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Customers leaving their airport parking till the very last minute pay more than they should because of demand and or the high gate rate based on time of year. The travel group Travelrobe launched its new airport parking site in the UK as part of its expansion into the UK travel sector. The group which first started in 2006 with its www.travelrobe.com site providing Hotels, Flights, Cruise, Car Hire, and Vacation Packages worldwide has now ventured into the UK’s airport parking segment with http://www.airportessentials.com providing airport parking, airport hotels and airport lounges to all its customers. Mark Felix Travelrobe’s MD says that when making arrangements to travel, Gatwick or Heathroiw airport parking and possibly a hotel the night before should always be considered, those who drive on the day before their flight always risk unpredictable weather and traffic conditions and its not worth the hassle and stress before a long haul or short flight. While there are many details to be considered when planning a holiday, it always seem that these very important elements of your travel is the last thing on everyone's mind. An Airport Lounge at Gatwick, Heathrow, Manachester, Stansted is a good option to also consider which allows you to relax before a flight and there are lots of benefits in booking an Airport Lounge. For starters, after booking there is no additional cost and the items available include alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages, snacks, news papers and TV monitors to catch up on the latest news and for those who require internet access this option is also available at most Airport Lounges. Other items apart from Airport Parking worth considering includes travel insurance, car hire, destination taxi service, online safe to secure your documents in case of an emergency abroad and all these can be booked from our partner site www.aph.com One of the most difficult parts of choosing an airport parking company to park your car with while on holiday is knowing how safe and reliable these companies are which is why we have chosen APH who are recipients of the Park Mark, Safer Parking Award from the British Parking Association as our airport parking partner. If you are looking to park at Gatwick, Birmingham and Manchester look for the Park Mark award sign from our site http://www.airportessentials.com Additional travel extras are available from www.travelrobe.com including flights, destination hotels, car hire, cruises, Gatwick Airport Parking, Heathrow Airport Parking etc. If you are planning a trip this holiday season we urge you to plan ahead on your Manchester Airport Parking, Heathrow Airport Parking and Hotel, Gatwick Hotel With Parking and every other airport in the UK To book a Hotel, Flight, Car Hire, Vacation Package, Cruise, visit http://www.travelrobe.com or UK Customers planning a trip this holiday season are urged to visit http://www.airportessentials.com to book their airport parking, airport hotels, airport lounges and any feedback on the new site is welcomed. For more information contact - Mark Felix Contributor's Notes: About Mark Felix: He is the owner of the Travelrobe group of travel sites based in the UK and writes press releases and articles on various travel destinations - For more information contact - Mark Felix www.Parctel.com: BANGKOK, February 16, 2009 - Holidaymakers all over the world can now visit a new website that gives them the latest information about the tourism situation on the ground in Thailand. The Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) has launched the "Thailand Tourism Update" website (http://www.tourismthailand.org/thailandtourismupdate). The site aims to ensure tourists an enjoyable journey within Thailand by keeping them informed with latest updates. There will also be information geared for special interest tourists and repeat visitors. Key elements of the fact-rich Web 2.0 site include constantly updated reports from independent news sources and organizations, topical feature articles on the country, blogs about Thailand by travelers around the world, RSS feeds, and a forum for travelers to discuss issues. The site has been designed as an information resource that can handle any breaking news. A Thailand Tourism Update forum team is available online to share information and insights with forum participants. Tourists will be able to keep themselves updated through RSS feeds on three main elements of the site: tourism news, travel blogs, and travel forums. Journalists, travellers, travel agents and tourism operators can subscribe to e-mail updates to keep themselves up to date. Thailand Tourism Update is the first online space provided by TAT for tourists around the globe to share their knowledge, interest and experiences about travel in Thailand. "Tens of thousands of tourists are here in Thailand right now having a great holiday enjoying the sun, smiles and cuisine we are famous for", said TAT's Deputy Governor for Policy and Planning, Mr. Suraphon Svetasreni. "Please help us get that message out to everyone around the world." Further information: Thailand Tourism Update: http://www.tourismthailand.org/thailandtourismupdate The Aviation industry in India encompasses a wide range of services related to air transport such as passenger and cargo airlines, unscheduled service operators --- private jets and helicopters, airport management, and support services like Maintenance, Repairs and Overhaul (MRO), ground handling, in-flight catering, and training. The Aviation sector has reaped massive benefit from the entry of private carriers, especially from those of the low fare ones. The growth of the airlines sector has caused a sharp upturn in demand for allied services including MRO, ground handling, and catering services. The booming aviation industry, along with its tertiary services, has wreaked a major talent crunch, boosting opportunities for training service providers. The ever-expanding Indian economy and increased demand for trade has pushed the need for air cargo services to a new high. Increasing number of entrants in the sector has forced airports to expand their cargo handling capacities. The aviation sector is still a small part of the travel and transportation services sector in India. 