Sunday, January 2, 2011

Gulfstream G150


Travelers in need of a jet with a transcontinental range might not imagine that the Gulfstream G150 (www.gulfstream.com)—the smallest jet in the venerable Gulfstream line—would be a candidate. Yet, surprisingly, this little jet delivers. Capable of making nonstop legs from New York to Los Angeles, or from California to Hawaii, the G150 is an excellent performer for an aircraft in this category.

The G150’s cabin is longer and wider than that of its predecessor, the G100. This change imparts a more spacious feel and provides extra shoulder room and a wider aisle. To minimize the effects of jet lag on passengers, 100 percent fresh air is filtered into the cabin, and 11 windows provide plenty of natural light. Combined with a 50-cubic-foot external baggage compartment that can store more than 1,000 pounds, these amenities ensure that passengers aboard the G150 arrive at their destination not only energized but with as much luggage as they require. The G150 sells for approximately $15 million.

Mega Yacht Odessa



With its stunning black hull and silver superstructure, Christensen Shipyards’ 160-?foot Odessa immediately commands attention in marinas filled with large, white yachts. The July 2009 launch also stands out among Christensen boats, boasting sleeker lines than its sisters from the Vancouver, Wash.–based yard. Her striking exterior, however, was not the driving force behind Odessa’s design.
Odessa’s contemporary styling, in fact, owes largely to its owners’ love of minimalist Armani Casa products. Christensen’s designers devised for the yacht an inviting yet uncluttered interior with a range of Armani Casa furnishings—many in Macassar ebony wood with Zen-like brown and beige fabrics—paired with bare walnut flooring and bulkheads. An almost-full-beam fish tank adds movement and color to the interior and serves as a divider between the warm and welcoming main salon and the streamlined dining room. Three bronze screen-type doors close off the dining room from the main foyer, providing an intimate space for meals or meetings.

This sense of style extends to Odessa’s outdoor areas, where Christensen has replaced its standard sundeck layout with a more wide-open space featuring Giati Designs deck furnishings and a large, rectangular hot tub. For guests seeking shelter, the deck offers a shaded seating area, as well as a welcoming bar.

Odessa accommodates as many as 12 guests in six staterooms that have low platform beds and spacious bathrooms. Passengers who charter the yacht, which spends summers in the Mediterranean and winters in the Caribbean, are served by a crew of 10 and have full use of tenders and toys that include a 22-foot Chris-Craft runabout, a 16-foot Nautica inflatable boat, a 15-foot sailboat, two Sea-Doo personal watercraft, two SeaBobs, pull toys, and a Brownie’s dive compressor.

Montage Beverly Hills


It’s been many years since Beverly Hills had a new high-end hospitality player on the scene – 18 years to be precise. So when Montage Beverly Hills opened in November 2008, in the heart of the Golden Triangle, all eyes were on the enigmatic newcomer. Not only has the hotel earned a following of loyal business and leisure travelers, it has also garnered the prestigious Forbes Five Star Award less than a year after opening. No other hotel has achieved the gold standard in hospitality so quickly – a testament to the company’s relentless pursuit of excellence.

The Forbes Five Star honor inspired Montage Beverly Hills to introduce a “Starry, Starry Night” getaway, so guests can share in this recognition. Along with a special rate and one-category room upgrade, guests earn a complimentary 60-minute treatment at the lavish Spa Montage for each night of their stay. At the peerless 20,000-square-foot Spa Montage, guests are treated to 17 treatment rooms, private men’s and women’s club-style locker rooms with steam, sauna, Swiss shower and private mineral pool, a co-ed relaxation area with large mineral pool, fitness room, full-service Kim Vo Salon and a team of wellness artisans.

