The Heart of Four Seasons

For 60 years, Four Seasons has set the standard for service and hospitality, never wavering from its focus on prioritizing people – both guests and team members. In a three-part series, we’re introducing you to 60 Four Seasons people who are sharing what they’ve learned, what they love and what they’re looking forward to. Our first story explored the 2000s to the present; here, we’ll look at the 1980s and 1990s, and how the innovation of those decades helped shape Four Seasons. In the next few months, we’ll culminate with the brand’s beginnings – and its founder, Isadore Sharp. We’re proud and grateful to celebrate him and the people who continue to make his dream a reality.

 

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1990 to 1999: Growing the Four Seasons Family

As the century and millennium drew to a close, Four Seasons focused on new openings around the world, including tropical getaways, historic renovations and properties in Asia.

Betty Chan joined the Four Seasons team in 1995 as part of the Worldwide Sales Office in Hong Kong. After sales roles in Shanghai and for the group of Thailand resorts, she became director of marketing for the new Four Seasons Hotel Bangkok at Chao Phraya River in 2019, as part of its pre-opening team. There’s a reason she’s been with Four Seasons for more than a quarter-century and a reason it feels like home: “I love the fact I can be myself,” she says. “My voice is being heard, and I love the culture of giving and getting feedback so I can improve myself.”

That same spirit – the perfect blend of comfort and exploration – is, of course, what makes Four Seasons so special to guests, too. By the 1990s, Four Seasons was recognized as a leader in the hospitality industry. Experienced travellers knew that they would find exceptional service with the brand, and the brand knew that guests were ready for more.

People who had stayed with Four Seasons on business trips were ready spend their leisure trips with the brand, too. “Corporate clients who love our exceptional service want to spend their holidays with Four Seasons too,” Chan says, “so it was important for us to develop more resort properties.”

And so, Four Seasons kicked off the decade with the launch of its first tropical resort, in Maui, followed soon after by the opening of its Nevis resort. By the end of the decade, Four Seasons had also welcomed the Maldives into the fold – capturing the attention and devotion of scuba divers, and setting the scene for the later addition of Four Seasons Explorer, a private cruising yacht that would introduce guests to even more of the Maldivian atolls’ wonders. While Four Seasons had always offered luxury and ease, now it was beginning to offer true global adventure.

In addition to the leaps and bounds in resort travel, Four Seasons also grew exponentially in Asia and the Pacific, beginning with openings in Tokyo and Hong Kong. For Four Seasons, the region represented a world of opportunity – for growing the brand, yes, but more importantly, for expanding guests’ horizons and connecting them to the world in the ways they needed and wanted. “Business travel to Asia increases every year, and Asia also offers great value for holidays,” Chan says. “It’s easy for long-haul travellers to experience different cultures in one trip by travelling to many countries – or having very different experiences within one country. For example, in Thailand, they can visit the Grand Palace and temples in the capital city of Bangkok, hop on a short flight to go glamping in the jungle at Four Seasons Tented Camp at Golden Triangle, and then end their trip relaxing on the beach at Koh Samui.”

On more than one occasion, the new properties introduced in this part of the world in the 1990s prompted whole new ways of thinking about the resort experience, breaking away from the standard industry approach and shaping the direction of Four Seasons for decades to come. Private pavilion accommodations drew guests to Four Seasons Resort Bali at Jimbaran Bay and were precursors to the luxury tents at Four Seasons Tented Camp Golden Triangle. Four Seasons also opened an inland resort at Chiang Mai, a concept echoed later in California and in Hampshire, England.

Four Seasons Resort Chiang Mai is especially close to my heart,” Chan says. “I joined the same year the Resort opened, and it was the first property I visited while working at the Worldwide Sales Office. At the time, there was no luxury resort in Chiang Mai, and Four Seasons really put the destination on the map. It was a ‘love at first sight’ experience for me on my first visit. There was something magical and spiritual about the place, and I returned every year and even honeymooned at the resort.”

Four Seasons captured a different kind of magic in the 1990s, too: historic restorations. The first of these was the conversion of a Renaissance convent in Milan, followed by properties in Istanbul and Paris. “During my time in sales, our clients in Asia were particularly interested in Four Seasons Hotel Istanbul at Sultanahmet and intrigued by the story of how we turned a prison into a hotel,” Chan says.

