Hotel Loyalty 2010 Summer Promotions Hyatt Gold Passport

Hyatt’s Newest Resort – Park Hyatt Aviara, Carlsbad, California

Park Hyatt Aviara in coastal Carlsbad, California opened today. The hotel, located about 35 miles north of downtown San Diego and 60 miles south of Disneyland, rebranded from its former persona as the Four Seasons Aviara Resort. The rebranding to a Park Hyatt is a result of the hotel owner’s dispute with Four Seasons Hotels after 13 years of management.

The standard rooms at the Park Hyatt Aviara property are luxury size rooms at 540 square feet. In my opinion the typical hotel room becomes a sizeable hotel room once you enter the 500 to 600 sq. ft. range. For comparison the square footage of a typical basic hotel room is about 280 to 320 square feet.

The $280 per night standard room rate I see for rooms this week makes this property a good candidate for a free night redemption using free night credits from the recent promotions. The hotel is a Hyatt Gold Passport category 6 reward night costing 22,000 points per night.

Currently the Park Hyatt Aviara offers an introductory offer for a 3rd night free rate including a $50 per stay resort credit. The 3rd night free rate brings the cost of three nights down to $234 per night this week. This introductory offer rate is available for reservations made by September 6, 2010 using rate code PHA50 for hotel stays through December 31, 2010. I only checked rates for this week so rates may be lower or higher than shown here for other dates.

Panoramic View King is $360 per night or $300 per night using the 3rd night free rate ($900 total for three nights).  The view is of the golf course or the Batiquitos Lagoon. Sliding French doors, king bed, 42-inch plasma TV… I hope they have ESPN coverage for watching World Cup 2010 in bed.

Park Suite is $480 per night or $400 per night using the 3rd night free rate for a 855 sq. ft room.

This property might be a good use of a Diamond member confirmed suite upgrade certificate when paying for the stay.

4 Comments

  • Ben Senise June 21, 2010

    i don’t get how you’re calculating the per night rate with the 3rd night free offer. if i pay 360 a night for two nights ($720 total) but get 3 nights, that would be 720/3 = 240 per night, no? am i missing something?

  • Ric Garrido June 22, 2010

    Ben – Third night free rates are rarely based on the otherwise lowest rate available. The $360 per night rate is the lowest rate available for the date I checked.

    The 3rd night free rate is actually $450 per night or $900 for two nights with the third night free, thus the actual rate comes out to $300 per night for three nights.

  • Kingsley June 22, 2010

    I read in the Wall Street Journal recently that there have been a lot of disputes with companies managing hotel properties. Seems like the economy has hit them hard. The article talked, too, about the economies the hotels are instituting, like not putting out those huge bouquets of flowers in the lobbies, and using their night staff to do miscellaneous chores as well as assigned jobs. With all of that, one would think places like Aviara would really try to keep prices down as low as possible — the $300 to $500 range is getting pricey, even if the room is worth it.

  • Ric Garrido June 23, 2010

    The most recent hotel industry news heralds the return of luxury hotel guests and the anticipation of being able to take room rates higher soon in the luxury segment.

    Time will tell.

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