The number of services the company provides is endless, but let's just say it works something like this: for $350 a year you can store 50 items, 10 custom shoe boxes and an accessories box in their climate-controlled, top-secret storage facility. The …
In El Barrio/East Harlem alone, we are seeing four parcels of NYCHA land being considered for luxury development (including one where a busy community center operates), the sale of a Human Resources Administration Multi-Service Center, the closure …
China will continue to drive and dominate luxury global travel over the next eight to ten years as the number of people looking for new avenues to spend grows in parallel with its economy, according to Dr Pierre Xiao Lu, an international expert on …
Like its fares in Singapore and Seoul, Uber charges a premium over regular taxi cabs in Taipei for its luxury car services. Base fare starts at NT$126, compared to NT$70 for regular Taipei taxis. Each additional kilometer costs NT$30, compared to NT$20 …
He added that NextGreatTrip's starting prices would open the product to a broader market since they are lower than those from similar companies that provide luxury-vacation services. Denver is no stranger to these types of companies. Filippini co …
Hotel"Casa Boyana" provides a combination of Luxury, Service, Quality and Value to the highly discerning and affluent travelers who seek precisely such qualities in the hotels they select. This truly Bulgarian luxury property filled with elegance and …
irs.jpg Acting IRS Commissioner Danny Werfel, left, accompanied by Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration J. Russell George, testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday, before the House Appropriations subcommittee on Financial Services …
A hotel shouldn't call itself a “luxury hotel” if guests can't order room service and are forced to eat from a Herb n' Kitchen. (Although the New York Hilton Midtown doesn't label itself a “luxury hotel,” with rates of over $220 per night, it isn't …
Or, perhaps, it's their bosses paying the bills don't want to pay for such luxuries. The New York Times reported last year that more companies were insisting that their business travelers downscale the type of hotel they stayed in. Goodbye to full …