Today, in her marketing role, Chan has a special fondness for one particular innovation of that decade: the Four Seasons website and online presence. When it was launched, “I was still fairly new to the company,” she says. “I remember looking at the images and was in awe and inspired by the destinations. At the time there were only about 40 properties in the world. In my current role, I understand that the website is a great channel for us to tell the stories of our craftspeople and to share images and inspiration.”

The decade brought growth that was both rooted and responsive. “One success of Four Seasons has been its ability to change with the times,” Chan says. “The company continues to evolve and never stops growing. I look forward to the continual innovations targeting future generations of travellers and how we can adapt to their needs and expectations.”

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1980 to 1989: International Expansion

Four Seasons began to rethink its identity in the 1980s, shifting to a new business model, solidifying its commitment to the Golden Rule and continuing its expansion into the neighbouring U.S.

“I have always believed that the sky is the limit, but my time with Four Seasons has shown that to truly be the case,” says Mohamed “Mo” Elbanna, Regional Vice President and General Manager at Four Seasons Resort Palm Beach. Originally from Cairo, Elbanna was lured away from the family textile business by the glamour of the hospitality industry. He joined Four Seasons in 2002 as part of the opening team at Four Seasons Resort Sharm El Sheikh, and then moved to the U.S. in 2008. He has been in the Americas ever since, with promotions taking him to Chicago, Nevis, Westlake Village in California, and now, South Florida, where he leads the Miami, Palm Beach, Fort Lauderdale and Surfside properties in addition to a few in other parts of the U.S.

Expansion into the U.S. hit its stride in the 1980s, with openings in Philadelphia, Boston, Dallas, Los Angeles and Chicago, among others. They joined existing Four Seasons properties in San Francisco and Washington, DC. “An expansion into the United States was a natural step,” Elbanna says. “Not only is it Canada’s nearest international market, but it’s also one of the largest in the world. Growing beyond the border, touching down in some of the most iconic cities in the United States made a splash, letting the world know that Four Seasons was ready to take on the world’s luxury hotel market.”

That readiness grew partly from an internal business transformation, as Four Seasons shifted from being a hotel owner-operator to being a management company. “This transition made us more focused on service and people rather than managing real estate development,” Elbanna says. “The model allowed us to shift focus to our people, the key to our success. We are still a company built on people, a pillar of our service culture.”

It was a natural evolution for Four Seasons after the company kicked off the decade with a key strategic decision to focus on its company culture. The philosophy of service had always been implicit, but in 1980, Isadore Sharp and his team made it explicit, with a formal credo founded on the Golden Rule: We treat others – all others: customers, employees, partners, suppliers – as we would wish to be treated.

Elbanna cites the adoption of the Golden Rule as easily the most important development of the decade. “It’s a simple ideology in concept, but it takes commitment to deliver that through our actions every day,” he says. “The fact that one saying grounds each and every one of us, wherever we are in the world – and that it still holds just as true today as it did back then – means that it was monumental, that it’s part of our DNA and who we are at the core, and that it always will be.”

Along with that, though, Elbanna points to the 1985 introduction of branded Private Residences as one of the decade’s most impressive legacies. “It takes both courage and ingenuity to branch out and integrate a new business component like that,” he says. Starting with the first residential offering in Boston, “Four Seasons was a trailblazer in the evolution of branded residences, and now almost every new property has a residential component. This was the first step in taking a hospitality brand on a journey to become a lifestyle community.”

A year later, Four Seasons chose Texas as the place to go big with two new developments: a full-service spa and the addition of golf, both at Four Seasons Resort and Club Dallas at Las Colinas. That same year, Four Seasons launched its custom mattress. Every new innovation was centred around the Golden Rule, making a Four Seasons stay about a more complete guest experience and forever changing the expectation of luxury hospitality.

By the end of the decade, Four Seasons had grown to 10,000 employees, all focused on service. “We all truly beat with one heart,” Elbanna says. “We all care about each other both professionally and personally. It’s about delivering on both the guest and employee experience every day.”

In thinking about the brand’s future, Elbanna envisions Four Seasons inspiring “all facets of life,” he says. “Beyond hotels and resorts, we are already touching on life experiences from air to land, from sea to sky, from shopping to sporting. I believe this is only the beginning of our ability to make life richer by making space for people to connect to each other and to the world.”

Check back later this year to meet Four Seasons founder Isadore Sharp and to journey deeper into the story of Four Seasons through the decades.