Located steps from Rodeo Drive, Montage Beverly Hills is an urban oasis encompassed by world-renowned retailers and exquisite restaurants. The hotel’s 201 guestrooms, including 55 expansive suites, are steeped in both classic elegance and modern-day convenience. Montage Beverly Hills has specifically crafted its accommodations and amenities to fulfill guests’ changing needs. The abundance of suites caters to business travelers extending their trips to include family. Likewise, adjoining room options are configured to accommodate nannies and additional family members.
Montage Beverly Hills embodies a customized-service culture as well as complimentary access to a fleet of Mercedes-Benz automobiles for Superior Suite and higher bookings, John Lobb-certified Shoe Butlers and the heralded flexible round-the-clock check-in and checkout. Montage guests “own” their rooms for 24 hours – far more accommodating than the industry norm. Other astute touches include complimentary high-speed wireless Internet access and temperature controls that ensure guests can finesse their comfort zones by degree.
The hotel’s passion for creative cuisine is equally inspiring, whether you prefer alfresco dining at Parq, Afternoon Tea in the Lobby Lounge, casual fare at the rooftop Conservatory Grill or exalted bistro delicacies just across the Beverly Canon Gardens at Thomas Keller’s Bouchon.
For innovative private events, Montage Beverly Hills provides a variety of venues: Parq’s interactive Chef’s Table, the Muse private dining room or enjoy panoramic views from The Conservatory Dining Room. Each intimate space offers a level of service, cuisine and privacy rivaling Beverly Hills’ most sought-after tables.
In a city famed for setting the standard in exquisite taste, Montage Beverly Hills is redefining the art of living well.

Brabus Mercedes S600 iBusiness


Brabus, one of the most respected tuning companies in the world, has now unveiled its latest creation, the Brabus iBusiness. Based on the Mercedes-Benz S600, the Brabus iBusiness four-seater luxury sedan packs in a range of multimedia features, including two iPads in the rear seats with Bluetooth keyboards and mouse, an ultra-small Mac minicomputer under the rear shelf and a 64GB Apple iPod Touch. The German super tuners have fitted the Mercedes S600 iBusiness with a 15.2-inch TFT display with 16:9 aspect ratio and USB 2.0 ports in the rear compartment to hook up peripherals to the Mac. You can connect to the internet via UMTS and HSDPA. The two iPads control the complete BRABUS multimedia system and the car’s standard S-Class COMAND system with all functions such as radio, navigation system and telephone.

When not in use, you can store the iPads in bespoke compartments in the car’s center console. The Mercedes S600 iBusiness is powered by a BRABUS SV12 R Biturbo 750 12-cylinder engine with a rated power output of 750 hp / 552 kW and a peak torque of 1,350 Nm (995 lb-ft). The car sprints from 0 to 100 km/h (62 mph) in 4.0 seconds and to 200 km/h (124 mph) in 11.9 seconds, with a top speed of 340 km/h (211 mph).
The interiors of the car are done in a two-tone combination of high-quality Brabus leather. There are power-operated curtains, a color-changing interior lighting system, a new BRABUS Yachting wood trim package, scuff plates with illuminated BRABUS logo, an ergonomic sport steering wheel and anodized aluminum pedals.
The exterior comes clad in a sporty yet elegant designer suit. There is a large center air inlet, integrated auxiliary headlights and LED daytime running lights. The Brabus Mercedes S600 iBusiness is built to order.

Another good news is that are ready to equip any existing current S-Class model with the new multimedia system and all other BRABUS options.

Porsche 918 Spyder




2012 Porsche 918 SPYDER The almost-too-great-to-be-real 918 Spyder no longer holds concept status and has been confirmed for a limited production run that will likely be somewhere near 750 to 1,250 units. The 918 Spyder combines racing design with electric motors to offer a fascinating range of qualities. Porsche plans to provide super-low emission levels with an estimated fuel consumption of approximately 94 mpg. Despite its green car rating, it is also intended to offer the performance of a super sports car with a lap time on the Nürburgring in less than 7:30 minutes, faster than even the Porsche Carrera GT.
This open two-seater is powered by a high-revving V-8 developing more than 500 horsepower and a maximum engine speed of 9,200 rpm as well as electric motors on the front and rear axle with overall mechanical output of 218 horsepower. The V-8 combustion engine is the next step in the evolution of the highly successful 3.4- liter power unit already featured in the RS Spyder racing car and positioned mid-ship, in front of the rear axle, giving the car excellent balance and the right set-up for supreme performance on the race track. The energy reservoir is a fluid-cooled lithium-ion battery positioned behind the passenger cell.


