Funding & Investment in Travel
Inside Playa Grande Beach Club, A Boutique Hotel Reimagining Travel to the Dominican Republic
One of Playa Grande Beach Club’s nine standalone villas.
Playa Grande Beach Club
Few destinations do an over-the-top beach vacation like the Dominican Republic. As all-inclusive travel grows in popularity even with the youngest generation of travelers, this Caribbean nation is drawing record-breaking numbers of travelers year-round, many of whom head straight to the island’s oversized resorts.
Beachfront development has long since pushed past the sugar-fine sands of Punta Cana and into new regions, with big-name hotels and resorts sprouting up in spots that were once known mostly to locals. Notably, the country’s first luxury wellness resort, Cayo Levantado Resort, debuted two years ago on a private island in the less-visited region of Samaná.
Meanwhile, the once tiny beach town of Miches is buzzing; Viva Miches by Wyndham, A Trademark All-Inclusive debuted in January, while Zemi Miches Punta Cana All-Inclusive Resort, Curio Collection by Hilton opening its doors less than a month ago.
The less-visited north shore of the Dominican Republic is home to some of the country’s few boutique hotels and resorts.
Playa Grande Beach Club
Now On the North Shore
A mere blip on the map of the Dominican Republic, the area surrounding the small town of Rio San Juan is nearly untouched, even when compared to still growing destinations like Samaná or Miches. But zoom in on Google Maps and you’ll start to see the appeal of this less-visited region: brilliantly white stretches of sand stretch right up to the lush foliage of the tropical jungle. This couldn’t feel further from Punta Cana, but with beaches that are just as nice.
Amidst the larger-than-life developments of other coastlines, the properties here are tiny in comparison. Small, serene, and supremely exclusive, properties like the Aman-branded Amanera and ÀNI Dominican Republic, are quietly rewriting the narrative of the travel to the Dominican Republic as being limited to the oversized and overwhelming.
Even more special still is nearby Playa Grande Beach Club, a boutique property the likes of which there are few in the country, let alone the Caribbean. Home to just nine standalone bungalows spread across a spacious swath of beachfront property carved out of the jungle, its one-of-a-kind design and down-to-earth luxury make it a world all its own.
Celerie Kembel-designed Playa Grande Beach Club.
Playa Grande Beach Club
Inside Playa Grande Beach Club
Stepping off the golden sands of one of the country’s most beautiful beaches and onto the manicured grounds of Playa Grande Beach Club, it’s immediately clear that this is a destination all its own. Even from the beachfront, it’s visible: the property’s meticulously maintained grounds are packed with details to delight visitors. Fringed umbrellas shade beach chairs; vintage furniture fills spaces coated with colorful, handmade tiles; candy-colored drinking glasses for afternoon piña coladas by the pool look like they’re straight out of a doll house.
Playa Grande Beach Club’s praiseworthy design comes as no surprise to those who know its founding story. Among the property’s owners is Celerie Kemble, a renowned designer who had a hand in every detail of its creation and design.
Her distinctly island-inspired, Palm Beach-informed design touches every corner of the property. Each bungalow evokes its own unique spirit, with colorful pastel palettes paired with one-of-a-kind textiles and art collected from remote corners of the world, including from Kemble’s personal travels. The Dominican inspiration of the property is undeniable, calling on classic, colonial-era design in architectural details throughout.
Each bungalow at Playa Grande Beach Club is unique crafted and includes handpicked pieces of furniture, art, and decor.
Playa Grande Beach Club
To step inside your private bungalow, available in one-bedroom, two-bedroom, and three-bedroom layouts, feels like stepping inside a gingerbread house with a tropical twist. Mine mixed a rose and lime green color scheme, that started with the handpicked textiles on pillows and continue to the tiles spread across the bathroom floor. My bungalow had its own kitchen, with a vintage-inspired refrigerator stocked with goodies like Dominican beer, local mangoes and freshly-ground coffee should I want to wake for sunrise on the sand.
The bathroom was its own separate sanctuary, complete with a massive copper soaking tub as the centerpiece of its design. I marveled at its size: how could the floor hold its weight? Did the house have to be built around its oversized port? It was one of a number of supremely special touches that wove together the visceral visual journey at this one-of-a-kind property.
Bungalows each come with kitchens, making it an ideal destination for a longer-term stay.
Playa Grande Beach Club
Home Away From Home
The intentionality of every design detail is Kemble’s love for the property made manifest, giving it lived-in, well-loved quality that makes it comfortable rather than imposing. Perhaps it’s the small size of the property, apt for less than thirty guests at a time, that enhances its homey feel. However, the family-and-friends-first founding of the property is even more likely the source of its welcoming vibe.
