Wednesday, February 23, 2005

Climb Macau Tower with Us

Climb with Me Afraid of heights? But you want to climb the tip of Macau Tower. Then join us here. Anthony

Wednesday, February 16, 2005

Get Nice sees openings in Macau boom

from www.thestandard.com.hk Get Nice chairman Hung Hon-man said after a shareholders' meeting Tuesday that ``our new shareholders have extensive experience in property and retail business, and we plan to ride on their specialties to expand our business.'' In addition to extensive property interests, Lau and Cheng are the controlling shareholders of Lifestyle International, which owns Hong Kong's Sogo department store in Causeway Bay and two retail properties in Shanghai. Hung would not specify what sorts of development Get Rich might pursue, except to say that he saw lots of room to capitalize on Macau's booming gambling industry without getting involved in casinos directly. ``Now most of the foreign investments in Macau center around gambling, but we haven't seen any concrete plan on other gambling-related business such as travel, hospitality and shopping malls,'' Hung said. ``When travelers bring their children with them, no entertainment place or facility is available for their children.''

Saturday, February 12, 2005

Macau's casinos are hoping to boost profits by attracting diners, but luring gamblers away from the tables is proving an uphill battle

"The food and beverage sector used to be a peripheral activity at Macau's casinos, but with the city aiming to become a world-class tourist destination, the new casinos are striving to make dining an attraction that goes hand in hand with the gambling experience. However, they're facing an uphill battle. Las Vegas casinos may offer some of the best dining in the US, but food tourism is still a new concept in Macau. The former Portuguese colony is reputed to have the world's oldest fusion cuisine. Macanese dishes combine Portuguese ingredients with spices and cooking methods from China, India, Malaysia, Brazil and Portuguese colonies in Africa, and the plethora of restaurants offering such fare has the casinos searching for new ways to tempt punters' tastebuds."

Still my Macau

"We wander aimlessly through a maze of twisting, cobbled back streets with tiny bakeries and mom and pop candy stores where naughty schoolchildren are spending their lunchbox money. Here are real people getting on with their day-to-day life, friendly and helpful too, and totally unconcerned about what the tycoons are up to over on the other side of the island. No tourists here. No casinos, either. But we do find a charming little Portuguese restaurant, O Porto Interior, where photographs of celebrities adorn the walls, including an autographed picture of a young-looking Audrey Hepburn. The waitress, a woman in her 40s whose name is Rosalina, joins us. ``Yes, she really came here, but she was old already,'' Rosalina says. ``She had the photograph with her, and signed it for my boss.'' After a delightful meal, we set off exploring again. The Inner Port area is packed with living history. This used to be the hub for sea trade in Macau, and Chinese shophouses offer a mind-boggling array of goods, from ships chains with links as thick as a man's neck, to dried meat and traditional Chinese medicines."