The Water Sports to Conquer on Your Next Trip



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Deep Impact in Maldives

In this private submarine experience, Four Seasons Resort Maldives at Landaa Giraavaru gives you and a guest a first-class ticket to the bustling underworld of Baa Atoll, the Maldives’ only UNESCO Biosphere Reserve. Piloted excursions in DeepFlight’s first three-person submarine – the Super Falcon 3S – allow you to explore the reefs in the comfort of a pressurized, climate-controlled cabin with individual viewing domes affording 360-degree views.

You’ll cruise past coral and through kaleidoscopic schools of fish – and maybe even alongside sharks, turtles, stingrays or dolphins – while your knowledgeable pilot dispenses facts about the plants and animals that call this fascinating ecosystem home.

Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger in Hualalai

Triathlon training is tough. So why not do it in one of the most beautiful places on earth, under the tutelage of a six-time Ironman World Champion? Four times a year, Four Seasons Resort Hualalai offers the rare opportunity to train with Ironman Hall of Famer and master coach Dave Scott. Each five-day clinic includes intensive training in swimming, cycling, running, nutrition, strength and flexibility, plus video analysis and a personal consultation.

The 28,000-square-foot Hualalai Spa is at the ready with massage, whirlpools, saunas, steam rooms and cold plunges. But the greatest perk is your training ground. “Kona is such a beautiful place, and it makes training here all the more memorable,” Scott says. “We bike on roads that run between the green mountains and the sparkling blue ocean, run next to black lava rock fields and swim in the crystal-clear ocean alongside Hawaiian sea life. Four Seasons Resort Hualalai is unique in that it has some of the most beautiful open-water swimming areas in the world, as well as an amazing 25-metre lap pool, so I can diversify my coaching in the two swimming environments.”


Paddleboarding in San Diego

Balancing Act in San Diego

Freshwater mingles with saltwater at Agua Hedionda Lagoon, an aquatic sanctuary teeming with wildlife just 15 minutes from Four Seasons Residence Club Aviara. These brackish waters are an irresistible environment for some 70 species of fish and 192 species of birds, from red-tailed hawks to hummingbirds. Experience this robust nature preserve via the Residence Club’s paddleboard adventure. You’ll take a Beau Lake paddleboard – a gel-coated mahogany masterpiece, essentially the Mercedes S-Class of paddleboards – that’s as comfortable for a beginner as it is for the accomplished rider.

“The adventure begins on the shore, where we get an orientation of the lagoon and a quick paddleboarding lesson,” says Resort Assistant Manager Joanna George. “We start early in the morning, when the water is the smoothest. It’s a calm and soothing ride. We often see fish jumping out of the water.” 


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Coral-Friendly Snorkelling in Bora Bora

At Four Seasons Resort Bora Bora, it’s easy to find a lagoon teeming with tropical sea life – there’s one within the confines of the Resort. Sign up for a guided snorkel, or help biologists at the on-site research centre as they work to build and restore the ecosystem in and around the property. “Our main duty is to take care of the coral colonies, so we start by explaining to guests the importance of coral to the ecosystem,” says marine biologist Sylvain Lenoir. “We also tell them about the technology we use to help the coral grow, then we go snorkelling with them to show them the different techniques.

“Guests can adopt a GPS-enabled coral nubbin and track it as it grows on our artificial reef,” Lenoir says. “They can also be part of a worldwide study by documenting levels of coral bleaching as they explore the waters around the Resort.”


Kayaking in Costa Rica

Bay Watch in Costa Rica

Four Seasons Resort Costa Rica at Peninsula Papagayo fronts the Bay of Culebra in Costa Rica’s northwestern corner, and its calm, cerulean waters are ripe for exploring. The best way to get up close with local sea life? A guided kayak ride with the Resort’s on-site adventure staff. In your self-propelled vessel, you can paddle out to gain the best vantage of the island and its volcanic Guanacaste mountain range and tropical rainforest beyond. Humpback whales arrive to deliver their babies between August and December.

“We normally take guests to Nacascolo Beach, and on the way we sometimes have the humpback whales swimming beside us,” says Recreation Supervisor Alonso Rodríguez. “You might also see dolphins, spotted eagle rays, sting rays, devil rays and lots of fish. When we get to the beach we show you some of the animals we see in that area, like howler monkeys. Kayaking is very relaxing, and it allows people to disconnect.”


