Entries Tagged as 'California Spa'

Big Sur Fire Forces Spa Closings

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Big Sur spas, including Ventana Inn & Spa, Esalen and Post Ranch Inn, have closed due to wildfires moving into the Big Sur area.

July 7, 2008, BIG SUR, CA - At 8:00 a.m. Wednesday July 2 the management of Ventana Inn & Spa was contacted by the Monterey County Sheriff’s Department with a mandatory evacuation notice.  Currently, Highway One is closed from Palo Colorado to Lucia.  The entire community of Big Sur has been evacuated and is closed until further notice.

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The 1,400 residents of Big Sur have also been ordered to leave their homes. About 65,000 acres of the Los Padres National Forest have burned in the last two weeks as part of the Basin Complex Fire.

Ventana Inn & Spa, which is undergoing an $18 million renovation, provided relocation assistance and physical room to room search was performed to ensure all guests had evacuated. General Manager Jonathan Farrington has indicated that Ventana Inn & Spa, Cielo Restaurant and Allegria Spa will remain closed until further notice. Esalen has cancelled all programs through July 13.

Stevenswood Spa Resort - Northern California Eco-Friendly Green Spa

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Stevenswood Spa Resort Integrates Eco-friendly Amenities into “Greening” Program

Officials of Stevenswood Spa Resort, one of the nation’s leading spa resorts dedicated to creating a more eco-friendly guest experience, today announced that it has implemented its next “green” initiative with the introduction of a 100-percent biodegradable line of Environmentally Sensitive Amenities™ at its 16-acre, ocean-view Indigo Eco/Spa and resort here. The amenities include environmentally friendly liquids, soap and packaging.

“We began as a spa interested in the well-being of our guests and evolved into a resort simultaneously dedicated to improving the environment,” said Michael Webster, Stevenswood Spa Resort principle. “It was a natural extension to take our guest-focused wellness approach and expand it to the wellness of the environment. While we are small by spa/resort standards, we believe we can be a more progressive laboratory for larger resorts that have to contend with scale and bureaucracy. As we implement strong environment-oriented programs, we share it with the industry. While at the property level, soaps and liquids and their packaging may seem insignificant in terms of environmental impact, on a national level it accounts for thousands of tons of materials a year.”

Webster noted that the spa was thinking “green” long before the LEED certification program began to become popular. ”We installed Delrin Venturi Spa Showerheads in 2004, which reduced water usage by more than 25 percent, while still providing a luxurious spa shower experience. In the past 3.5 years, we now recycle more than 30 percent of our expendables, resulting in tons of recycling, saving hundreds of barrels of oil and dozens of trees annually. More than 50 percent of the products we use are either recycled or bio-degradable.”

Webster pointed out that the Environmentally Sensitive Amenities™ will have a meaningful impact on both the environment and the economy. “One ton of recycled plastic saves nearly 700 gallons of oil,” he said. “If the entire industry adapted a totally recyclable program for bathroom amenities, the savings could easily exceed millions of barrels of oil annually.

“Our goal is to help preserve the environmental health of our ‘backyard,’ the Mendocino Coast. If others do the same for their respective backyards, we will have a major impact on the global environment.”

All amenity bottles and their aluminum caps are fully recyclable and made mostly from post-consumer recycled materials. Additionally, ESA products contain minimal preservatives and labeling and are packaged in non-bleached, natural board for easy biodegradation.

Specific ESA items that Stevenswood Spa Resort has acquired include:

• Toothbrush & toothpaste

• Hair comb

• Makeup removal towelettes

• Shower cap

• Herbal shampoo, conditioner and lotion

• Peppermint mouthwash

• Shoe shine kit

• Mending kit

• Vanity pack

• Facial and hand soaps

• Q-tips

• Bath crystals

• Nail file

• Cotton balls

• Aroma body wash

“Our guests expect the Stevenswood Spa Resort to be at the forefront of environmental awareness, while establishing the highest standards of luxury,” Webster added. “Adding this product line to our amenities is a natural step for us to maintain that commitment.”

