Spotlight

Spotlight :: PHX

[trip style = urban + sun + active & adventure]

{Editor’s Note :: This month we’ve been prescribing a healthy dose of Greater Phoenix’s desert sun covering girls’ getaways, a stay at the Arizona Biltmore and The Saguaro, and outings like a Spring Training baseball game or a hike up Camelback Mountain. Next week: A Scottsdale Spotlight.}

Resorts, sports and sprawl. That was my assumption. Going out on a limb, that might be yours too. After touching down at the airport, I would put on my blinders {read: oversized sunglasses} to the nearby city, pick up my rental car and hightail it on the freeway toward to a resorty palm oasis filled with welcome drinks, sun and loungers.

Passing by Phoenix at 100 mph, I n-e-v-e-r guessed the urban playground had enough eateries, arts venues and artisan markets to make you sit down and stay awhile---linger even.

Many US cities are going through a renaissance. Urban hubs once high on towers, power suits and caffeine are undergoing a rebirth, favoring a blend of business and pleasure. Phoenix, the sixth-largest city in the US, is one of the movement's savants. The Valley of the Sun's economic hub is quickly becoming a live/work/play space where a new breed of urban dweller is shaping the cityscape on foot and on rail.

This is all part of the plan, with completed projects like the $1.4-billion METRO Light Rail system, moving 15,000 people per hour along a 20-mile stretch linking a series of key stops in Phoenix to Tempe and Mesa. Forgotten city quadrants are filling up with music halls, vintage shops and coffee/cocktail bars, pulling people in at all hours of the day instead of depending on the in-and-out rat race regulars.

Don't bypass Phoenix like I did on my first few visits. Even if it's just for a day of your vacay, take off your sunglasses and dig into Arizona's sun-tropolis, where culture is the new currency.

Eat Breakfast // Lux Central When you order a coffee, your bevvy gets a name tag. Of course it does. Lux started off with java, stayed true to its roots, then grew into a coffee-come-cocktail bar offering a small-batch breakfast, lunch and dinner menu. Open from 6am - late, it's like Cheers, but replace Ted Danson with Ted Hipster, bar stools with schoolhouse Marais chairs and the bar with a community table adorned with bowls of limes and crystal mixology sets. Visit Lux enough and everyone will know your name - but the name tag on your coffee cup helps.

Lunch // Pane Bianco Starting off as a take-away sandwich shop offering a covered picnic-style eating area in the parking lot, Pane Bianco has experienced similar growth to Lux - and they happen to be nextdoor neighbors. In Pane Bianco version 2.0, you can take out on one side of the restaurant or eat in on the other. Named best chef in the Southwest region by the James Beard Foundation in 2003, owner Chris Bianco's simple menu packs a culinary punch with wood-fired market sandwiches like goat cheese with roasted tomatoes and arugula, or mortadella with date/tomato jam and pecorino sardo.

Dinner // Tuck Shop Not enough restaurants whip up homemade tonic in the AM, are anchored by mod 70s living room lounges or feature an original bank vault {left over from when the space was a credit union}. Thank God for architects-turned-restauranteurs. When said living room lounge includes vintage aqua arcade games akin to waterfall ring toss, the space can't help but take you back to a time when you snuck away from the dinner table to watch Chips on TV and your mom called you back to finish your peas. In Tuck Shop's case, you want seconds, comfort food like crispy chicken with savory waffles, or beer-battered cheese curds demands it. Order a G&T - you won't be disappointed.

Drinks // Durants Drinking at Durants is like watching an intense red-on-magenta sunset that hangs on and on. With only a slight facelift since its opening in 1950, the bar at this speakeasy is ringed by red-tufted vinyl half-moon booths {insert Ron Burgundy here}, set against blue-red damask wallpaper and orangey-red carpets. Servers and bartenders wearing the traditional black on white avec vest and bow tie trio, only add to the what's-old-is-new-again scene. Don't even think about ordering beer or wine; Durants is a place for whiskey and old fashioneds. Shut the front door! Tradition demands entering through the kitchen.