Swimming with sharks

Swim Meet in O‘ahu

If anyone has the right name for a career in marine biology, it’s Ocean Ramsey. A certified scuba instructor and professional free diver, the Hawaii native has made it her life’s work to foster understanding and appreciation of the ocean as a whole, but especially sharks. In Ramsey’s day job – running her own marine research and conservation company, One Ocean Research and Diving – she studies shark behaviour by swimming alongside them, and promotes their intelligence and important role in shaping ecosystems. (Photographs of her freediving with great whites are eye candy for her half-million Instagram followers.)

Guests of Four Seasons Resort O‘ahu at Ko Olina can join Ocean, or one of her crew, in a research trip to swim with sandbar or Galápagos sharks. You’ll get the low-down on shark biology, physiology and behaviour, then don a snorkel and climb down the swim ladder. “I find that no matter how much I talk to people about sharks, they don’t truly believe me until they see for themselves,” Ramsey says. “After experiencing the program, participants have a much more realistic perspective on how sharks behave and how we can adapt our behavior to peacefully coexist – both in the water and in the global community through conservation.”


Jetblades in Langkawi

Up and Away in Langkawi

You may have heard of jetpacks – high-tech backpacks that send you skyward with a hose full of rapidly moving water. Now behold Jetblades, small-scale wakeboards of sorts that use the same technology but allow you to spin, swoop, flip and swirl through the sky with more control. Four Seasons Resort Langkawi is the first resort in Malaysia to offer this thrilling experience. Strap into your boots and prepare for a wild ride over the Andaman Sea.

New Guard: Cultural Flagships From Seattle to Beijing

The second half of this year sees a long list of new museum openings – and expansions to some of the world’s top collections. Which are worth a first visit or a fresh look? From a modern art wonderland in Maryland to an astounding array of photographs in London, these collections should be on your itinerary.


A rendering of the approach to The Pavillons and the Water Court.

Glenstone Museum, Potomac

Less than 15 miles outside Washington, D.C., Glenstone solidifies its reputation as a must-visit for contemporary art fans with an expanded exhibition space known as the Pavilions. The new building, designed by Thomas Phifer and Partners, comprises 13 distinct areas, with work in the inaugural installation from artists such as Roni Horn, Brice Marden and On Kawara. Glenstone is also launching “Louise Bourgeois: To Unravel a Torment,” featuring more than 30 pieces spanning five decades from the trailblazing French-born American artist. Save time to wander the more than 230 acres of rolling pastures and unspoiled woodland, home to sculptures by Richard Serra, Jeff Koons and Andy Goldsworthy.

V&A Photography Centre, London

The Victoria & Albert Museum has been acquiring photographs since its founding in 1856, and the collection is one of the largest in the world. With the recent addition of 6,000 cameras and other equipment from the Royal Photographic Society, the museum tasked David Kohn Architects with designing a new home. The photography centre, on the first floor of the historic North East Quarter of the V&A’s South Kensington building, will display hundreds of thousands of rare images from luminaries like Ansel Adams and Alfred Stieglitz.

The Guardian Art Center, Beijing

Built on the doorstep of Beijing’s historic Forbidden City, The Guardian Art Center seeks to re-establish the area as the heart of China’s art scene.

The first auction house to specialize exclusively in Chinese artwork and antiques, it also includes a café and bookshop, office space, and 1,700 square metres (18,300 square feet) of exhibition space, making it the only one-stop art complex in Asia. Designed by architect Büro Ole Scheeren, the building references Beijing’s past: Circular lenses in the façade allow light into the interior, creating a pixelated abstraction of Dwelling in the Fuchun Mountains by 14th-century painter Huang Gongway. Rectangular glass panels on the upper part of the building evoke the brick of the centuries-old hutong dwellings nearby.


Nordic Heritage Museum, Seattle

Nordic Heritage Museum, Seattle

Step into a soaring central hallway designed to evoke the glacier planes of a fjord, with angular walls that narrow as you go deeper inside. The freshly reopened Nordic Heritage Museum has a new home, created by Seattle’s Mithun architects in collaboration with renowned Finnish architect Juhani Pallasmaa. It’s still in the hip waterfront neighbourhood of Ballard, and still full of rich insight into the legacy of immigrants to the U.S. New exhibitions this season include “Northern Exposure: Contemporary Nordic Arts Revealed,” a collection of works from leading artists across Iceland, the Faroe Islands and Scandinavia.

Your Journey Begins Here

Where will your cultural cravings take you next?