Stevenswood Spa Resort is an idyllic retreat on Northern California’s Mendocino Coast. Contemporary and secluded, this tranquil resort offers a gracious respite for travelers and locals alike. Located two minutes south of the town of Mendocino in Little River, this AAA Four-Diamond property is surrounded on three sides by State Park, and is a short walk to the Pacific Ocean. Intimate by design, elegant by nature, the lodge features luxury suites, the acclaimed Restaurant at Stevenswood, and the Five-Star Indigo Eco|Spa. A private botanical garden, Jacuzzi hot tub spas, and landscaped grounds enhance the breathtaking setting, with a backdrop of Redwood groves and ocean meadows. For more information, call 707.937.2810

Green … getting back to basics

The Greening of the Spa

What Constitutes a Green Spa?

Tips for Greening Your Spa Experience and Your Life

How Natural and Green is my Spa Skin Care?

Spas that are Green or Eco Friendly

Go Green may mean Going Backwards

GAIA Anderson Hotel & Spa - American Canyon California - LEED Gold

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This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com. http://www.spavelous.com

GAIA Anderson Hotel & Spa Opens as America’s first LEED Gold Certified Hotel

GAIA Anderson Hotel & Spa, built for $14 million, opened on May 1, 2008 and is the latest creation from Mr. Wen Chang, creator of America’s first, LEED Gold certified hotel, Gaia Napa Valley Hotel and Spa in American Canyon, California.

Maintaining his very high standards for the ultimate in an eco-friendly hotel, Mr. Chang directed the construction crew in the usage of state-of-the-art green building practices that include 122 totally “green” rooms - painted with special, low-VOC paints, recycled carpets, state of the art and energy-saving air conditioners and heaters that use 15% less energy. Behind the walls, all the wood used in construction was certified as new growth wood.

Outside the hotel, on 11 beautiful acres of natural landscaping, touched by the Sacramento River, the landscaping is chemical-free.

Building With A Heart

The eco-friendly hotel features a full-service restaurant and more than 5,000 square feet of meeting space, all built under the rigorous construction guidelines of the U.S. Green Building Council. Every detail is important. Exceeding the standards of the USGBC, nearly 90% of the wood used in the construction of the hotel is certified as sustainably-harvested and comes from local timber sources within 500 miles of the hotel’s location.

Solar lighting, natural light from the sun, illuminates the public areas of the hotel through SolaTubes that focus the light of the sun into these areas, replacing electric lights and energy consumption during the day. Solar power provides more than 12% of the hotel’s electrical needs, while a real-time display in the lobby shows how much energy and water is being used by the hotel, and how much CO2 - a common gas implicated in global warming - is being saved due to sophisticated energy conservation at the hotel.

Every inch of the grounds, with the hotel situated on 11 acres of beautiful land touched by the Sacramento river, are totally chemical-free with no herbicides, pesticides or toxic chemicals used in the landscaping.

No detail is overlooked. Scraps of wood, cardboard and metal left over from the nearly completed construction are recycled.

Gaia’s Green Features

Wood Based Materials. All lumber used for the hotel is FSC (Forest Stewardship Council). The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) is an international network to promote responsible management of the world’s forests.

Coatings, Adhesives and Sealants. Low VOC (volatile organic compound) sealants and adhesives were used throughout the hotel for carpet, construction. Low VOC paints were used throughout the hotel. Both these strategies help improve the air quality within the hotel and have a positive effect on human health by improving the quality of air.

Carpet. Carpet with recycled content. Our carpets contain post consumer recycled material in the backing, fiber and pad. Construction Waste Management. The contractor is committed to implementing waste diversion practices as an integral part of their operations. They provided a recycling station for paints. The contractor also provided a recycling station for cardboard. During construction, bins were placed on the property primarily for cardboard. All cardboard were recycled on the premises.

Stone. All restrooms use recycled tiles and granite.

Water. The project achieved a water use reduction of about 40%. DDLow flush toilets. All toilets produce 1 gpf (gallon per flush). Standard toilets produce 1.6 gallons per flush. All of our guestrooms are equipped with low flow showerheads. The Koi pond uses recycled water from the site, which is then filtered and cleaned prior to entering the pond.

