■ HOTELS & TRAVEL
SPECIAL SECTION INSIDE
A World of News and Perspective
HOTELS T R A V E L &
■ A Special Section of The Washington Diplomat
■ July 2015
The Sofitel’s “magnifique renewal” celebrates the ties between Paris and Washington, D.C.
BUILDING
■ JULY 2015
■ WWW.WASHDIPLOMAT.COM
■ VOLUME 22, NUMBER 7
RENOVATION RACE
In Hypercompetitive Market, Hotels Spruce Up to Stay Fresh
POLITICS
W
After Spectacular Fall, Can Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood Recover? On June 24, 2012, the Muslim Brotherhood arguably reached its pinnacle of power when it won Egypt’s first democratic election. Since then, however, it has experienced an epic fall from grace, but is Egypt’s largest and oldest Islamist political movement really on its last legs? PAGE 8
PHOTO: HAMADA ELRASAM FOR VOA
ECONOMICS
Amid ‘Greek Ruins,’ Journalist Uncovers Self-Inflicted Wounds In “The Full Catastrophe: Travels Among the New Greek Ruins,” journalist James Angelos takes on his own “tribe” to provide a sobering account of how Greece became the sick man of Europe and a threat to the global economy. PAGE 10
culture
Textile Museum, GW Join Forces One of the city’s hidden gems, the Textile Museum has found new life, and relevance, in its merger with the George Washington University. PAGE 26
EUROPE
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hen Washington welcomed a record-breaking 18.3 by Stephanie Kanowitz million domestic visitors in Today, in addition to the Hiltons, 2014, local hotel owners Hyatts and Holiday Inns, sat up a little straighter. After Washington has boutique hotels all, whether they came here decorated with local art (we’re for closed-door meetings with looking at you Kimpton), mammoth members of Congress or to structures with 1,700-plus stroll with their families rooms and conaround the Smithsonian museums, vention centers (think Marriott Marquis and Gaylord National those visitors needed places to sleep. Resort), hotels with And this area has plenty of histories (the Hay-Adams, Willard options when it comes to lodging InterContinental and the Jefferson — with many fit the bill) more on the way. Currently, and uber posh hotels that get the nation’s capital is home upward of $800 a night for to more than 140 hotel regular rooms (also properties and 31,000 rooms, known as the Capella). Next according to Destination DC, year, D.C. will even have its first “micro hotel” which markets the at area as a great place to visit. 7th and H Streets, NW, courtesy About 20 more properties are of Modus Hotels. The New York set for construction. will “pod” concept Also worth noting is that while feature much smaller rooms (and rates) than the visitors are here, they spend typical hotel setup. money — and plenty of it. Domestic visitors To remain competitive in this alone spent about $6.8 billion constantly evolving environment, in D.C. last year, established according to IHS Global Inc., hotels have to step up their a year-over-year increase of games and constantly refresh 1.9 percent. Yes, that’s we themselves. Here billion with a B. look at how five hotels have reinvented themselves in recent months.
The Washington Diplomat July 2015
July 2015
TRAVEL & HOTELS
Continued on next page The Washington Diplomat
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Arab and African migrants desperate to reach Europe’s shores are dying in the Mediterranean. Russia continues to ratchet up tensions in Ukraine. Cash-strapped Greeks may be forced out of the eurozone while the Brits ponder going it alone as well. Undeterred, the European Union’s new ambassador to the U.S., David O’Sullivan, is confident the bloc can rise to the complex tangle of crises facing it. PAGE 13
EUROPEAN UNION JUGGLE PEOPLE OF WORLD INFLUENCE
DIPLOMACY
Retirement Doesn’t Dim Diplomat’s Relevance
Nordic Envoys Make History on Twitter
After a renowned Foreign Service career that included key ambassadorships to the U.N., Russia, India, Israel and Nigeria, Thomas Pickering continues to leave his mark on issues ranging from Iran to Benghazi to reforming the State Department. PAGE 4
On a hot summer day, Nordic envoys discussed a chilly topic, the Arctic, and made history by becoming the first five ambassadors to ever host a Twitter town hall meeting together. PAGE 6