The Four Seasons Welcomes You Won’t Soon Forget


Rowboat arrival in Hangzhou

Rowed Trip

Guests of Four Seasons Hotel Hangzhou at West Lake arrive at the Hotel not by plane or train, but traditional wooden rowboat. The 45- to 60-minute trip is a tranquil tour of West Lake, a body of water that has long inspired poets, painters and philosophers. Sip longjing tea and glide past temples, floating lotus groves and ancient causeways with arched bridges on your way to the Hotel, idyllically nestled in the flora.


Little girl at Four Seasons

Kids Win

Let’s face it: Hotel check-in has never topped any kid’s list of happy vacation moments – until now. The thoughtful staff of Four Seasons Hotel Boston has transformed an otherwise mundane moment for children into one to remember.

As families check in, a welcoming staffer pulls around a red wagon filled with small stuffed animals, inviting kids to pick (and keep) their favourite. Children then complete a clipboard questionnaire that’s used to customize their stay. Pro tip for parents: Book the “Kids Adventure Package” and prepare to wow your brood with the greatest arrival gift of all – a dreamy tent complete with luxury linens, a souvenir pillow and a special “glamping” gift, set up in your room.


Arrival into Nevis

Speedy Cruise

Like a drumroll introducing the main event, the journey to Four Seasons Resort Nevis is part of the Resort’s appeal. After touching down at Robert L. Bradshaw International Airport on St. Kitts, you’ll cruise to Christophe Harbour on a ribbon-like road, taking in sweeping ocean views at every turn. Order a rum punch at the harbour bar before boarding the gleaming white Four Seasons speedboat. Verdant Nevis Peak gradually comes into sharper focus, and in less than 20 minutes you’ve arrived at the Edenic island known as Nevis. Just follow your Four Seasons guide down the pier to the white sand beach and the palm-shrouded string of pastel gingerbread buildings beyond.


A couple takes part in a Balinese blessing

Balinese Blessings

Upon arrival at Four Seasons Resort Bali at Jimbaran Bay, you’ll be greeted with fragrant frangipani – a Balinese symbol of purity and immortality – and make your way to an open-air temple fronting the turquoise waters of the bay. Here, Resort priest Ajik Ngurah, a chakra healer and meditation teacher, conducts traditional Balinese ceremonies and blessing rituals. For road-weary guests, he can offer a special welcome blessing: Close your eyes, breathe deeply and allow gentle spritzes of holy water to wash away all the burdens and stresses of daily life and help balance your energy.


A girl and a Bernese Mountain Dog

Puppy Love

You know that heart-full feeling you get when your dog greets you in a frenzy of licking and tail-wagging? Feel it whether or not you’re a pet owner at Four Seasons Hotel Megève, where a young Bernese mountain dog named Nemo waits by the door. Just like Nemo, this iconic ski town in the French Alps has a pedigree – the Baroness Noémie de Rothschild famously vacationed here, and built a ski resort in the 1920s. As if Nemo’s welcome weren’t enough, during ski season guests are ferried to and from the Mont d’Arbois slopes in horse-drawn carriages. Baroness Rothschild would be proud.


Couple embarks on a private charter to Lanai

Flying High

Say goodbye to hours-long layovers in Honolulu. Four Seasons Resort Lanai now offers private air charters, and the trip couldn’t be simpler: Land in Honolulu, allow airline staff to transport your luggage, board the Lanai Airlines PC-12 and be on your way. The planes run on a flexible daily schedule and seat 2 to 8 passengers, so whether you’re going as a couple or as a family, the aircraft’s all yours. At the landing pad in Lanai, a Four Seasons Ambassador awaits with keys to a Mercedes Sprinter or luxury SUV – the comfortable final leg of your trip to Hawaii’s wildest island.

Your Journey Begins Here

Greet your next adventure.

Your Most Instagrammable Day in Toronto

World-class museums, thoroughly charming neighborhoods and a restaurant selection even New Yorkers would envy – it’s no surprise that Toronto is tops. We turned to guests and staff of the 55-storey Four Seasons Hotel Toronto – the flagship property in the Four Seasons portfolio, not to mention the birthplace of the brand – for their most shareable memories, including what room service to order for breakfast and where to nab a cocktail in a 19th-century former speakeasy. Here, get a play-by-play rundown of Toronto’s most cinematic sights.

MORNING

Sunrise Sustenance

There’s no better place to catch the sunrise over Toronto’s tony Yorkville neighborhood than from your sumptuous bed, overlooking floor-to-ceiling windows that peep out on the city.