Environmental Quality. Appropriately sized and efficient HVAC units are used throughout. These units are quieter and more efficient than standard HVAC systems and use a more environmentally friendly refrigerant than is standard. Aluminum exterior grates were used in all entrances of the property. This helps to minimize dust and particulates entering the building, therefore improving air quality.

Energy. All windows used are efficient, low energy transmittable and reduce glare. Solatube tubular skylights are used throughout the hotel including our conference rooms, lobby and the hallways. These skylights magnify the sun’s rays to deliver abundant light into the property interior spaces during the day. We save electricity by using these skylights. Solar panel provides 10% of our electricity. Cool reflective roof reflect heat therefore saving money in cooling costs.

Recycling. Recycling bins in rooms and around property. Newspapers are not delivered to each occupied room. Newspapers are located in the lobby available for guests who actually read them. Bulk soap and shower dispensers are used in all guest rooms. This helps to eliminate hundreds of pounds of plastic containers and packaging daily from mini shower bottles and soap. Only recycled paper products are used at the hotel.

Landscaping. Chemical free landscaping. All of the fertilizers used for landscaping are all natural and chemical free. Native and climate-adaptive plants were used so water use for irrigating is very limited.

Cleaning. Environmentally friendly cleaning products are used to clean the property.

This is a remarkable, one-of-a-kind “Green” hotel - an environmentally sustainable hotel - that is setting a trend for new, eco-conscious travelers who expect to travel as they live: being environmentally conscious, walking the talk with a minimal impact on the earth and usage of as many recycled and natural products, and energy saving products, as humanly possible.

About GAIA Anderson Hotel & Spa

Located on 11 naturally-landscaped acres in Anderson, California (south of the city of Redding, just off Highway 5, the main North-South route from California to Oregon) GAIA Anderson Hotel & Spa is a 122 rooms, cutting-edge, eco-operational hotel offering guests the ultimate experience of harmony with nature. The nearly completed eco-hotel includes more than 5,000 square feet of meeting rooms, a full-service restaurant featuring California cuisine and local, artisan foods and banquet facilities for local events, weddings and other gatherings.

The hotel is located at 2900 Alexander Avenue in Anderson, California, 96007. The phone number is: (530) 365-7077.

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How Natural and Green is my Spa Skin Care?

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Hot Spas to Go to in the USA - Customized Treatments and World Spa Experiences

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This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com. http://www.spavelous.com

World-class pampering and wellness are today getting creative: customized treatments, elaborate hydrotherapy circuits, locally inspired rituals, and lots of four-hand massage. Our correspondents tested the latest facilities around the globe to yield a list of 76 winners as wide-ranging as the planet itself.

Conde Nast Traveler Names 76 Hot List Spas for 2008

Condé Nast Traveler’s May issue features a “Hot List” of 76 new spas that opened around the world in 2007. The list in the U.S. includes four in California — Spa Solage in Calistoga, Voda Spa in Los Angeles, Spa Desert Springs in Palm Desert, and Spa at Grand Del Mar in San Diego — and two in Texas — Spa at Four Seasons in Austin and Ritz-Carlton Dallas. Other US winners include The Spa of Colonial Williamsburg in Williamsburg, Va., Drift Spa in Las Vegas, Nev., and Solitude Spa, Jackson Hole, Wyo. Mexico has three winners, including Spa Aqua in Cancún, Paz Body & Mind Spa in Los Cabos, and Spa at the Mandarin Oriental, Riviera Maya, while the Caribbean had a whole slew of hot new spas, including three in Antigua — Spa at Curtain Bluff, Hermitage Bay Spa and Spa Tranquility in Antigua — and two in Jamaica — Fern Tree at Half Moon in Montego Bay and Rockhouse Spa.

World-class pampering and wellness are today getting creative: customized treatments, elaborate hydrotherapy circuits, locally inspired rituals, and lots of four-handed massage. Our correspondents tested the latest facilities around the globe to yield 76 winners as wide-ranging as the planet itself.

