Hotels & Accommodations
EDITION Hotels Celebrate National Wellness Month Globally

If you thought luxury hotels were all about the thread count and minibar selection, you clearly haven’t met EDITION Hotels. These design-led havens have decided that wellness isn’t just a trend—it’s a full-blown lifestyle, and they’re laying it on thick.
In fact, their global collection of spas might just be the closest thing to heaven without actually getting struck by lightning on a mountaintop.
From Los Angeles to Reykjavik, EDITION Hotels aren’t merely offering massages and cucumber water—they’re orchestrating wellness symphonies where sound therapy, cold plunges, and Turkish hammams play in perfect harmony. And no, you don’t need to speak fluent yoga to enjoy it.
The West Hollywood EDITION: Zen, but Make It Hollywood
Tucked just off Sunset, The West Hollywood EDITION is where calm gets a facelift. The Spa here is minimalist in the way only Hollywood minimalism can be—calculated down to the larchwood and Venetian plaster. Six private treatment rooms? Check. A dedicated meditation space? Naturally. Saunas and a recovery lounge? But of course.
More than just eye candy, the spa uses plant-based products and treatments that do more than smell nice. “The Spa at The West Hollywood EDITION is the first luxury destination in Los Angeles to unite wellness, mindfulness, and inner beauty through treatments that support ecological well-being and healthy living,” according to the hotel team. Oh, and there’s a 24-hour gym with Peloton bikes for when you feel the guilt creeping in.
The Miami Beach EDITION: Power Nap, No Pillow Required
If you’re after glamour with your grounding, The Miami Beach EDITION has you covered—right down to the custom hammam room on its lower level. Nine private treatment rooms, a full-service beauty lounge, and the kind of relaxation area where you half-expect to see a flamingo in a robe.
Here’s the kicker: you can take a Power Nap that uses Biotic Wave technology to give you the rest equivalent of four hours of sleep in just 30 minutes. Now that’s what I call cheating the system.
The Riviera Maya EDITION at Kanai: Nature, Nurtured
In Mexico, The Riviera Maya EDITION at Kanai looks like it was dropped into a cenote by the gods of relaxation themselves. With hydrotherapy pools, a Turkish hammam, and a steam and chromotherapy bed, it’s like Mother Nature got herself an interior designer.
The Spa’s private cabana-style treatment rooms are each named after local white flowers—Buganvilla, Pasiflora, and the mysteriously exotic Ololiuqui—giving it the feel of a botanical retreat.
“Centred around local florals and aromatics—with a focus on wellness, mindfulness, and personal connection,” the experience is as thoughtful as it is indulgent.
Add a Pool Bar that serves actual healthy drinks (not just minty mojitos), and you’ve got a proper wellness pilgrimage.
The Reykjavik EDITION: Vikings, Volcanoes, and Vibes
Who knew Iceland could be this warm? The Reykjavik EDITION is what happens when Norse mythology meets five-star pampering. By day, the spa serves up post-workout smoothies; by night, it becomes a sleek pre-party pamper zone. We’re talking thermal plunge pools, steam rooms, and hammams—all within snowball’s reach of a glacier.
One treatment, Uruz, is a tribute to hot-cold therapy and Viking ritual. Think salt scrubs, marine mud, hot stones, and chilled marble working in tandem to boost circulation and make you feel more alive than your Tinder profile suggests. “Massages, body wraps, and Bioeffect facials await curious visitors,” the hotel states. Curious? You’ll be converted.
The Bodrum EDITION: Ancient Ritual, Modern Reset
On the sun-kissed Turkish coast, The Bodrum EDITION is a spa-lover’s dream: eight treatment rooms, salt caves, steam rooms, and a hammam that’s as Instagrammable as it is authentic. Mediterranean architecture meets full-body surrender.
The standout? The Stress Release Massage—a signature EDITION Hotels treatment using sweet almond oil and deep-tissue magic to iron out every wrinkle your flight home might leave behind.
According to the team, “Guests can enjoy therapies such as the Optimal Release Massage… or the Stress Release Massage, an EDITION-exclusive experience.”
Final Thoughts (Before Your Next Booking)
This August, as National Wellness Month rolls around, EDITION Hotels are inviting guests to do more than just exist—they’re offering a reason to feel again.
Whether you’re detoxing in Reykjavik, sweating out last night’s cocktails in Miami, or floating in a hydrotherapy pool in Riviera Maya, there’s an EDITION for every kind of weary soul.
So, next time someone says “treat yourself,” tell them you’re headed to EDITION Hotels. And mean it.
Hotels & Accommodations
Why green hotels are adding more plants

The Jewel at Changi airport is a shopping mall that houses 2000 trees and palms and 10,000 shrubs, a hedge maze and a rain vortex cascading seven storeys, the world’s tallest indoor waterfall.
