Best Hyatts in India
Am planning a trip to India for January 2017.
Will in part plan my trip around those Hyatts that have a WOW factor--if there are any. Please advise on your experience at any of the Hyatt family properties anywhere throughout India. Info on the following will be a bonus: (a) where location is especially favorable or not; and (b) suites at relevant properties--plan on using DSUs where possible. |
Originally Posted by travelexpert
(Post 25246147)
Am planning a trip to India for January 2017.
Will in part plan my trip around those Hyatts that have a WOW factor--if there are any. Please advise on your experience at any of the Hyatt family properties anywhere throughout India. Info on the following will be a bonus: (a) where location is especially favorable or not; and (b) suites at relevant properties--plan on using DSUs where possible. The hotel is gorgeous and the suites are very, very nice. Service is top notch too. |
Park Hyatt Goa
http://www.goa.park.hyatt.com/en/hotel/home.html Goa in January will be lovely. Have no idea about the suites at PH Goa, but the property and basic rooms were wonderful. |
Thanks for advice in posts so far.
How about anything in the major Indian tourist cities? |
Grand Hyatt Mumbai has my vote. It's a little far to Colaba which is the drawback. It has great restaurants; particularly China House and Soma. They have a free shuttle to the airport as well. The best part; it's quiet. You don't hear the constant honking like you would if you'd stay at hotels along Marine Drive.
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Skip Bangelore. The Hyatt there is... dreadful to say the least.
I enjoyed the Hyatt in Amritsar. It's next to a known mall, so tuktuk drivers aren't confused when you asked to be driven there. Also, a hotel driver can meet you at the airport and drive you to the hotel for roughly $10 USD. Service is amazing. As a Diamond, it seemed that I had a concierge permanently assigned to me, as he checked me in, greeted me directly every single time I came in, escorted me to breakfast and dinner, etc. The breakfast there is also extremely solid, with a mix of standard English fare and savory Indian dishes. I booked this hotel under an promotion, so I only paid 2500 INR per night ($38 USD). While the hotel doesn't have a wow factor, I would go back in a heartbeat. |
Originally Posted by paag
(Post 25246881)
Park Hyatt Goa
http://www.goa.park.hyatt.com/en/hotel/home.html Goa in January will be lovely. Have no idea about the suites at PH Goa, but the property and basic rooms were wonderful. The suite was roughly 800 sq., two bathrooms and large soaking tub. It was one of my best DSUs ever used. |
GH Goa vs PH Goa
Originally Posted by tphamBU
(Post 25257475)
Suites with a DSU are huge. I was assigned a corner suite which had a view of the pool and ocean. (Well, not really the ocean, more like the rolling lawn which led to the beach.)
The suite was roughly 800 sq., two bathrooms and large soaking tub. It was one of my best DSUs ever used. I've got a suite booked at the GH Goa, but am wondering if I should be looking at the PH instead. Opinions? The lounge and camp hyatt were both driving factors for the GH, as well as the photos on the website, but I do love a good PH. |
Originally Posted by bostonpilot
(Post 25257819)
I am taking the family (2 adults + 2 young kids - 8 & 6 yrs old) on our first India trip. We are doing ~1.5 weeks of traveling around Rajasthan and then heading to Goa for 4 nights at the end of the trip for some relaxation.
I've got a suite booked at the GH Goa, but am wondering if I should be looking at the PH instead. Opinions? The lounge and camp hyatt were both driving factors for the GH, as well as the photos on the website, but I do love a good PH. PH Goa located at South Goa has a beach right in front. The beach also has shacks that serve amazing food. |
Originally Posted by gemini573
(Post 25256886)
Grand Hyatt Mumbai has my vote. It's a little far to Colaba which is the drawback. It has great restaurants; particularly China House and Soma. They have a free shuttle to the airport as well. The best part; it's quiet. You don't hear the constant honking like you would if you'd stay at hotels along Marine Drive.
I would say it is still a "conference" hotel, but a very good one at that! It is also quite convenient to the airport. When I used a DSU I got a Grand Suite, which isn't too large (~600 sq. ft), but it suited my needs just find. I liked the lounge as well. |
I would add the GH Mumbai has an excellent Grand Club that offers an open bar happy hour with great food every day from 6 - 8 pm.
GH Mumbai doesn't have the wow factor that Taj Colaba has but few other hotels in Mumbai do... |
I am going to express a divergent POV and suggest that you don't plan your India trip around Hyatts. You will miss a lot/most of what makes India, India.
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Originally Posted by Darren
(Post 25261515)
I am going to express a divergent POV and suggest that you don't plan your India trip around Hyatts. You will miss a lot/most of what makes India, India.
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Originally Posted by Darren
(Post 25261515)
I am going to express a divergent POV and suggest that you don't plan your India trip around Hyatts. You will miss a lot/most of what makes India, India.
I think Ahmedabad is a very interesting place and the state its in, Gujarat is steeped in history and I believe the birthplace of Gandhi. Both Hyatts there are nice though Hyatt Ahmedabad (not the Hyatt Regency) was formerly an Indian chain hotel which means smaller and a less "business-y" atmosphere. PH Chennai is a nice little hotel as well but not sure there is much to do or see there. |
Any updated thoughts to this topic?
I’ve been to many of the hotels in northern India mentioned here and they were fine. I tried Lucknow and would not recommend it, while Kolkata was interesting but in need of renovation I would like to do a Hyatt tour of southern India as has been discussed here. |
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