2006-07 posted annual passenger traffic of about 96 million, as compared to nearly 6 billion passengers carried by the railways. The industry has already bumped into several challenges; inadequate infrastructure being the most crucial. The airlines suffered losses of around USD 500 million in 2006-07 and the situation is expected to deteriorate in 2007-08. The high cost of operations, intense competition, and unsustainably low fares have contributed to these losses. While initiatives have been taken to remove bottlenecks to growth, a need for further investments in capacity is felt more than ever. A recent spate of mergers, however, has come to some relief. The decelerating profit margin does not entail a slump in revenue generation. It is the increasing costs that have thrown the aviation industry into the present plight. India’s aviation sector stands up to the crisis and races against its fastest growing global competitors. Improved affordability and connectivity add to the expected improvement in both passengers and cargo traffic. Large public and private investments in air travel infrastructure, supported by government initiatives, are expected to pour in. For more information please visit: http://www.bharatbook.com/productdetail.asp?id=80691 Or Contact us at: The recent announcement that CCTV images can now be used as evidence in the issuing of parking fines is of consequence to every local authority. The new regulation stipulate that CCTV can only be used in areas deemed “to difficult or sensitive” for an attendant to operate, such as a fast flowing road or a busy junction. Now, fines can be issued through the post up to 14 days after the alleged offence has occurred. According to the RAC, of Britain’s 25m cars just 1m are on the move. Across England and Wales, the number of parking tickets handed out to motorists is approaching 8 million annually. In the capital, penalty notices have jumped by 45% in four years to Today, the entire messaging cycle can be automated (controlled via barcodes to ensure 100% integrity). Technology is available to fold and insert documents into envelopes which can then be processed via digital meters which automatically weigh each mail piece and add the correct postage amount to each item. This results in professionally presented and cost efficient communications. A more streamlined, automated approach will ensure that any communications concerning parking fines are totally accurate and despatched on time to the right person. www.Parctel.com: The Harry Potter Black Taxi Private Tour of London is conducted in a licensed London Black Cab by an expert taxi driver/guide who will take you to the sites made famous by the Harry Potter series. First stop Diagon Alley where Harry and his friends visit at the start of every school year to pick up their supplies of spell books, Robes, wands and other items in preparation for their return to Hogwarts. Step inside the Leaky Cauldron for a Butter Beer and visit Gringotts bank, the Wizarding bank operated by Goblins. Walk into the wall to get to platform 9 and 3/4 at King's Cross Station where the Hogwarts Express departs. Watch the time on the clock on the bridge and walk the bridge that Harry and Hagrid march across. See the site where Harry and Ron stole Ron's fathers flying car. Stand on the bridge where the Knight bus crossed from the third book, Prisoner of Azkaban. And visit the all new Leaky Cauldron. New and Exclusive to Viator - Visit the locations of the new movie "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix"! Follow Harry's flight to London with Dumbledore's Army and see the bridges, buildings and ships they pass along the way. Enter the telephone box that descends into the Ministry of Magic below. Stand right where Harry and Voldemort come face to face for the first time since the Triwizard tournament in Harry Potter and The Goblet of Fire. Last stop is the Headquarters of the Order of the Phoenix, which is also home to Harry's beloved God father Sirius Black. This is your chance to put yourself in the shoes of Harry Potter and Friends as you see the sights of London. Find out more about the Harry Potter Tour www.Parctel.com: Now, you can be the pilot of a single-engine, four-seat airplane, soaring over the Southern California landscape with an unbelievable view of the city and homes below. Best of all, there's no experience necessary! While you're in the pilot's seat, a certified flight instructor will be guiding you every step of the way, from takeoff to landing. It's a memorable, exciting and fun experience. Plus, the time is FAA-logable as an actual flight lesson, if you bring a valid US passport or birth certificate. This adventure includes a pilot's logbook, "First Flight" certificate and souvenir photo. www.Parctel.com: We at Parctel are still in two minds as to whether Hamish McNeilly from the Otago Daily Times was having a slow news day or just wanted to highlight a strange aberration that airport parking attendants in the booth at Dunedin International Airport display: The latest driving hazard could be the humble car parking ticket. Tired of handling saliva-laden tickets presented by drivers, an attendant at the Dunedin International Airport ticket booth decided to do something about it and placed a sign in the ticket booth reading: "Please do not put the ticket in your mouth. Your co-operation is appreciated." Dunedin International Airport operations manager Richard Roberts investigated the issue and discovered an estimated one person per flight put their ticket in their mouth before handing it over. It was unclear whether the sign - which had been up