Asia/Singapore Tuesday, 9th June 2026
Page 1102

Tourism Australia gets more money to court Asians

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TOURISM Australia will receive A$12.5 million (US$12.8 million) for the second tranche of the government’s Asia Marketing Fund by July 1, an amount dedicated to growing Asian footfalls during the 2013/2014 financial year.

Speaking to TTGmice e-Weekly in an interview, Andrew McEvoy, managing director of Tourism Australia, explained that the fund was a percentage of the Passenger Movement Charge. “So the more people travel, the bigger the fund will get,” he said.

The Asia Marketing Fund comes on top of Tourism Australia’s overall budget for destination promotion across the world.

According to McEvoy, part of the second phase of funding will be used to “up the ante on business events in Australia”.

He said: “We will invest some of the money into doing what we do well in this business events sector. That means the usual trade shows, road shows, but more importantly, efforts to get planners to come to Australia. We will be doing familiarisations bigger and better.

“We have Dreamtime (a premier incentive business showcase) at the end of this year (in Melbourne), and we will do that exceptionally well. We will have 125 (MICE) buyers from around the world, a lot of them – perhaps half or a little more – will be from Asia.”

The fund will also be used on “aviation attraction or aviation partnerships” across Asia to create more air access from the region into Australia.

Tourism Australia’s efforts to attract more Chinese leisure and business travellers will get a financial boost too.

McEvoy said: “We undertook last year our second-tier city strategy in China. We have been very active in 11 cities around Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. This year we’ve gone into Chengdu, Chongqing and Qingdao. A good example of our success is Sichuan Airlines’ launch of its first direct flight from Chengdu to Melbourne. That will really help to open up the rest of the country directly to Australia.”

Meanwhile, Tourism Australia has beefed up the Business Events Australia website (www.businessevents.australia.com) with an intensive library of business events case studies. Featured events include the 51st Annual International Conference of the Society of Petrophysicists and Well Log Analysts which took 623 attendees to Perth in June 2010, and the 9th World Indigenous Women and Wellness Conference in Darwin which was attended by 560 delegates.

“We are using advocates to tell our story. We are letting other people tell our story because they will tell it almost more passionately and through different eyes,” he said.

Parkroyal Darling Harbour sports new look

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PARKROYAL Darling Harbour, Sydney reopened in February after an A$20 million (US$20.5 million) rejuvenation that gave it new interiors and the latest in hotel technology.

Acclaimed design firm Hassell employed a bright palette of natural and earthy shades and textures, inspired by the Australian landscape, for the 340-key hotel’s new look.

The new interiors extend from the hotel’s lobby to guestrooms and five meeting rooms. The event spaces, which were gutted and recreated, now feature state-of-the-art technology and are supported by an in-house staging and event service. Blackwattle Room is the largest event space in the hotel, capable of hosting 200 banquet guests or 280 cocktail-style. It is adjacent to a spacious pre-function space that overlooks Darling Harbour.

There is also a new club lounge on the top floor, as well as rejuvenated dining establishments.

Meanwhile, new technology systems installed in the hotel allows guest preferences, such as their ideal check-out time, to be conveyed to relevant staff ahead of their arrival. Room keys are able to track guest movements so that staff can be alerted if a guest with messages or a package waiting has just returned, or if they are leaving the hotel and their room door has been left ajar.

The hotel is looking to streamline the check-in process further by encoding smartphones as room keys.

Wangaratta flaunts MICE facilities through new guide

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WANGARATTA in north-east Victoria is looking to lure more business events to the city and its surroundings, having launched its first Conference and Event Planner Guide four months ago.

Detailing venues, accommodation options, activities, attractions, dining and catering solutions and event support services, the book is a dedicated planner guide to drum up interest for the city – which sits two-and-a-half hours from Melbourne by car – as well as its neighbouring regions of Milawa Gourmet Region, King Valley, Glenrowan, Boorahman and El Dorado.