All 259 guest rooms feature down-swathed Signature Four Seasons beds – the ideal lounging spot for awaiting room service. “For a sunrise view, request a room facing east,” says Carolina Avaria, the Hotel’s Chef Concierge and Director of Communications for Les Clefs d’Or, an organization of the globe’s top hotel concierges. Her go-to room service breakfast orders? “The lemon ricotta pancakes are our trademark breakfast item if you’re looking for something sweet. For something savoury, the avocado toast and the Canadian breakfast never disappoint. And we also have healthy smoothies, including the Blueberry Antioxidant and the Power Green.”

 

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Kick Off the Day with Culture

Among the most beloved sites in Toronto, Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) – the largest museum in the country – provides a sophisticated start to your day. “It’s just a block away from our Hotel, which is phenomenal,” Avaria says of the 1914 museum, which sports a glass and aluminum façade by architect Daniel Libeskind called The Crystal. “They have the best rock collection in the world and the largest exhibition of Chinese artifacts outside of China. You can spend two hours to an entire day in there, and it’s only a seven-minute walk away.” Don’t leave without stopping by the 6,000-square-foot Institute for Contemporary Culture, where modern works (from street art to style star photography) take center stage.

AFTERNOON

 

 

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Pretty Pick-Me-Up

If you’re feeling peckish after nonstop gaping at the museum, swing by family-owned Sorelle and Co. – one of Avaria’s favourite spots for a restorative afternoon coffee or tea and gluten-free, vegan sweets. “It’s adorable, with seriously perfect, Instagrammable decor,” she says. “Not only is it a great, cozy atmosphere, but it’s truly beautiful, with little roses on each round table. The walls are all glass, so you can see outside to Yorkville.” Order a Toronto-made Sloane tea (the vanilla bean rooibos is a classic) and a lemon brûlée tart for a bit of edible R & R.

 

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Brunch With a Side of History

Bar Reyna is housed in an old row house built in the 1850s,” says Avaria, who has lived and worked in Yorkville for 16 years. “In the 1960s there was a massive hippie movement, and all of the Americans avoiding the draft came to Yorkville.” At Bar Reyna, a former speakeasy, Mediterranean-inspired dishes like baklava French toast in mulberry syrup lure – as does the leafy back patio. Avaria’s cocktail of choice? The Mezcal Smokeshow. “I love it because it’s rimmed with Hawaiian black salt, a unique ingredient I haven’t seen anywhere else.”

Lap Time

Take a leisurely walk back to the Hotel through the bustling Yorkville neighborhood, and then head to the ninth floor for a dip in the 13-metre-long pool, where floor-to-ceiling windows reveal the surrounding cityscape. “All Hotel and Spa guests have full access to the pool and adjacent whirlpool, which are ideal for either a relaxing soak or vigorous exercise,” Avaria says. “Guests love standing out on the Spa’s terrace to take in the view.” Upgrade your swim with a Spa treatment, such as a Himalayan Salt Stone Massage, during which you’ll be rubbed down with the 200-million-year-old mineral.

EVENING

Dine in Style

Among the dozens of truly exquisite restaurants in Toronto, the Hotel’s own French brasserie Café Boulud is touted as the best in the city. “It’s one of celebrity chef Daniel Boulud’s only two restaurants in all of Canada, with beautiful mid-century interior design by London-based Martin Brudnizki,” Avaria says. “The menu, designed in collaboration with Chef Boulud and Chef de Cuisine Sylvain Assié, is rooted in soulful French cuisine inspired by Lyonnaise classics and Boulud’s upbringing on a family farm in the small village of Saint-Pierre-de-Chandieu.” The most ordered dish? The rotisserie chicken, which is slowly cooked to perfection on what Avaria deems the Rolls-Royce of rotisseries, a Rotisol imported directly from France. “Another standout: the plateau de fruits de mer, a seafood tower including oysters, shrimp, crab, clams, mussels and half-lobster. For dessert, you must order the profiteroles, which are one of the most popular desserts in all of Toronto on Instagram.”

A Bubbly Finish

The preferred way to cap off a delicious day in Toronto is by sipping your favourite Champagne from your private soaking tub lofted over the city. “Every room in our Hotel has a bathtub, but book the Presidential or Royal suite to enjoy a soak by a window overlooking Yorkville,” Avaria says. Custom-made body products tailored specifically for the Hotel by Vicolo Fiori’s fragrance line with Etro Milano amplify this only-in-Toronto treat.

YOUR JOURNEY BEGINS HERE

Where do you picture yourself next?

Toronto skyline