for more than a year - had deterred serial ticket biters, he said. A wet ticket had the potential to spread germs and also jam machines that read tickets, a spokesman for New Zealand's largest private car parking operator said. "But I think that would be unlikely. "You see the odd person with a ticket in their mouth but besides from being a bit gross, it is not a big problem," Wilson Parking NZ South Island operations manager Daniel Bundy said. People perhaps put tickets in their mouth because they were "multi-tasking" and that was one way of keeping it nearby, he said. Citifleet team leader Brent Bachop said the Dunedin City Council had the potential problem licked. Council-controlled parks used an automated system. The only problem council experienced with the parking tickets was when people bent their tickets, he said. As to which body part has the most germs, it seems to be a toss up between the mouth and fingernails with most people saying fingernails - so it seems to be a situation of damned if you do and damned if you don't for the poor airport parking attendant. WikiAnswers votes for the Mouth as carrying the body part carrying the most germs. I suppose the best solution would be to issue the queasy germ phobic attendant with latex gloves and a mask - wimps! www.Parctel.com: The winner of the escalating battle for Raleigh-Durham International Airport's lucrative parking business may be determined by people such as Wayne Eakes. The manufacturing engineer always chooses to park in the airport's sprawling seven-story parking garage because it's convenient to RDU's terminals. But Eakes said lower fees and amenities such as free bottled water and newspapers might persuade him to switch to a new lot two miles from the terminals. "With gas prices being so high, any kind of savings helps," said Eakes, who lives in Snow Camp and flies out of RDU on business about six times a year. "And you wouldn't have to wander around looking for your car." The lot, owned by Cincinnati-based FastPark, ups the ante for the RDU parking business, worth about $40 million a year. The lot, which has its grand opening today, adds 2,000 spaces to RDU's parking mix. To attract customers, it is offering free parking through Aug. 9. After that, daily fees will be $6.36 a day, or $5.45 for customers who download a "frequent parker" card from company's Web site. That's cheaper than RDU's parking deck, which costs $10 for the daily lot. But it's on par with RDU's remote lots, which cost $6 a day and shuttle passengers from about a mile away. Two other private parking operations already shuttle passengers to the terminals, but FastPark's lot is more than twice as large as the largest competitor, the 920-space Preflight Airport Parking on Lumley Road. The I-40 Park & Fly on Airgate Drive has about 250 spaces. FastPark's parent company, Chavez Properties, began buying land for the site in 2005 and now has 27.9 total acres, according to Wake County tax records. Airline ticket prices are rising, and travel is predicted to decline with a slowing economy. But Manuel Chavez, the company's vice president, said amenities including free car washes, covered parking spaces and shuttles that take passengers from their cars directly to terminals will draw the customers who are still flying. "You can pull into those big garages and get lucky and find a space, and if you do, then you've got lug your bags to the terminal," Chavez said. The family-owned company also has airport parking operations in Austin, Baltimore, Cleveland, Houston, Albuquerque, Cincinnati, Miami, Memphis and Tucson. It's developing sites in Milwaukee and Orlando. But luring customers from RDU's lots may be difficult. The airport has the advantage of more spaces -- 20,000 total, including 11,000 in the garage adjacent to terminals A and C. Even though RDU's prices are higher, location matters most to some travelers. "If I'm getting here at 10 at night, I don't want a shuttle, I don't want to wait around," said Jessica Unger, a Raleigh sales consultant who takes weekly business flights and always parks in the RDU deck. "Even if the shuttle is there waiting when I land, my car is right here," Unger said Thursday. "It's convenience. I don't care if [the other lot] is free." Source: Dudley Price, News and Observer www.Parctel.com: Budapest Airport has sharply reduced its long-term parking fees and introduced new fares for the holiday season, the Ferihegy airport operator announced Thursday. One-day parking at the airport will drop to Ft 2,500 from Ft 4,000, the three-day rate falls to Ft 6,200 instead of Ft 10,000, while parking for eight days will cost Ft 9,500. A parking fee calculator is available on the airport website at www.bud.hu. Ferihegy Airport has 2,533 parking spaces, of which 234 are guarded. Source: caboodle.hu www.Parctel.com: The Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) has launched two digital activities to encourage tourists around the world to participate in the "Amazing Thailand" campaign, and to attract more visitors to the Kingdom. Tourists can win 200,000 baht of prizes by uploading video clips of their most amazing experiences in Thailand in TAT's amazing Experience Video Contest. The aim is to inspire other travelers to visit Thailand. Thailand Portfolio Project features uploaded photographs and stories from journalists focused on the Amazing Thailand theme. Contributions are ranked by the site's visitors to generate a list of the most popular posts. This seeks to encourage more users to upload their experiences. TAT believes that Thailand Portfolio project and the Amazing Experience Video Contest will provide excellent first-hand tourism information to social networking site users. TAT expect that within one year these clips will be viewed by more than 100 million visitors, which will help promote tourism in Thailand and will let people world wide have a better understanding of Thailand. |
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