrain
-Prompong Station - 5 minutes by car - 10
blocks on foot
- Chao Praya
River - 30 minutes by car
- World Trade
Center - 20 minutes by car
- Silom Road -
20 minutes by car
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LOCAL
ATTRACTIONS
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The Hotel
Davis is centrally located to most of the
tourist attractions and business centers in
Bangkok, including the Grand Palace and Wat
Phra Kaew, the Royal Barges National
Museum, housing a collection of ceremonial
barges (spectacular), the Floating markets at
Klong Damneonsaduak, and Jim Thompson
Thai House Museum (pictured at left).
The Jim Thompson
House is the home of James H.W. Thompson,
a self-made American entrepreneur who was the
founder of the world renowned Jim Thompson Thai
Silk Company. Thompson's achievements during
his 25 year stay in the Kingdom of Thailand
have won him much fame as the "Legendary
American of Thailand".
James Harrison
Wilson Thompson was born in Greenville,
Delaware in 1906. He attended public schools in
Wilmington, went on to boarding school at St.
Paul's and attended Princeton University, the
family university, from 1924 to 1928.
Although Thompson had a keen interest in art,
he chose to become an architect and went on to
study architecture at the University of
Pennsylvania. He was a practicing architect in
New York City until 1940. His
service in the OSS during the war took him to
Asia, where he fell in love with the environs
and its people. With his natural flair
for design and color, and driven by his
single-minded dedication to reviving the craft,
Thompson soon gained worldwide recognition for
his success in rebuilding the silk industry,
for generating international demand for Thai
silk and for contributing to the growth of the
silk industry. However, during the Easter
weekend in 1967, Thompson disappeared while on
holiday with friends in Cameron Highlands, a
northern Malaysian resort. An extensive and
extended search failed to reveal any clues
about his disappearance.
"In the twenty years before his ill-fated
holiday in Malaysia, he had accomplished more
than most men in a full life. He had built a
major industry in a remote and little known
country whose language he could not speak; he
had become an authority on an art that,
previously, he scarcely knew existed and had
assembled a collection that attracted scholars
from all over the world; he had built a home
that was a work of art in itself and one of the
landmarks of Bangkok; and, in the process of
doing all this, he had become a sort of
landmark himself, a personality so widely known
in his adopted homeland that a letter addressed
simply 'Jim Thompson, Bangkok' found its way to
him in a city of three and a half million
people."
Source:
Jim
Thompson Thai House Museum.
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