While Kemble was the creative mind behind the property’s design, she was just one of a close-knit group of owners who initially intentioned Playa Grande Beach Club to be a private destination reserved just for friends and family. Now, guests can book bungalows for their own home-away-from-home feel.
In addition to just nine bungalows, Playa Grande Beach Club has a main house with a restaurant and bar, a two-story library and lounge, a beachfront pool with a covered lounge area for lazing, and a small gym.
Rio San Juan and Beyond
For such a set-apart property far from the tourist crowds, there’s surprisingly plenty to do just outside the bounds of the resort. One morning I ventured out with a guide who led me up a mountainside that stands between the coastline and the expanses of the island, cracking open fresh coconuts, pointing out tropical fruit laden trees, and explaining the rich vegetation along our trek.
At the end of the path was an incredible viewpoint overlooking the island’s north coast, from which he pointed out the area’s best beaches and departures for the area’s other popular excursions: horseback riding, tours through the forest to swim in millennia-old sinkholes and boat rides through the mangroves.
“Why would anyone want to leave such a precious property?” I had thought, until I realized that I would need to plan a return trip to experience everything there is to do in this still largely untouched region of the country.
Playa Grande Beach Club’s elegant main house, home to the property’s lounge space, bar and restaurant.
Playa Grande Beach Club
The Playa Grande Secret
There is plenty to do during a stay at Playa Grande Beach Club, but noticeable absent is the laundry list of amenities that often feel like a to-do list to modern travelers. Here, the luxury is in the space, the solitude, the stretch of sand that feels almost all your own. It is the serenity of dining in the grand, romantic main house, chatting with friends and family over farm-fresh food highlighting island-inspired flavors.
“The biggest benefit of staying at Playa Grande Beach Club is that you feel like you are in a family,” says Alexandra Jeronimo, General Manager of Playa Grande Beach Club.
“The hotel is a timeless place from yesteryear where generational stories are made,” she says, referencing both the intimate feel of the property and high return rate of guests. At this boutique property, bungalows sometimes book up to a year in advance by guests who don’t want to skip a season at Playa Grande.
It’s a destination to be shared with friends and family, but carefully. “A lot of visitors tend to say things like ‘I don’t know if I should tell anyone about this place, so I’ve decided to tell no one so I can keep it for myself,'” says Jeronimo. After all, what started as a hideaway for a group of close friends and family never lost its essence. Now, it that same sublime peace and welcoming spirit that makes Playa Grande Beach Club such a singular slice of paradise.
Funding & Investment in Travel
Long queues at Malaysia’s checkpoints after country’s worst breakdown in autogates affecting foreign travellers
SINGAPORE: Long queues are taking place at major immigration checkpoints in Malaysia on Saturday (Jul 19) after it reportedly suffered the country’s worst-ever breakdown in the autogate system since Friday noon.
The Star reported that tens of thousands of foreigners were affected, involving more than 200 autogates across the country. However, Malaysian passport holders were able to use the autogates with no issues.
Kuala Lumpur International Airport Terminal 1 and 2, as well as Johor’s Bangunan Sultan Iskandar (BSI) Customs, Immigration and Quarantine complex and Sultan Abu Bakar CIQ (KSAB) were among the entry points affected.
Funding & Investment in Travel
The pretty UK seaside town rammed full of independent shops | UK | News
Salcombe is full of independent shops and tourism is a huge part of the economy (Image: Jonathan Buckmaster)
In Salcombe, everyone is proud to call this place home. It’s easy to see why, especially if you visit on a sunny summer’s day when the sun bounces off the turquoise water. But the seaside town is far from a hidden gem. Visitors return to this pretty part of Devon year after year, bringing with them some serious cash.
Tourism is worth a staggering £266 million a year to the South Hams district, according to council research, and it accounts for one in 10 jobs, with almost 4,500 people working in the industry. However, locals have previously expressed frustration at overcrowding in the peak summer season, when the streets become heaving with visitors, and reports say the small community of 2,000 swells to 20,000.
Crowds watching Rocket Week at the yacht club in Salcombe (Image: Jonathan Buckmaster)
Read more: Direct train to beloved UK seaside town returns after being scrapped
Read more: UK seaside town named ‘one of the most colourful places on Earth’
Salcombe Mayor Jasper Evans showed us around the seaside town (Image: Jonathan Buckmaster)
As we wander through the charming streets full of independent shops towards the yacht club where a race is taking place, we begin to realise just how tight-knit the permanent community is.