Après // Crescent Ballroom While I was walking around downtown Phoenix, I couldn't help but notice this place. Beside a mechanic shop, it channels the same feel with a color scheme reminiscent of a black, 1970's Volvo wagon. From the outside, Crescent Ballroom looks like an urban watering hole, but it's what's on the inside that counts, no? Two kitchen-like doors open up into one of Phoenix's hottest indie music venues the size of a boutique used-car lot. A different act takes the stage every night.

Do Phoenix Public Market & Food Trucks As roosters are crowing at dawn in the country, vendors are setting up for Phoenix's open-air public market in the city. On Saturday morning, grab a coffee, browse local farm produce and buy locally made jewelry. Also on Wednesdays from 4-8pm. If you're lucky, you might spot the torched goodness crème brûleé food truck, voted one of the 20 best food trucks in the US by Smithsonian magazine. I tried it and the truck's crusted custards deserve all the credit they receive.

Art Walking, driving and taking the Light Rail through downtown Phoenix you spot clean-lined architecture with unique passive heating/cooling techniques. Take an hour to wander by these structures. Also visit the Phoenix Art Museum. With exhibits like Frank Lloyd Wright's "Organic Architecture in the 21st Century", a massive contemporary art collection and a boutique fashion collection {currently: bathing suits through the ages}, this 160,000-sf gallery doesn't overwhelm, it delights. Also check out the Heard {right down the street}, a world-famous museum featuring the art and culture of the Native Americans of the Southwest. {Trip Styler Tip :: The Phoenix Art Museum's FLW exhibit is on until April 29th. If you go, try to join a tour. Don't miss the interior garden---a great place to rest tired, sightseeing legs.}

Hike Networks of steep climbs and flat trails await as close as 20 mins outside the city.

Spring Training Baseball Every year Arizona gets fever pitch for the month of March playing host to 15 Major League teams. Catch a midday game for as little as $8.

Stay [trip style = luxury] Arizona Biltmore - vintage desert glam and Trip Styler approved! See full review here.

[trip style = budget conscious] Priceline - book or bid on a two- to five-star stay for less.

Getting There Direct, daily flights {with favorable flight times} from Vancouver to Phoenix start at $400 return via US Airways or WestJet.

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[all photos by @tripstyler {except light rail shot, durants & crescent ballroom} taken while as a guest of Phoenix's CVB.]

Spotlight :: Harrison Hot Springs

[trip style = spa + weekend getaway + active & adventure + budget conscious]

{Editor's Note: Today is Trip Styler's introduction to Harrison Hot Springs, look out for some of the area's foodie stops and wilderness adventures on Friday.}

—————————————————– Dear Harrison, At multiple junctures we've almost brushed shoulders. It's not that I didn't want to meet you, our paths never crossed.

And then, late in 2011, mutual friends connected our interests and a date was set. Harry, apparently you were making up for lost time, pulling out all the stops with a soak in the spring-fed mineral pools, massage in the spa and an evening of dinner and dancing. xoxo, Trish —————————————————–

It was a cold and rainy late-November day and with a weekend bag and still-warm Creme De La Crumb scone in tow, I made the arrow-straight, highway journey to Harrison Hot Springs from Vancouver. This road is well traveled in summer; in winter the lake-front destination is quiet and cozy with budget-friendly appeal.

 

The area's farm-to-table foodie stops and world-class nature exploration notwithstanding {more on this Friday}, the natural hot springs and spa at the Harrison Resort & Spa are the pièces de résistance. Luxuriate in the mineral pools in the early morning or at night {fewer spa-goers at this time} to watch the steam dance and water glow against the surrounding blue-black mountains.

 

When the clock strikes eight, get dolled-up like Marilyn Monroe and Cary Grant, and go back in time {literally} at the hotel's legendary Copper Room supper club. Dressed-up tables with dimly lit lamps are intimately arranged around the well-heeled dance floor, used every night thanks to the longtime crooners, The Jones Boys. Watching "Erma and Norm" storm the dance floor at the first hint of Moonriver, will make even the most timid dancers bust out their limited moves in the name of love.

—————————————————– Harry, I wish our first date would have resulted in a rose ceremony, but I'm a modern girl, so I'll settle for an itinerary filled with romantic gestures instead.