To showcase the area’s offerings, the city participated in AIME 2013 and was one of the featured destinations for AIME 2013’s pre-show familiarisation tours. While Wangaratta did not have its own dedicated booth at AIME, it was represented by Tourism Victoria.

Emma Keith, business events & tourism development coordinator with the Rural City of Wangaratta, told TTGmice e-Weekly that the destination was last featured at AIME in 2009 when they had “no destination materials for MICE”.

Annalee Humphry, managing director of Nolan Media and Events Australia, said: “I see great potential in Wangaratta (and its surroundings) as a destination for business events, as it is an easy drive from Melbourne and there is available infrastructure for meetings and incentives.

“This region is great for food and wine, and is loved for its pristine environment. Clients can leverage Wangaratta’s nature to enhance the event’s experience.”

Katrina Pizzini, who runs the Pizzini Wines vineyard and A Travola cooking school in the King Valley with her family, is also hoping to draw more corporate bookings.

“We have been popular with family events for a while now, but we would like to see more corporate clients. Perhaps with the new planner guide we may start to see more corporate interest,” she said.

– Read more about the incentive options in Wangaratta and its surroundings in TTGmice April issue

Pacific keeps anchors in Sydney

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THE International Maritime Exposition (Pacific), held every year at the Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre, will remain in the Australian city even when the venue is shut for major redevelopment of the Darling Harbour precinct (TTGmice e-Weekly, September 27, 2012).

Ian Honnery, board member and chief executive of Maritime Australia, the organisation behind Pacific, told TTGmice e-Weekly: “It is my understanding the interim Glebe Island Expo will be a waterfront site, which is just perfect for Pacific.

“Therefore we will not be moving out of Sydney when the Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre closes for those few years.”

Glebe Island Expo is expected to be up and ready by the time the Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre and the Sydney Entertainment Centre close for construction of the new facilities in December.

Meanwhile, Honnery said Pacific, which typically occurs in February, would be postponed to October 7 to 8 this year to coincide with centenary celebrations of the Royal Australian Navy fleet’s first entry into Sydney.

“Pacific 2013 will tie in with Royal Australian Navy International Fleet Review, which will be spectacular,” he explained.

The Navy International Fleet Review will include formation fly-pasts, naval gun salutes, military band performances, naval demonstrations and a fireworks display in the evening.

J Hotel Shanghai Tower

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Timur Senturk is now managing director of J Hotel Shanghai Tower, the flagship property of Interstate China Hotels & Resorts Company. Senturk comes to his new assignment from 12 years with The Ritz-Carlton Company where he was most recently general manager of the Ritz-Carlton Guangzhou.

One&Only Resorts

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Kerzner International has appointed Helen McCabe-Young as executive vice-president, sales & marketing, One&Only Resorts. McCabe-Young is based in Dubai.

Gold Coast Tourism

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Gold Coast Tourism has appointed Anna Case as director of business events. Case has worked with Tourism Australia, the Hong Kong Tourism Board, Encore Business Tourism and SquareOne Events.

MCI Australia

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Ray Shaw

MCI Australia has made several changes to its management structure. Ray Shaw, former MCI Australia managing director, is now chairman of the new Board of Directors and non-executive director. Stephan Wurzinger, director association relations for Asia-Pacific, has taken on the additional role of managing director. Newcomers include Rebecca Schepers who joins the company as director of association relations for Australia, filling much of Wurzinger’s association relations role in Australia, and Jerome Buchanan who is sponsorship and development manager.

Rosewood Beijing

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David Campbell is now director of sales and marketing in Rosewood Beijing. Campbell has worked in Asia for more than 16 years and has a background in opening new hotels.

The Ritz-Carlton Beijing and JW Marriott Hotel Beijing

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The Ritz-Carlton Beijing and JW Marriott Hotel Beijing have appointed Radu Cernia hotel manager. Cernia joined The Ritz Carlton Company in 1998, and was most recently executive assistant manager, culinary/F&B at The Ritz-Carlton, Tokyo.

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