Pan Pacific Orchard is divided into Forest, Garden, Cloud and Beach.Credit: Darren Soh
At the Pan Pacific Orchard on Orchard Road, the impressive 23-storey tower has four separate climate zones – forest, beach, garden and cloud – with dense greenery settings, enormous plant-covered pillars and cascading water features.
And at the new Mandai Rainforest retreat by Banyan Tree, just 30 minutes from Singapore’s central business district, vines trail from platforms and balconies and greenery springs up in every passage and corner of the contemporary building. The plan is for the resort to entirely disappear into the rainforest as the plants grow.
While it’s common to be surrounded by plants at resorts in natural environments like tropical jungles or alpine forests, it’s city hotels that are really getting the green-up.
Some of the hotels in the 1 Hotel brand feature about 4000 plants. Clearly, a few hanging pot plants or rubber trees in pots won’t do any more.
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This is part of a broader healthy building movement, which takes a holistic design approach, viewing the construction of a building and its inhabitants as deeply intertwined; human nature as well as plant nature.
It seems to me that this should be the most fundamental consideration of building design, but I think we’ve all seen buildings that have the opposite effect, ignoring the mental health aspects of existing in spaces unsympathetic to our innate biological connection with nature.
Brutalism appears to be in fashion again, but no matter how visually stunning those spaces are, they’re difficult to live in.
As the global population continues to urbanise, architects and designers are trying to figure out how people can reap the benefits of being in nature without going outside.
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We’re lucky in Australia that even our biggest cities provide access to water, trees and natural light. But other urban environments are often land-locked concrete jungles.
The Japanese have always been respectful of the natural world, and even Tokyo, with its population of 37 million, can feel tranquil because of the access to Zen gardens and gorgeous interior tree plantings.
When we travel, we spend a lot of time in artificial environments – planes and airports, notably. Research shows that guests spend more time in biophilic hotel lobbies and rooms. It’s understandable that we would want to stay in a space that’s green and uplifting.
It’s a green revolution.
Hotels & Accommodations
A long, strange trip from counterculture to $6,000 tickets and fancy hotels

The San Francisco fog, a familiar friend to many Grateful Dead shows, rolled in with an unspoken acknowledgment of this special occasion. Inside the park, a blanket of people gathered across the Polo fields for the band’s 60th anniversary.
My mother, a veteran Deadhead, stood beside me, her eyes welling with tears in awe of nostalgia and revamped joy. Around us, my brothers and their buddies from college, a new generation of Deadheads, mingled along with my mom’s old friends.
But this was not the nonchalant vibe of the 1960s and 1970s nor the parking lots circus of the 1980s and 1990s.
In the early days of the band, and pretty much up to the death of Jerry Garcia and the end of the old Grateful Dead, concert tickets were intentionally kept affordable to legions of fans. (Jerry Day in the city is still free.)
This time, some tickets went for as much as $6,000. Instead of camping on friends’ couches, visitors stayed in fancy hotels like the Fairmont. Some longtime Deadheads refused to go, and one told the Standard that “Jerry is rolling over in his grave.”
The story of the Grateful Dead and San Francisco serves as a meaningful metaphor for the city and its ever-changing transformations.
The Dead, which once came from an ethos that symbolized the rejection and dismissal of greed and establishment culture, is now part of the foundation for the city’s economic strategy. The change from a movement defined by counterculture to a weekend of music that encourages spending and civic pride shows how a historically radical culture has sunk into San Francisco and has been celebrated by the very system it once sought to escape from—and a system that tried to repress it, sometimes violently, in the now-famous Summer of Love.
The Grateful Dead and this city have been linked from the very beginning. The band began here in the defiant days of the 1960s. Back then, fans of the Dead found tickets much easier to get. The access was easier, in general.
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A late 1980s Deadhead told me there was a time when everyone simply ran into the field, at max spending $20-$30 for a concert into the 1990s.
As San Francisco celebrated the 60th anniversary, Dead & Company in Golden Gate Park gave a special opportunity to reflect on the band’s evolution, a story from counterculture to a cultural phenomenon—a direct mirror to the city’s own political and social change.
The Summer of Love took place in Golden Gate Park, and faced a lot of pushback from city officials. Though standing for peace, love, and the simple pleasures of good music, the rise of psychedelic drugs and a new form of rock was overwhelming for the city to manage. The “hippies” were not welcome in a lot of places, and far from celebrated by most city officials.
Today, Mayor Daniel Lurie’s administration has officially embraced the Dead & Company concerts, celebrating them as a “significant cultural milestone” and a key driver of the city’s economic recovery.
The political conversation is dominated by economic concerns right now, especially in the revitalization of San Francisco in a post-pandemic world. The city is actively promoting these concerts to attract people from all over and to boost local businesses, with posters, buses, and street signs advertising the three days of music.
Rather than talking about peace and love, the city trumpets estimates that the concerts will have a $150 million economic impact—a world apart from the anti-capitalist sentiments of the Grateful Dead, and the 1960s counterculture.