 

What To Know
  • Getting There: Harrison is about an hour and a half from Vancouver and three hours from Seattle.
  • Hotel/Spa/Mineral Pools: A series of adult and family-friendly pools at varying temperatures fit everyone's needs. Comfortable hotel rooms with modest bathrooms start at $99 {includes access to the spa's pools, complimentary parking and wifi}.

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[photos c/o abundantc, harrison resort & trip styler, taken while a guest of tourism harrison]

Spotlight :: PDX'ing in Pictures

[trip style = urban]

Last weekend I was in Portland for the third time in just over a year. I swear, a NASA-grade laser beam keeps drawing me back. And it's not just me; anyone I talk to who's visited once, always becomes a lifer, gobbling up a-n-y-t-h-i-n-g to do with the trip style = urban playground.

What I love about PDX'ing is the farm-to-table, handmade, bike-everywhere spirit. In no other city would someone inquire if my vest was handmade or give directions as if I was biking. Similarly, when I asked the hotel concierge where to shop in the area, he told me about a bunch of independent boutiques, purposefully failing to mention any of the department stores or chain shops like Anthropologie in the area.

Brunch. Tasty n Sons: A neighborhood bistro with a menu that's anything but. Think breakfast tapas like griddled bacon wrapped dates with maple syrup and almond, or sweet biscuits with warm blueberry compote and creme anglais. Trip Styler Tip :: If you want to avoid the brunch rush, go early around 8.45am to secure a table for the 9am open. If you can't get up early, get in line and send your partner to Ristretto Rosters down the street for a coffee.

brodure portland

Brunch. Broder: Scandinavian fare in the Pacific Northwest. Whatever you do, make sure you sample a potato pancake, pictured above.

Shop. Beckel Canvas: After brunching at Broder, walk down the street to Beckel Canvas, a family-run business operating out of a little production facility and storefront in an area filled with family homes. They make all their products---from canvas totes to duffels to tents---on site.

schoolhouse electric portland

Shop. Schoolhouse Electric Supply & Co: Filament bulbs, deco-modern lights and minimalist decor in a massive brick warehouse with a flower shop and coffeehouse in the space.

vintage coach shoulder bag portland hawthorn street

Shop. Hawthorne District: Vintage clothing and furniture shops galore. While there, I could have picked up a million things for the home, but I resisted and snapped up a vintage 70s Coach bag {made in NYC before production was shipped overseas} instead.

Related Content
Spotlight Portland {part deux}
Spotlight Portland {part one}
Ace Portland
Jetset Jingles :: Portland
IMG_FRI :: Portlandia
Vancouver to Seattle Must-Stops

[photos by @tripstyler @nate_fri @heatherlovesit]

Bellevue, Bundled

[trip style = weekend getaway + urban]

{Editor's Note: A few weeks ago we published some IMG_FRI photos of a small-batch coffee shop in Bellevue, WA hinting there was more to come. Following yesterday's Roam+Board featuring a health hotel in Bellevue, I give you: what's cool in the sub/urban city just outside of Seattle.}

Sometimes you need a trip style = urban + weekend getaway that's easy -- an auto-pilot escape.

For Vancouverites, one such escape is Bellevue, WA. If your goal is to shop, eat out and explore a little on the side, this entertainment destination has got you covered. Everything is close, walkable and bundled into a smart little package.

One of the main reasons people hit up Seattle instead of Bellevue is the city vs. suburb draw. Yet in the last few years, Bellevue has shifted to a city destination of its own. Here are some its indie, urban finds to whet your palate.

Breakfast - Chace's Pancake Corral - Tie up your horse car and gobble a few flapjacks sour cream waffles and hash brown omelets at this wild, wild western breakfast saloon. A Bellevue institution since 1958, this diner has a steady flow of high ratings on Urbanspoon and yelp.

Coffee - Cafe Cesura - If a Yaletown loft, '50s Palm Springs rancher and Intelligentsia Coffeebar had a baby, this is what it would look {and taste} like.

