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Gaga for spas
Virginia resorts go on a spending
binge to give their guests pampered treatment
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Gaga for spas
Pampered treatment for guests
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Spa
treatment, spas
are hot and Wintergreen Resort has
spent $4 million upgrading their facility.
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by Jessica
Sabbath
Virginia Business
April 2006
For Michi Magee, a hot stone
massage at Wintergreen’s
expanded luxury spa is the most relaxing part of her
vacation. When this New Jersey mother of two escapes
to her Wintergreen Resort vacation home in the Blue
Ridge Mountains, she doesn’t miss an opportunity
to indulge in the Lastone Massage at the Wintergarden
Spa. “It’s my favorite thing to do on vacation,” says
Magee, who’s owned a Wintergreen home with her
husband since 2001. “It contributes to the whole
relaxation and getting away experience . . . I also
enjoy the pampering.”
Magee sees the availability
of spa treatments as a necessity in choosing where
to vacation, and she’s
not alone. An increasing number of travelers and
conference goers expect an opportunity to escape
into the soothing
ambiance of a spa and indulge in a range of exotic
treatments, from oatmeal gommage and honey wraps
to aromatherapy massages.
In response to the increasing
demand for spa treatments, Virginia resorts are spending
millions to add or transform
their limited-service spas into luxury “destination
spas,” where guests can escape daily pressures
for a full-fledged spa experience in tranquil surroundings. “The
spa really has made the transformation from being simply
an amenity at a resort to a core element,” says
Kate Mearns, chairman of the International Spa Association
(ISPA) and director of sports and spa at the Kingsmill
Resort & Spa in Williamsburg.
Recently, the Lansdowne Resort
in Loudoun County and Wintergreen opened multimillion-dollar
destination
spas to replace their limited spa options. Later
this year the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation and
the Founders
Inn in Virginia Beach are scheduled to open expansive
spas, and The Homestead in Hot Springs — a well-established
and award-winning destination spa — plans to
almost double its number of treatment rooms in 2007. “Our competitors are
offering the spa experience, and if they don’t, they know they ought to be,” says
Lloyd Williams, vice president of sales and marketing
for Wintergreen, which opened a $4 million overhaul
to its spa in late November. “It’s
almost a given under the category of a resort.”
The spurt of enhanced spas
at Virginia resorts follows a national trend in the
fast-growing $15 billion health
spa industry. There are currently more than 12,000
spas in the United States, according to ISPA, and
resort spas are the industry’s fastest-growing
segment. Between 1999 and 2004, the number of American
spas
increased 128 percent, and the number of resort spas
increased 290 percent.
Mearns attributes the popularity
of spa treatments to increasingly busy lifestyles
and a growing acceptance
of spa treatment benefits. “People want to relax
and balance their lives,” says Mearns, who has
seen an increasing demand for spa services at Kingsmill,
which opened its destination spa in 1996. “When
people are away, whether they’re on vacation
or whether they’re at a conference, they understand
that the spa’s an opportunity to relax.”
Similarities are apparent throughout
Virginia’s
newest resort spas. Each has a wide-ranging menu
of massages, body wraps, facials and salon services,
a
treatment room or two specifically for couple massages
and lounges for relaxation before and after treatments.
Typically, a 50-minute Swedish massage will cost
about $90, a body wrap can range from $95 to $150
and 50-minute
facials run about $95.
Invigorating aromas, earthy hues and soft music await
guests who are encouraged to leave everyday cares behind
as they don thick spa robes and slippers before treatments.
While the ambiance varies from spa to spa, each is
designed to make guests feel pampered and to offer
a distinctive flair, befitting the resort.
Wintergreen, for instance,
used a mountain top location to its advantage. The
resort placed the 12,000-square-foot
spa atop the resort’s highest peak, Devil’s
Knob, giving spa-goers an expansive view of the Blue
Ridge mountains from 4,000 feet above sea level while
they receive services in one of 13 treatment rooms.
The emphasis on natural surroundings is apparent even
at the spa’s entrance where two fountains greet
guests with the relaxing sound of water gurgling
over rocks.
After looking at national trends,
Wintergreen directors decided to morph the resort’s limited-service
spa into a destination spa. “Before, no one was
going to come up here for a spa experience,” says
Williams, since the ski and golf resort offered only
limited services. “Now it’s a destination
spa as opposed to an amenity.”