Muni was not only providing extra services, but also running Grateful-Dead-inspired buses. Hop on the bus, and it might drop you off at the legendary “Shakedown Street” in Golden Gate Park in the JFK promenade between Transverse Drive and Blue Heron Lake Drive. It was a Deadhead marketplace vendors from all over the country come to offer handmade art, shirts, crystals, roses, and enduring spirits of the Grateful Dead.
The three days of music held much more than the Dead & Company themselves. Doors opened at 2:30 PM with lines throughout the park, anticipation buzzing, and everyone coming in with the collective embrace of good music.
Billy Strings, Stergil Simpson, and Trey Anastasio opened for Dead & Company. Young and old came together to celebrate the music. Tie-dye, bubbles, and glitter were full-out signifying a diverse yet unified crowd: the timeless tunes of the Grateful Dead were the bridge of multi-generational gaps.
Dead & Company came with their imperious blend of widely loved melodies and creatively inspired interpretations of the music, delivering three nights of musical journeys. Whether you’re a fan of the Grateful Dead for 60 years, or a fan for just the weekend, the blend of music revealed beloved classics to unexpected gems.
As the final notes faded on Sunday night, a bittersweet feeling sat in the crowd that night. When the music had stopped, the echoes of good vibes continued. Bob Weir and Mickey Hart stood upon their San Francisco roots in awe of the palpable sense of community.
This weekend was something entirely built from the culture old Deadheads once knew, to the uprising of the new generation of music, with touches of different eras throughout the band’s life. The streets were dancing again. At the corner of Haight and Ashbury, hippies gathered and children sang, spanning through to Golden Gate Park. I knew these shows would be more than just a concert, but a testament to the enduring power the Grateful Dead’s music holds, no matter what point in time.
Hotels & Accommodations
Is Asian Hotels (North) Limited’s (NSE:ASIANHOTNR) 71% ROE Better Than Average?

While some investors are already well versed in financial metrics (hat tip), this article is for those who would like to learn about Return On Equity (ROE) and why it is important. By way of learning-by-doing, we’ll look at ROE to gain a better understanding of Asian Hotels (North) Limited (NSE:ASIANHOTNR).
Return on equity or ROE is a key measure used to assess how efficiently a company’s management is utilizing the company’s capital. In other words, it is a profitability ratio which measures the rate of return on the capital provided by the company’s shareholders.
How Is ROE Calculated?
Return on equity can be calculated by using the formula:
Return on Equity = Net Profit (from continuing operations) ÷ Shareholders’ Equity
So, based on the above formula, the ROE for Asian Hotels (North) is:
71% = ₹1.9b ÷ ₹2.6b (Based on the trailing twelve months to March 2025).
The ‘return’ is the amount earned after tax over the last twelve months. One way to conceptualize this is that for each ₹1 of shareholders’ capital it has, the company made ₹0.71 in profit.
See our latest analysis for Asian Hotels (North)
Does Asian Hotels (North) Have A Good Return On Equity?
One simple way to determine if a company has a good return on equity is to compare it to the average for its industry. However, this method is only useful as a rough check, because companies do differ quite a bit within the same industry classification. Pleasingly, Asian Hotels (North) has a superior ROE than the average (7.3%) in the Hospitality industry.
That is a good sign. With that said, a high ROE doesn’t always indicate high profitability. Especially when a firm uses high levels of debt to finance its debt which may boost its ROE but the high leverage puts the company at risk. You can see the 3 risks we have identified for Asian Hotels (North) by visiting our risks dashboard for free on our platform here.
How Does Debt Impact Return On Equity?
Virtually all companies need money to invest in the business, to grow profits. That cash can come from retained earnings, issuing new shares (equity), or debt. In the case of the first and second options, the ROE will reflect this use of cash, for growth. In the latter case, the debt used for growth will improve returns, but won’t affect the total equity. Thus the use of debt can improve ROE, albeit along with extra risk in the case of stormy weather, metaphorically speaking.
Combining Asian Hotels (North)’s Debt And Its 71% Return On Equity
Asian Hotels (North) does use a high amount of debt to increase returns. It has a debt to equity ratio of 2.10. Its ROE is pretty impressive but, it would have probably been lower without the use of debt. Debt does bring extra risk, so it’s only really worthwhile when a company generates some decent returns from it.
Conclusion
Return on equity is useful for comparing the quality of different businesses. In our books, the highest quality companies have high return on equity, despite low debt. All else being equal, a higher ROE is better.
Having said that, while ROE is a useful indicator of business quality, you’ll have to look at a whole range of factors to determine the right price to buy a stock. The rate at which profits are likely to grow, relative to the expectations of profit growth reflected in the current price, must be considered, too. You can see how the company has grow in the past by looking at this FREE detailed graph of past earnings, revenue and cash flow.
Of course, you might find a fantastic investment by looking elsewhere. So take a peek at this free list of interesting companies.
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Have feedback on this article? Concerned about the content? Get in touch with us directly. Alternatively, email editorial-team (at) simplywallst.com.
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
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