'Keyless Entry' trend spreading in hotels
More and more hotels are switching from keys or key cards to apps that let your phone open your door.
More and more hotels are switching from keys or key cards to apps that let your phone open your door.
With more and more travelers demanding good service, Red Roof is working on upgrades to be able to guarantee "fast and free"
On the way to the Galapagos Islands, Marilyn Jones stops for a couple of days in Guayaquil and finds a hotel worth remembering.
All the major hotel chains, and some smaller ones, are developing brands and concepts aimed at the growing market of people born after 1980.
Marilyn Jones visits an unusual bed and breakfast in Vicksburg and learns the even more unusual story of its original owners.
At €50 a day, the Hotel Bristol in Vienna treats dogs and cats like royalty.
Starwood expands its keyless-entry app to more hotels for faster check-in and easier access.
As trade restrictions between the U.S. and Cuba continue to loosen, Starwood becomes the first U.S. operator to run a Cuban hotel.
London will soon have a new 144-room floating hotel that's also a job-training project.
An Austrian mountain hotel, reachable only by air or on foot, finds itself juggling hundreds of old and new helicopter-delivered mattresses.
In the continuing war between traditional hotels and holiday-rental sites such as Airbnb, rivals have filed a lawsuit and are demanding new laws.
Built by the Midlands Railroad at the turn of the 20th century, it's an amazing example of Edwardian baroque and self-congratulation.
Julia Child's cottage in Provence, furnished as it was in her time, is available for rent on Airbnb...at $639 a night.
Four lucky winners in a HomeAway get to spend the night in a luxury apartment specially built high up on the Eiffel Tower.
A new wrinkle in hospitality: Hotels in small towns, using rooms and apartments in different buildings near a central reception.