Power is transmitted to the wheels by a seven-speed PDK transmission that feeds the power of the electric drive system to the rear axle. The front-wheel electric drive powers the wheels through a fixed transmission ratio.

A button on the steering wheel allows the driver to choose among four different running modes: The E-Drive mode is for running the car under electric power alone, with a range of up to 16 miles. In the Hybrid mode, the 918 Spyder uses both the electric motors and the combustion engine as a function of driving conditions and requirements, offering a range from particularly fuel-efficient all the way to extra-powerful. The Sport Hybrid mode uses both drive systems, but with the focus on performance. Most of the drive power goes to the rear wheels, with Torque Vectoring serving to additionally improve the car’s driving dynamics. In the Race Hybrid mode the drive systems are focused on pure performance with the highest standard of driving dynamics on the track, running at the limit to their power and dynamic output. With the battery sufficiently charged, a push-to-pass button feeds in additional electrical power (E-Boost), when overtaking or for even better performance.

Like the drivetrain, the lightweight body structure of the Porsche 918 Spyder also bears DNA carried over from the track. The modular structure with its monocoque bodyshell made of carbon-fiber-reinforced plastic (CFP) and liberal use of magnesium and aluminum not only reduce weight to below 3,285 lbs. but also ensure supreme driving precision thanks to a high level of torsional stiffness.

The driver and passenger are not only embedded in contoured sports bucket seats but also form part of the cockpit. The cockpit offers a glimpse at the potential interior architecture of future Porsche super sports cars. The three free-standing circular dials for road speed (left), engine speed (middle) and energy management (right) would appear to come directly from a racing car in the 60s.


The Porsche 918 Spyder concept also comes with further innovative functions such as the Range Manager. After being activated in the Center Display, the Range Manager uses the map in the navigation system to present the remaining range the car is able to cover, naturally allowing the driver to influence that range through the appropriate choice of power and performance.

Lamborghini Sesto Elemento

The world expected Lamborghini to unveil its Murciélago replacement at this year’s Paris auto show—production of the wildest bull has already ended—but the supercar maker chose instead to tease us with this concept, saving its new flagship for next March’s Geneva auto show. Ah, you must now be thinking, so this smaller car previews a Gallardo replacement! Nope, it’s not that either.
What, then, is the Sesto Elemento? Let's have a look at the exterior first. Despite the mid-engine layout, this concept seems compact, with a very short rear overhang. Wedgy shapes are typical for Lamborghini, but this car is even more extreme than the super-angular Reventón, the ultra-low-volume Murciélago spinoff from a few years ago. A plethora of spoilers, air vents, and triangular elements protrude from or perforate its body. There is a racing-type quick-refueling system. The rear end is open, to give spectators a clear view of the transmission and the exhaust system, the latter of which, remarkably, exits through the engine cover above the taillights.
The front end and roof are marked by sharp, seemingly folded creases, and the rear part of the roof is graced by two intake ducts and two parallel lines of five holes arranged above the cylinder banks. Below the ten openings sits, obviously, a V-10. The hexagonal shape of these elements is a nod to an obsession of former Bertone designer Marcello Gandini, who penned the Miura and Countach.
Seems Familiar and Futuristic
Despite an overt familiarity to its shape, the Sesto Elemento is nevertheless detached from the brand's current styling language. The wild details turn it into something you’d expect only in a video game, or in some crazy tuner's showroom, but not quite from Lamborghini, not after the brand has been working hard to overcome the styling clichés of its past. In fact, we hear there was a considerable amount of discussion within Lamborghini and at parent Audi about showing such an extreme concept car. In the end, the view prevailed that it wouldn't hurt to deviate a bit from the production models' somewhat aloof and architectonic proportions and design—traits that will apply to that Murciélago replacement, by the way.
One of the most striking features of the Sesto Elemento is that its entire body is constructed from visible, matte-finish carbon fiber (the so-called "sixth element” indicated by translating the concept’s name from Italian), as expensive a material as it is light. In fact, the curb weight of the entire car is claimed to be a mere 2200 pounds. That's 1100 fewer than our estimated curb weight for the supposedly “superlight” Gallardo Superleggera.
Wicked Quick
Combine the low weight with the V-10’s 570 hp at 8000 rpm—torque stands at 398 lb-ft at 6500 rpm—and performance should be explosive; Lamborghini says the car is capable of reaching 62 mph in 2.5 seconds. Top speed—only mentioned, says Lambo, "in the interests of completeness,” as top speed has been downgraded to the fourth-highest priority for its products—is said to be “well over 185 mph.” We suspect this modesty belies a terminal velocity north of 200 mph.
The use of carbon fiber extends beyond exterior panels: The passenger-holding monocoque, front subframe, crumple zones, and wheels are made of the material as well. The rear subframe, by contrast, is made of aluminum. Most anything else has simply been omitted. There is no dashtop—the underlying structure itself is laid bare—and the seat cushions are glued to the monocoque. One element we wish had been included is a clutch pedal. The Sesto Elemento is equipped with the e-gear six-speed automated manual transmission; power runs through it to Lambo’s all-wheel-drive system.
Foreshadows Future Lambos