The resort has already seen
benefits since it opened last November, reports Williams.
Ski guests are staying
longer and advanced bookings for the spring golf
season are up over previous years. In recent weekends,
the
spa has been booked solid. “We’re definitely
seeing an effect in the short term,” says Williams.
A destination spa is one of
the final projects of the $60 million overhaul of
the Lansdowne Resort. The 12,000-square-foot
Spa Minérale opened in March, quadrupling the
size of its former spa, which included just a couple
of treatment rooms. “It’s really being
built as a destination spa, and could stand on its
own and drive business to the resort,” says Josh
Herman, director of public relations for Lansdowne
Resort. “With our old spa, we were sold out
a lot of the time. There obviously was a big demand
for
spa services.”
About 80 percent of the resort’s business is
from meeting and conference guests. Resort directors
hope the new amenities will increase the number of
leisure guests and appeal to meeting planners as well. “We’ve
really done all of these renovations to target more
leisure customers,” says Herman. “Also,
the trend around the country is that groups have more
time for golf and more time for spa activities, and
we’re seeing a huge demand for that.”
The facility includes 13 treatment
rooms and three lounges, each equipped with a fireplace.
Products include
its own Spa Minérale items, many made from Virginia
soils. Nearby Luck Goose Creek Quarry was used to produce
many of the salts, scrubs and muds used in its product
line. The resort also plans to use the dogwood, Virginia’s
state tree and flower, as an astringent in many of
its products.
The Founders Inn in Virginia
Beach is adding a $4.3 million spa set to open May
15 for a simple reason — its
conference guests asked for it. “We’ve
just gotten so many requests for it that we couldn’t
ignore it,” says Steve Migliara, director of
sales and marketing. “We just had to give our
clients what they’re asking for. When we get
overwhelming requests from our clients, we need to
spend our money to stay competitive.”
Conference clients increasingly
want amenities for their guests during free time.
The 10,000-square-foot
spa and fitness center will include six treatment
rooms and a 2,500-square-foot conservatory, with
ceiling-to-floor
windows for spa-goers to relax in over-sized furniture
with views of the resort’s private lake. “This
is so before and after their treatment they’re
not in a lobby, they’re in a nice tranquil environment,
taking some time taking in the entire process,” says
Migliara.
The spa will include a heated
indoor pool and is located steps away from the resort’s new zero-entry outdoor
pool — featuring fountains and a circular slide
for children.
The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation,
which operates five hotels, sees a new spa as the
missing piece to
its resort. “From a hotel product offering, we
have all of the amenities and all of the facilities
of any great resort in the mid-Atlantic area,” says
Perry Goodbar, vice president of hospitality sales
and business development for Colonial Williamsburg. “We
have golf, shopping, dining, tennis, biking. But
overall, the missing element for us was a spa.”
The foundation is renovating
a three-level brick building that once housed its
folk art museum into a 25,000-square-foot
fitness and spa facility that includes 12 treatment
rooms and is scheduled to open in late 2006. The
facility will include an indoor pool. The building
sits between
the Williamsburg Inn and the Williamsburg Lodge and
Conference Center, which is currently undergoing
a major renovation and expansion. “We’ve
always offered limited massages, but no soaking tubs
or further amenities,” says Goodbar. “The
spa just opens up a whole new arena for us in that
regard.”
It will incorporate the historic
theme of Virginia’s
18th century capital, and Goodbar promises it will
be different than a “trendy” spa. The
new spa will join others in the Williamsburg area,
including
Elements, a 3,400-square-foot spa at Great Wolf Lodge,
which opened last year.
An increased demand for luxury
spa services at The Homestead Spa — known as the oldest spa in the
United States — has inspired an expansion of
its spa and fitness facilities starting in 2007 as
part of a five-year renovation of the resort. The project
will likely increase the number of treatment rooms
from 17 to 30. “It’s extremely important
to the customer today that goes on vacation that they
have a place to go to rejuvenate,” says Gary
Cherrett, the Homestead’s vice president of
marketing.
“It’s just exploded,” adds Cherrett. “Ten
or 15 years ago very few hotels had a spa, and now
every hotel and resort has a spa.”
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