Friendly faces regularly stop Mayor Jasper Evans for a chat, and he has a wealth of knowledge on all the local businesses; however, he assures us it’s not so tight-knit that outsiders are not welcomed.
Mr Evans tells the Express: “Tourism is really important. The visitor economy is really important for Salcombe. It’s the main part of the economy.”
He takes us to the harbour through more pretty streets where we chat to an RNLI volunteer, who shares a similar feeling.
He smiles as he tells us: “We all joke about ‘bloody tourists’, but you know, that’s our bread and butter. We love them really when you stop to think. People, in general, are most generous.
“The problem is in the winter, it’s naked. Most locals would say it’s kind of nice to have the town back, but you do look forward to the visitors coming.
“Obviously, the economy is important to all of the locals, but it is also nice to see people around the town. It’s nice to see people who appreciate what we do.”
There are plenty of independent shops in Salcombe (Image: Jonathan Buckmaster)
Howard Davies runs the Salcombe Distillery (Image: Jonathan Buckmaster)
It’s a theme we notice throughout the day as we chat to locals who have made businesses that thrive on tourists searching for uniquely Devonian experiences.
From the Salcombe Brewery to the gin distillery, or the many bustling restaurants and cafes serving up fresh seafood, we start to understand that independent businesses are a huge part of Salcombe’s appeal.
We head to Island Street to the Salcombe Distillery, where a gin-making course is taking place as we chat to the co-founder and director, Howard Davies.
He tells us: “I think what the South West does very well is producing very high quality products, be that food and drink, clothing or accessories.
“Often you can get levels of quality from boutique independent local companies that you may not get from a broader multinational organisation.
“I don’t know what you’re like, but when I go away, I love to buy local. There’s something special about it, and you want to support the local market.”
He adds: “I think for a lot of South West communities, ultimately tourism is a really important part of the economy.
“Now, obviously, it brings challenges because you have locals who live here, and it’s trying to get that balance between affordable housing for people who live locally, but you need employment for people who live locally as well.”
Theo Spink says tourism keeps local people in jobs (Image: Jonathan Buckmaster)
As we wander down Island Street, a place full of artisanal local businesses, we chat to Theo Spink, who lives in the area and works at Luscombe Maye estate agents.
She tells us: “A lot of people, including myself, depend on our jobs for the holiday trade, so people are able to live here because there is business to be had. We are all hugely dependent on that holiday trade.”
When I ask if it’s ever overwhelming, she responds: “It can sometimes be, but I think what people need to remember is that it’s just six weeks.
“It’s those state school holidays where it’s crazy. But if it wasn’t that crazy, people wouldn’t make enough money to sustain their businesses year-round.”
When we chat to Mayor Evans about the volume of tourists, he acknowledges: “It’s very concentrated in the summer season and a few other high points in the year.
“We’re trying to diversify here so that the months when the tourists don’t come, we still have economic activity. It’s really important, we have to remember our permanent residents.”
He tells us that Salcombe also has a fishing industry, which is no better exemplified than in our next stop at the Crab Shed, a friendly seafood restaurant where we see an enormous Devonian crab being served up for lunch to a father and daughter.
As we sit on a bench in the sun overlooking the water, owner Emma Langmaid enthuses: “We love tourism, it’s our business. We’ve got a beautiful place to showcase.
“I think it’s incredibly important, it’s important for everything. Our livelihood is down here, so yes it has to happen.”
Emma Langmaid at the Crab Shed, which serves up generous portions of Devonian crab (Image: Jonathan Buckmaster)
Some people who work in traditional industries have more mixed views, as we learn from Mike Wrigley, who works in one of the few remaining boat yards on Island Street.
The artisanal hub used to be full of workshops, metal workers, riggers and engineers, and we’re told nearly all of the residences on the opposite side of the street have been purchased by second homeowners.
He tells us: “It’s swings and roundabouts. Salcombe has been a tourist town for the best part of 100 years, so it is part of how the place ticks.
“It’s not so much the tourism that’s causing the problem, it is the second homes side of things. There are so many second homes now, it is killing the local community in a way.”
He adds: “Even when I started working in this workshop, there was still a reasonable number of people living in this street, but it’s pretty much all gone, there are only one or two now.
“All the boat yards have disappeared, and there are only three of us here now. It was all workshops [but they have gone too].”
However, he appreciates the atmosphere of tourist season.
He said: “In season, it’s nice because there are a lot of people that make the place feel alive again. It’s only really the school holidays, July and August, that it generally just gets too many. You know, the whole place becomes a struggle to live in.”