If the sinister design won’t redefine Lamborghini styling, the Sesto Elemento is nevertheless significant as a rolling testament to the brand’s commitment to carbon fiber; all future Lambos will make extensive use of the stuff. AWD systems and heavy, ten- and twelve-cylinder engines take their toll on curb weights, and eliminating hundreds of pounds through the use of carbon fiber will give Lamborghini a potent weapon in the fight to create the most extreme supercars.
It's good politically for the brand within the VW Group, too. With its sales numbers taking a dive, Lamborghini needs another leg to stand on, and carbon-fiber expertise will for the first time make the raging bull a technology leader among VW’s brands. Lamborghini is working with the University of Washington in Seattle to develop its carbon-fiber tech, and aircraft maker Boeing is a partner in the university's Lamborghini Advanced Composite Structures Laboratory, too.
Yes, we were hoping to see the next Murciélago, but we’ll admit the Sesto Elemento is one hell of a substitute, and it further raises our expectations for the next production Lambo. This thing is so over the top, it’s almost too much—just as any proper Lamborghini should be.

Jaguar C-X75


Jaguar desperately needs a BMW 3-series fighter priced between $30,000 and $40,000. While we continue to wait for that rumored announcement, Jaguar is using the très chic Paris auto show to unveil an eleventy-billion-dollar, two-seat, twin-turbine, quad-electric-motor-powered 205-mph slingshot that should be in production in about, oh, never. Cue the Star Wars theme. Did we mention that there was British government agency money involved in this project?

The C-X75 is at heart a research project designed to fuse aerospace and automotive technologies. The car was developed over a nine-month span and paid for by Jag, while the powertrain springs from a joint project with the British government–sponsored Technology Strategy Board. On the most basic level, the car’s complex powertrain is a range-extending hybrid that operates roughly like the Chevrolet Volt's. In the Jag, a 19-kWh, 330-pound cache of lithium-ion batteries provides up to 68 miles of pure-electric AWD propulsion from four 195-hp electric motors. Mounted inboard, each drives a single wheel through a 3:1 gear reduction, and together create a claimed 1180 lb-ft of torque. (Four electric motors? Maybe Jaguar should have called it the XJ440.)
When the battery pack is exhausted, two miniature gas turbines weighing 77 pounds each and making 94 hp at 80,000 rpm provide recharging power and also can boost the electric-motor output when high performance is required. The turbines, made by the English company Bladon Jets and housed in a box behind the two seats with inlet air channeled through ducts around the occupant’s heads, extend the range to 560 miles.
 