Spas in the U.S. making the Hot Top Spas List include:

- Spa Solage, Calistoga, CA

- Voda Spa, Los Angeles, CA

- Spa Desert Springs, Palm Desert, CA

- Spa at Grand Del Mar, San Diego, CA

- Drift Spa, Las Vegas, NV

- Spa at Four Seasons, Austin, TX

- Ritz-Carlton Spa, Dallas, TX

- Spa of Colonial Williamsburg, Williamsburg, VA

- Solitude Spa, Jackson Hole, WY

Top Ten Spas

Best Resort Spas | Best Day Spas


Expedia.com


Summer Hair Care - Deep Spa Conditioning treatments

 

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Deep conditioning spa hair treatments: facials for your hair

Salon treatments are going the way of spa services. Japanese tea ceremony and shiatsu scalp massage, anyone? - IT IS THE latest in exotic hair care: a Shu Uemura intense hair conditioning “ritual” at Luxelab in Santa Monica. It is, they say, based on the Japanese tea ceremony.

So, you settle into the shampoo chair, wrapped in a black kimono, as the technician sets out a lacquer tray precisely arranged with a matcha tea bowl, a whisk and vials of mysterious fluids. A paddle brush in each hand, she begins to sweep up portions of hair, letting it toss and fall, to gauge its texture and general well-being. Then the scalp is doused with jasmine oil and rubbed with a fingertip massage. After a splash of “rare” deep sea water and camellia oil are worked through with a goat-hair brush, you’re left to marinate.

Is this a tea ceremony? A spa treatment? A tossed salad?

As more of us damage our hair with dye, bleach, heat styling and simple wear and tear, elaborate deep conditioning treatments are emerging as a new hybrid of hair care and spa treatment. With exotic-sounding ingredients, feel-good scalp massages and elaborate application techniques, the treatments resemble a multi-step facial for your hair, complete with the take-home maintenance regimen. They promise, and often deliver, shine, softness, deeper color and manageability, but also come with a hefty price tag and, sometimes, add-ons of questionable value.

Some have evolved into four-step, hour-long procedures that cost $200. Others cost $35, require a slathering of thick conditioner and 15 minutes under the hair dryer and are luxurious in name only. It’s often hard to sort out what’s worth the time and money, particularly when you know that a good at-home conditioner, allowed to absorb for half an hour or half a day, yields a similar result.

Yet, salons have adopted the spa lingo, learned massage techniques and added a few touches that help mimic, but rarely match, the tranquillity of a spa. And just as the effects of mud rubs and herbal wraps fade after a week or two, so too do the moisturizing benefits of these deep conditioning treatments. There is no permanent fix if your hair’s been damaged by heat styling, coloring or just plain wear, according to Dr. Heather Woolery-Lloyd, a dermatologist on the research team at the University of Miami Cosmetic Center.

The beauty-speak that ascribes curative powers to spa treatments also has slipped into the soft sell of these treatments. Some provide “cures” to conditions that aren’t ailments. For example, some of the salon treatments and their complementary retail products claim to counteract a tightening scalp, a supposed side effect of aging.

“If the scalp gets tighter as we age, how is it then that our faces get wrinkles and sag? The logic isn’t there,” Woolery-Lloyd says. The doctor agrees, however, that aging can affect hair’s shine because as we grow older, oil production slows, causing drier skin and hair.

Some treatments extol oil rubs and gentle scalp scrubs as essential to your maintenance routine, but Woolery-Lloyd says such treatments are unnecessary and may even aggravate some skin conditions, such as dandruff. They do, however, often feel great.

It’s helpful, however, to go into the salon with your expectations in check: The best moisturizing conditioner can’t seal frayed or split ends; for that, you’ll need a cut. The conditioners work because they cause the cuticle — the surface of the hair — to lie down smoother, reflect more light and tangle less readily.