Happy Hour - Lot No. 3 - A dimly lit den where Bellevue's cool cats gather for happy hour or late-night drinks and nibble on {a new take on} comfort food. Try the baked pretzel and homemade mustard dipping sauce paired with a respectable selection of craft beer and cocktails.

Dinner - Monsoon East - Saigon-inspired Vietnamese cuisine with a dash of Pacific Northwest. Perch yourself at the Ocean Bar to marvel at the open-concept kitchen's fresh ingredients and pace.

PS - Don't forget to visit the Bellevue Arts Museum for the famed Gorge Nelson show {on until Feb 12th}. Hailed as "pure furniture porn for mid-century modernists" by Brian Miller, Seattle Weekly.

See more of TS's do/eat/stay Bellevue picks here.

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[photos by @tripstyler & restaurant websites]

 

Spotlight :: Modern Honolulu

[trip style = sun + beach + urban + weekend getaway]

Maybe you love crowds, duty-free shopping galleries, two-hour restaurant waits and garden-variety hotels, but I don't. It's not my idea of a tropical affair. So, this past weekend I custom-tailored a trip style = sun + beach + urban + weekend getaway with a modern mantra. You have to know what you're doing to enjoy Waikiki like you're the only guest at the luau.

First order of biz: find a cool hotel just off the strip with a sense of space---not an easy task in Honolulu until recently. In late 2010, a hotel opened that ruffled the feathers of traditional beachside resort cash cows and beckoned a forgotten breed: discerning travelers with an appetite for cool.

The Modern Honolulu is sleek, spacious and social, hanging between Waikiki and Ala Moana beaches. A massive surfboard installation hangs above reception and the rest follows this abstractly composed aesthetic: neutral rooms decorated with tropical accoutrements; a wood-deck pool surrounded by beach beds for two; an outdoor bar with picnic and yellow bistro tables shaded by overhanging trees and lit at night by strings of twinkly wine-bottle luminaries---the list goes on. {See my detailed Trip Advisor review here.}

Rethink Honolulu. Your curated, DIY luau is waiting {without the crowds and watery mai tais}.

Eat
  • Breakfast: Cream Pot {in the Hawaiian Monarch hotel}. I was a little skeptical about this breakfast factory with a cult following, but once I tasted the food, I was converted. Don't let the grandma's-kitchen-meets-French-countryside decor throw you. The service is slow, but with a smile, and the food is sinfully good. Dishes like the homemade vanilla custard cream-filled crepe with salted caramel sauce and the ahi carpaccio eggs benedict with a grilled rice cake, avocado and orange miso shoyu sauce are exactly the kind of meals you want to avoid before lounging poolside. But if you go for an early-morning surf, SUP or run, it's all good!
  • Dinner: Morimoto {in The Modern Honolulu hotel}. If celeb Iron Chef Morimoto's self-titled restaurant is good enough for Obama {who dined there over the holidays}, it's good enough for me. A stark white interior with splashes of green and purple accentuates the open kitchen. Those who want an al fresco experience while soaking in the warm climate can sit outside in the covered dining area. Make a reso in advance and try the tuna pizza. I don't like anchovies, olives or jalapenos, but I LOVED this inventive appetizer.
  • Drinks: La Mariana Sailing Club. Sandwiched between shipping yards and boat repair hangars in Honolulu's pier district, La Mariana is a museum-quality ode to all things tiki. The lush grounds facing the marina lead you into 1950s exotica with wooden carvings, preserved puffer fish lights, netted ceilings and multicoloured glass fishing floats in every corner. Go for umbrella drinks here and dinner elsewhere, and stay long enough to croon to the live piano music. Ron, the longtime {and blind} pianist plays songs like "I just called to say I love you..." {Thanks for the recommendation Steve & Kelly!}

Getting There Getting to Honolulu is easy with a multitude of nonstop flights and departure points. WestJet and AirCanada fly from Vancouver {approx $700 return}, Alaska flies from Bellingham {approx $400 return}, and Alaska, Hawaiian and Delta fly from Seattle {approx $500 return}.

Related A Tropical Experiment High/Low :: Booking A Vacation In Maui

[photos by @tripstyler]