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The Place to Stay on the Way to the Maldives

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The Place to Stay on the Way to the Maldives

January 28th, 2010

Travel writer Amanda Jones recently traveled to the Maldives by way of Dubai for a feature in the "Find Bliss" issue of ISLANDS magazine. This is her dispatch on an amazing hotel she stayed at during her travels.

I’d always had a knee-jerk negative reaction to the concept of Dubai. All that shiny new stuff in a desert seemed incongruous, antithetical and maybe even gauche. I’d even remained unconvinced when my friend Jan Morris, the iconic British travel writer, had said, with uncharacteristic enthusiasm, that Dubai put all other cities to shame. And then I went and was unabashedly won over. It’s like heyday Las Vegas meets Versailles. Or maybe more like Las Vegas crossed with a hot Geneva. It’s a bubble world where everything is clean, cutting edge, lit up and functioning. Everyone is polite. There is no poverty. Nothing is even slightly shabby.

And set on a man-made island in the Arabian Gulf is the Burj Al Arab, stated to be the world’s most opulent (and expensive) hotel.

Built to mimic a billowing sail, the Burj is worth saving all your pennies and staying there, or alternatively, go just to have dinner there. The lobby has soaring ceilings, a shooting, laser-lit fountain, mosaic floors, and glass and metal everywhere. The suites come with a butler, push-button curtains, TV’s that rise out of tables, stocked bars, full size Hermes bathroom condiments (they even give you a chic tote so you can haul them off with you), and décor that you’ve previously only seen in James Bond movies. The hotel has four gourmet restaurants, one of which, Al Muntaha, is cantilevered from the top of the sail with a dizzying view. Another has an aquarium in the walls, through which you descend in a glass elevator to reach the restaurant. In the past decade, Dubai has quietly established itself as a convenient, sleek, seamless hub for global travel. Despite their economic crisis, you can get almost everywhere in the world from there.

If, like me, you’re sick of flying through Europe’s crowded, smoky, expensive cities, give Dubai a shot.

See Amanda's day-by-day itinerary to plan your trip. And see her full article in the ISLANDS archive on Scribd.

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