Travel / Lifestyle
Heritance Kandalama achieves 64% occupancy in December
by Elmo Leonard in Kandalama

Heritance Kandalama, blended with nature and the Elephant Rock in
the background.
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How did Heritance Kandalama (earlier Kandalama Hotel) reach an
occupancy rate of 64 percent for December 2006, amidst so much adverse
publicity levelled against this island in recent months? And, this
achievement is even more singular, considering that for December 2005
her occupancy was 84 percent?
Heritance Kandalama is more than a fairy tale, and supersedes the
ageless Sleeping Beauty, where human and animal life of a kingdom went
into hibernation for a century while the trees continued to grow wild.
This spell was broken when a handsome prince discovered the dormant
city, and drawn by the splendour of the princess in slumber, kissed her,
reactivating life.
Kandalama is in the environs of Dambulla, the rock hue temple, built
by a king of Sri Lanka's first recorded capital, Anuradhapura, reminding
of his exile, in that place. It is also just 25 kilometres from Sigiriya,
where a rock fortress is reputed as the '8th Wonder of the World' built
by a patricidal king, with a very rare and refined sense of artistry.
This is also part of the island's dry zone, most of which is called
Raja Rata or the country where the kings dwelt. Around, here, abound
Giritale with its irrigation water body. Polonnaruwa built by the
greatest king of Sri Lanka, and countless irrigation tanks, temples and
settlements, very little of which has been uncovered.

The Infinite pool, with the ancient Kandalama Wewa in the
background. |
Below this hospitality unit is a giant irrigation waterway, the
Kandalama Wewa built by King Wasaba and reconstructed by Sri Lanka's
first prime minister D. S. Senanayake, which is incorporated into the
landscape.
Sri Lanka's architect with a longing for the natural, Geoffery Bawa
hovering on helicopter, found this location, 160 kilometres from
Colombo.
He shrouded the one-kilometre long building, of seven levels, into
the hills, glens, rocks, flora and everything else that nature has
offered. The entrance to the hotel and reception area is part of a rock.
And, people would just come here, even to marvel at the wedlock of
mother nature with human ingenuity.
Thus, Heritance Kandalama a 5 Star hotel, oasis in the jungle,
reactivated following many centuries of dormancy is much more than a
mere fairy tale. Besides, it bears all the sophisticated features, by
which man communicates.
It is evident that the flora here does not comprise wild trees, but,
artistic types, with the banyan abounding. And, this just points to the
existence of an ancient park.
The hotel takes its visitors to the rock caves, temples and to Purana
Gama or ancient village standing the way it did, with mud-and-thatch, in
eras gone by, so the visitor comes back, or tells others.
Here, you can see the peasant, live off the earth, as they did,
burning trees and growing vegetables, converting palm sap into treacle.
Then, there are the archaeological excursions, elephant rides, cycling
tours and nature walks. Also, three swimming pools, one carved out of
rock.
Three types of monkeys run around and pay no respect to you. The
gliding eagles, the elephant haunts, the percussion of bird songs, the
jazz of insects at night, and again at dawn, the splendour of the
peacock are but a few.
Heritance Kandalama adheres to the 3 R Principle, reduce, recycle and
reuse, and even the water is purified and used for gardening.
Smoking is discouraged. The awards Heritance Kandalama has received
are too many to recount, suffice to say, Green Globe 21 Certified Hotel,
First hotel in the world to be awarded the prestigious Leeds Green
Building Certified Hotel award, Thomas Gold Medal, PATA Green Leaf
Environment, SAGA Good Food Award, ISO 2200 and HACCP Certification. The
cuisine is local and foreign and wide in every variety.
There is the Six Sense Spa, managed by a Thai company.
Rooms: 71 superior; 33 luxury; 33 deluxe 14 suites. For recreation:
billiards, tennis, table tennis library, golf, volleyball and indoor
games.
Other facilities: conference, room service, laundry, business centre,
shopping arcade children's play area and doctor on call.
[email protected]
Marketing Elephant Corridor, 'Our Way' in Germany
"Our Way" Hotel Developers, Deputy Chairman Susanne Filippin, will
set up a Marketing and Liason Office in Germany to facilitate the
marketing of the "Elephant Corridor" hotel and the new hotels planned by
'Our Way'.
"In view of our associate company Tropical Pleasure (Pvt) Limited,
diversifying into other areas of Dendro, renewable energy and
manufacturing of biodegradable products, the liason office is as
important for these as for our tourism sector", she said.
"While I will personally be involved in the setting up and
co-ordination of the office in Germany our Chairman Prasanna W.
Jayewardene believes that the direction the country is going under
President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his Government, especially with the
support of the Leader of the Opposition Ranil Wickremesinghe and the UNP,
will be the 'take off time' and the country will show phenomenal growth
and development.
SriLankan welcomes 14 new local pilots
Fourteen young pilots received their 'Wings' as Junior First Officers
at SriLankan Airlines, after completing a rigorous training program at
the National Carrier.
The group included one female pilot who is the third female to join
the SriLankan Airlines pilots, and four former flyers from the Air
Force.
CEO of SriLankan, Peter Hill said: "SriLankan Airlines has an
enviable record of quality of service and safety, especially in the air,
and we guard that tradition closely. All these pilots have achieved the
standards we demand of our employees, particularly those on the flight
deck. We are confident that they will work hard towards the day when
they will become captains".
The professionalism of SriLankan pilots was a major factor in the
airline being named "World's Most Efficient Operator of Airbus A330s
(small fleet category)" by Airbus Industry.
"This group has worked very hard, and are now beginning fruitful
careers which will literally take them around the world", said Capt.
Dick Hutton, Chief Technical Officer at SriLankan. |