Jag is claiming 0-to-62-mph times of 3.4 seconds for the 3000-pound C-X75, about as quick as a Ferrari 458 Italia, with the quarter-mile accomplished in 10.3 seconds at 156 mph. Under hard acceleration, its runs solely on electricity to 60 mph, then one turbine kicks in to assist up to 120 mph. Beyond that, both turbines assist the C-X75 to its top speed. All of this is theoretical, since nobody has driven this machine at a speed faster than a crawl. The brakes are from the supercharged XFR sedan, though, so the 5-to-0-mph stops are surely furious.
Either way, it’s a stunning, road-sucking, mid-engined machine that looks like a windblown sliver of mercury, yet another attractive opus from the Jaguar design shop run by Ian Callum. Befitting Jaguar, the chassis is an aluminum spaceframe. The outer panels are fiberglass. A moveable airfoil on the underbody Venturi tunnel directs airflow according to the car’s speed, while the turbines’ hot exhaust gasses flow through vectored nozzles to increase downforce. Also, the grille and brake-cooling ducts seal themselves when not needed.

Inside is a nearly all-glass cockpit consisting of high-res LCD touch screens for gauges and information displays and electroluminescent lighting.
Talk about dumping the retro shtick.

Maybach 57 S


Maybach unveils a stunning collaboration with German coachbuilder, Xenatec, who have constructed a sleek 2+2 coupe based on the Maybach 57 S.
Designed by Burch Fred Hardt, the same man who penned the Exelero concept, the coupe features conservative styling and a luxurious interior.
The exterior package includes new front and rear bumpers, a new air diffuser with integrated exhaust system and the B-Pillar moved 20 cm to the back of the car, offering more room for the passengers.


The car is also offered with a full glass roof, bespoke interior and armored body for full protection.


Power still comes from a the same 6.0L twin-turbo V12 making 612-hp and 737 lb-ft of torque found in the Maybach 57 S.
This will help the coupe to sprint from 0 to 60 mph in 5 seconds and to hit a top speed of 170 mph.


Production will be limited to 100 units and pricing starts at €675,000 ($923,440).
As the project is approved by Maybach, the Xenatec coupe offers a complete four-year unlimited mileage warranty and a four-year service & repair package, just like standard Maybach vehicles.

Blackberry Playbook


BlackBerry maker Research In Motion just announced its iPad rival at its developers conference in San Francisco.
The PlayBook is aimed at business customers, co-chief executive Michael Lazaridis said during a speech at the conference.
The device is 9.7 millimetres thick and features a seven-inch touch screen. That’s smaller than the iPad’s 9.7-inch display.
It can run both HTML 5 and Flash 10.1 and has a one gigahertz dual-core processor with one gigabyte of RAM.


BlackBerry smartphone users can pair their handset with the PlayBook using a Bluetooth connection to view their email, calendar, documents or other content.
The PlayBook also features front- and rear-facing cameras to support video conferencing and allows multi-tasking between programs.
The fact PlayBook users can route data through BlackBerry smartphones instead of paying for separate telecom service should prove a selling point in the business and personal markets.
RIM said that in the coming weeks it would release a software kit so third-party developers can begin tailoring applications, or “apps,” for PlayBook.
The tablet will be available in the U.S. in early 2011 and in other countries in the second quarter, RIM said. The company didn’t give a price for the device.

Highest Restaurant in the World

Emaar Hospitality Group (EHG) has announced plans to open the “highest restaurant” in the world in January 2011 in Dubai.
The restaurant will be called Atmosphere and will be located on the 122nd floor of Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world.
According to a report on Hotelier.com, Atmosphere will be grill style restaurant.

The restaurant is located two levels below the obeservation deck ‘At the Top’ and EHG expects it to become a must-visit venue for visitors to Dubai.
Atmosphere is being designed by famous hospitality designer Adam Tihany, responsible for hotels such as the One&Only Cape Town.