Ronald DiSalvo, who develops products for hair and beauty companies through his Marina del Rey laboratory, Integrated Research, says hair conditioning products, used correctly, do what they promise. They enhance the look and feel of dry or rough hair. Salon-grade products especially have improved as chemists formulate conditioners to work faster and easier on various types of hair and damage, DiSalvo says. Now even fine, limp hair can emerge from deep conditioning without looking greasy. Yet some treatments can be overkill.

“If you look at the average person who probably isn’t going to the salon except for a hair cut, they aren’t doing anything to their hair to damage it,” he says. “So you can put a pretty mild conditioner on it.”

The bells-and-whistles conditioning treatments are, no doubt, an extravagance. But they will produce hair that seems a little smoother and behaves a bit better. And sometimes, that — and a neck rub — is more than enough.

Steam

Carla Gentile’s West Hollywood salon Steam takes a spa-like approach to the basic hair care routine. The shampoo room looks like a Moroccan hammam; the lights are dim, the music low and the staff speaks softly. Gentile offers seven moisturizing treatments that focus on conditioning, scalp “deep cleaning” or both. Some include a 10-minute head massage with essential oils and perhaps a 10- or 15-minute neck, shoulder and arm massage; a gentle hair brushing to apply a hair masque; and a session under a steam hood or dryer. One popular treatment uses roasted sesame seeds marinated in clove, lemon and thyme essential oils said to help clean the scalp and condition the hair.

314 N. Harper Ave., Los Angeles, (323) 966-0024;

conditioning treatments, $20 to $125.

Luxelab

The Santa Monica salon also offers seven ways to deep condition, including three new ones inspired by the Japanese tea ceremony. The $75, 25-minute také ceremony we tried isn’t nearly as stylized as an actual tea ceremony, yet tea tools set the mood. After a stylist examines the hair, the scalp is cleaned with an application of jasmine oil. The big payoff? A 10-minute shiatsu scalp massage. Using a whisk, and what looks like a matcha teacup, the stylist combines a fast-absorbing camellia essential oil with a cream made with deep sea water said to provide minerals. The mixture is painted down the hair strands with a short-bristled goat-hair brush and left to sit for 10 minutes. Unlike most salon conditioning treatments, the Shu Uemura products used here contain no silicone and require no heat to penetrate the hair.

1408 Montana Ave., Santa Monica, (310) 255-9900; Shu Uemura ceremonies, $35 to $150.

Román Salon

Stylist Corey Powell ministers to the lovely locks of celebrities such as Mary-Louise Parker, Holly Hunter and Renée Zellweger with herbs he grows and infuses in oils himself. His “hair therapies” might contain rose geranium, lavender or rosemary steeped in cold-pressed oils such as camellia seed, kukui nut, avocado or hemp seed. Powell brushes in the oils, warms them with a blow dryer and then calls in an assistant who applies a type of shiatsu massage. While the oils are absorbed, clients have a warm, lavender-scented towel wrapped around their necks. To smooth the hair, he coats it with a custom-blend of moisturizers and honey. The finishing touch: 15 minutes under a micro-mist steamer to help open the hair cuticle and drive in the moisturizers.

818 N. La Cienega Blvd., West Hollywood;

(310) 854-1030; custom treatments $125 to $165.

Sassoon Salons

Stylists prescribe one of 10 conditioning treatments to address dryness, sensitive scalps or damage caused by coloring, heat styling, sun exposure or even aging. The $37, half-hour “luxury” deep conditioning treatment at the Beverly Hills Sassoon begins with an assessment and a prescription (thick Kérastase Oléo-Relax conditioner is popular for addressing heat-styling damage). A colorist selects the appropriate conditioner for the hair type, which is stroked through the hair, roots to ends, then followed with 15 minutes under a hair dryer, your head covered with a plastic shower cap. The helpful follow-up? A cut and instruction from a stylist on how to properly blow dry, style and condition (weekly, at home) so you learn, for once, to stop torturing it. Some sessions can combine a cut with an express, heat-free conditioning treatment in which the action of combing and stroking is said to help the conditioner penetrate the strands.

9403 Little Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills;

(310) 274-8791; South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol St., Suite 1606, Costa Mesa; (714) 556-5673; conditioning treatments, $30 to $37.

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