Mike Wrigley works at one of the few remaining boatyards in the town (Image: Jonathan Buckmaster)
Island Street used to be full of workshops (Image: Jonathan Buckmaster)
We end our trip by visiting the harbour master, who undoubtedly has the best office view in the town, looking straight onto the water.
With a 22-year career under his belt at the harbour, Cameron Sims-Stirling tells us it is one of the area’s biggest trading points.
He says: “Tourism is a huge part of our everyday living, and keeps us in jobs all year around here.
“I think times have changed. I think there definitely was that sort of, oh second home owners and holidaymakers, but I think the penny dropped and we just went, well, none of us would have jobs. With any seaside town, there can be that delicate balance.”
He smiles as he tells us: “On a day like today, try and beat it. It’s epic. That’s why people come here.” We can’t help but agree.
Funding & Investment in Travel
Japan Tourism: West Japan Train Offers Overnight Travel for Casual Travelers
The West Express Ginga heads toward Shimonoseki with the Seto Inland Sea visible from the windows.
13:22 JST, July 19, 2025
After the retirement of the cross-country long-distance sleeper trains known as “Blue Trains,” the West Express Ginga limited express began operations in September 2020 as an overnight train for casual journeys.
These days, tickets for scenic trains are usually sold as part of package tour products, and if they are treated as charter group trains, they often do not even appear on timetables.
However, the Ginga, operated by West Japan Railway Co., is listed on timetables as a special train which you can ride without being charged a sleeper fee. Passengers are required only to pay a surcharge for a reserved seat express fare or Green Car first class seat. We can say this is a night train with a completely new concept.
The Ginga train is a specially modified 6-car 117-series electric train that was manufactured before JR companies were privatized, and it is painted in a beautiful lapis lazuli blue.
Car No. 1 is equipped with Green Car reserved seats, and Cars No. 2, 3 and 5 have normal reserved seats that include couchettes, reclining seats and family cabins. Car No. 6 has Green Car private rooms, and Car No. 4 consists entirely of free space. Passengers can choose their preferred seat for a long, comfortable ride.
First-class seats that convert into beds in Car No. 1
The Ginga operates on three main routes depending on the season in the Sanyo, Sanin and Kinan (Wakayama) regions. This year, the Sanyo route runs between Kyoto and Shimonoseki stations until Aug. 9, and the Kinan route between Kyoto and Shingu stations in Wakayama Prefecture from Aug. 25 to Oct. 29.
One of the highlights of the West Express Ginga is its hospitality, which rivals that of package tour trains.
A premium room in Car No. 6 offers private space.
The Sanyo route Ginga departs Kyoto at 9:15 p.m., heading west along the Tokaido and Sanyo lines as night falls. The train arrives at Himeji Station at 11:48 p.m. on Fridays only, and departs again at 12:42 a.m., giving passengers time to enjoy Himeji’s famous soba noodles known as “Maneki no Ekisoba” on the platform.
The Seto Inland Sea glistens as the sun rises the next morning. The train stops for about 18 minutes at Yanai Station, where passengers can buy taimeshi, sea bream rice which is a local specialty in ekiben boxed meals, from a vendor on the platform.
A vendor carries a tray of ekiben boxed meals on a platform at Yanai Station. He sells boxes of local specialty taimeshi seabream rice, right.
Tourist information about the Yamaguchi cities of Yanai, Yamaguchi, Ube, Hagi, Iwakuni and Hofu is available in the train, and on specific days, local specialties are sold on board between Iwakuni and Shin-Shimonoseki stations.
The eastbound train departs Shimonoseki at 7:43 p.m. There are no long stops, but the onboard service is excellent. Local specialties from Shimonoseki, Hofu, Shunan, Yamaguchi and Iwakuni cities are sold onboard on specific days. Passengers can also enjoy local sake, beer and other alcoholic beverages as one of the perks of the journey.
Why not enjoy every part of the Sanyo Route while making the Ginga trip full of the excitement of an overnight train ride?
West Express Ginga Sanyo Route
The train runs on Mondays and Fridays from Kyoto to Shimonoseki, and on Wednesdays and Saturdays from Shimonoseki to Kyoto until Aug. 9, except for some dates. One-way fare is ¥12,950 for reclining seats or couchettes. Tickets are available through JR West’s online reservation system and at JR ticket offices.
***
Japan Tourism is presented in collaboration with Ryoko Yomiuri Publication, which publishes Ryoko Yomiuri, a monthly travel magazine. If you are interested in the original Japanese version of this story, click here.
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