How will the travel industry change post-virus?
What are some silver linings of the COVID crisis?
Global Wellness Institute Launches Wellness Q&A Series on COVID-19’s Impact –
Now and Post-Crisis
The First in the Series Is World-Renowned Architect, Bill Bensley
Bill Bensley, owner, Bensley Architecture, Interior Design and Landscape, Thailand
In the hospitality world, Bill Bensley needs no introduction: He’s designed 200+ boundary-pushing, jaw-dropping hotels in 40 countries; he’s completely redefined and “rewilded” luxury hospitality in Asia; and he’s a true sustainability pioneer. And no one does it all with more humor and honesty…
Interview conducted by Beth McGroarty, VP Research & Forecasting at the GWI, leading the insightful interviews as part of the #PositivelyWell initiative.
Beth McGroarty: It seems ridiculous to ask, but how are you doing during the pandemic?
Bensley: Most people know I’m an eternal optimist, so while it sounds funny, super well. It’s an excuse to stay in my office and dive really deep into what I truly love, my design work, in a way I haven’t been able to for years.
Pre-COVID, I traveled 30 weeks a year; that’s 60 percent of my life. If there was a new play in London or I wanted to check on a resort in South Africa, I’d book a flight. Why the hell not?! I loved it, but now—like everyone—I’m grounded. This whole thing has been an epiphany for me: I was flying too much and didn’t need to.
I’ve been designing hotels for 37 years, and normally, I’d hop on a plane with 400 pounds of drawings and fill up a ballroom to make a presentation. Now, I’m using Zoom, and last week, I made my first major presentation virtually for three different hotels in Vietnam. And you know what happened? They didn’t fire me! All the props and on-site presentations were a crutch I didn’t need.
GWI: How do you think COVID will change travel post-virus? What new desires and demands will rise? We were already flirting with extinction before the crisis and preoccupied with issues like sustainability and overtourism. You recently said that the old “luxury is dead”…
Bensley: And now it’s going to be deader…deader than a doornail. I really believe that COVID will make us re-think travel—clear away the junk. I think we’ll travel less post-crisis—I know I will—but mostly I think people will be radically more selective about where they go. That’s a positive for our world.
Certainly, the “monied” people are going to go to places that are more remote and places in deep nature. I think social distancing will remain with us for years.
GWI: Positive given the nightmare of overtourism…
Bensley: Southern Thailand had such beautiful beaches and great corals, but all of that has been shittered—(laughing) that’s the technical term for destroyed—because of mass tourism. These huge busloads of tourists were given booties to walk on and crush the corals, so they’re basically dead. I think COVID will curb that kind of overtourism in Thailand and in many other parts of the world and prove a catalyst for a better, less destructive tourism.
GWI: Any other COVID silver linings?
Bensley: Yes. We have realized that the inherent problems of the wildlife trade have made the world ill, and it will keep up the pressure on places like China and Vietnam to stop this insatiable consumption of the world’s wildlife—and all the poaching that ends up on the dining tables of Asia’s rich and famous. Since COVID, China has declared that wildlife is illegal to catch and eat—forever.
The whole reason for our Shinta Mani Wild tented camp in the Cardomam National Forest has been to be a stronghold against illegal wildlife poaching for Asian dining tables. We take out 12–20 snares a day.
Researchers recently defrosted two pangolins from a 2017 Singapore raid—a fave to eat in China and believed to cure all ills—and found the flesh has sister COVID viruses. Terrifying. Consuming wildlife has brought the world to its knees, and this experience will, I pray, make it stop.
A “blue” lining: I’ve been in Bangkok for 37 years, and right now, the time before our New Year’s festival Songkran, we usually have the hottest and most polluted skies. I have never seen blue skies like this. COVID is one hard way to grasp the unbelievable impact that just a couple of weeks without cars and polluting the air can make.
GWI: Coronavirus has, obviously, rocked the travel industry. How has it impacted your four properties? Any advice for other owners?
Bensley: We just closed our hotels: no customers. But at Shinta Mani, I still have to patrol and protect the several million hectares of forest, so I’m still employing most of our 115-person Wilderness Alliance army, and it’s coming out of my pocket, but I won’t let it go.
In our Siem Reap hotels, we employ 240 people and they’re already very poor, and the $200–$300 they make a month supports, on average, eight family members. I’m keeping employees on payroll and will grin and bear it as absolutely long as I can—and hope other owners will too.
One issue is people wanting their money back for reservations, but some hotels are taking people’s deposits to pay their staff, etc. Hospitality needs to live by standards, or we lose all respect. COVID is no excuse to take people’s money to pay for your mismanagement. We, of course, encourage people to postpone not cancel—and we’re offering all kinds of extras if they do. But the right thing to do is to give people a full refund if they want it.
GWI: Tell us about a few upcoming projects you’re excited about—so we can fantasize about future travel…
Bensley: We’re—hopefully—just about to open a Capella in Hanoi across from the opera house. The property has layers of history: It was first an actor’s residence, then a whorehouse, then an army depot. It’s a 42-room hotel with a really European feel, and all of the suites are based on different opera characters at the turn of the last century: It has a diva floor, a drama floor, and actress and actor floors. I had a ball with this project!
The World Wild “human zoo” project in Guangdong, China, is my favorite because it will have such a powerful impact on the country’s young people. It’s a massive zoo and seven-hotel project where 95 percent of this huge piece of land is for rescued, abused animals to run wild (there will be no predators)—while 5 percent is for human “viewing cages.” A train will take people (and we expect 5–10 million visitors a year) to eight different whistle-stops, and at each, they will experience something like an amazing Broadway show, educating them on different aspects of wildlife, environmental protection and sustainability.
So far, we’ve designed 2,400 hotel rooms for brands like Four Seasons and Conrad. Right before COVID, we had this giant meeting with the Communist leader of southern China and 48 of his entourage. We filled up a ballroom with 130 feet of drawings and mesmerized them for six hours. At the end, their leader gave his full approval, saying this was the best thing we could possibly do. So the project is on strong legs!
We’re committed to designing the “zoo”—a better word is the sanctuary—of the future. I’ve hired a zoologist from England full time, and for a year and a half, he’s been researching the very best practices for wildlife from all over the world—and getting expert opinions from Africa to Australia.
GWI: One final thought about human life and travel post-COVID?
Bensley: We will—and we must—learn to slow down and appreciate Mother Earth.
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