World's 10 most expensive for-hire resorts
Ultra-luxe hideaways from Musha Cay to St. Tropez
A private jet delivers you to an airstrip. A helicopter is waiting to whisk you to an oceanfront property where a late-model Ferrari is parked in the driveway. Inside, a team of uniformed staff — maids, masseuses, butlers, bartenders; chefs and even a personal concierge — are on hand to tend to your every need. You want the beach to yourself and your friends for the day? Done. A picnic lunch of lobster and champagne delivered to a table set on the sand? Arranged. It sounds like the most lavish hotel experience on earth, but it’s not a hotel at all. It’s a private villa where the staff stay not on the property but in a central headquarters nearby, allowing you both first-class service and maximum privacy. And it’s all yours for a mere $28,000 a day.
Used to be that the most expensive resorts in the world were famous hotels in celebrated destinations: the Hotel Du Cap Eden-Roc in Antibes, for example; or the George V in Paris. These days however, private villas, exclusive-use islands, and luxury African safari lodges make up some of the most expensive resorts in the world — and there’s barely a recognized hotel among them.
“Privacy has become the number one requirement for really wealthy travelers and you don’t get privacy in a hotel,” explains Thierry Morali, VP of sales and development at Villazzo, a new luxury “Villa Hotel” company. “It follows on from acquiring the personal yacht and the private jet that you would see a demand for the private hotel, and that’s what we do.”
Established with a handful of villas in 2002 by German software tycoon Christian Jagodzinski, Villazzo now has 27 luxury mansions in Miami, Aspen, Paris, Courchevel, St-Tropez and Marbella on their books, and specializes in turning them into temporary private hotels for big-spending clients paying up to $30,000 a day for the privilege. Villazzo staff are trained to leading hotel standards but operate like the Special Forces of the leisure industry, arriving on command at the Villa in question while remaining as unobtrusive as possible. “We combine the intimacy of a private home with the luxury of a top hotel,” says Morali. “In short, we parachute the hotel to you.”
Beyond the privacy factor, one reason for the boom in exclusive hire resorts is the “anything-is-possible” attitude of the multi-millionaires who own them. Villazzo, for example, not only provides a top-model sports car for use during your stay, but also has a helicopter on stand-by to fly you to beaches, ski slopes or even restaurants.
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One suspects he is referring to Sanctuare’s priciest property, Musha Cay in the Bahamas, which was bought in 2006 by the illusionist David Copperfield. An exclusive-hire island that can cost up to $50,000 a day for 24 guests, no expense has been spared, from the use of a private fleet of yachts, boats and jet skis, to day-visits to the string of neighboring islands in the Exumas that Copperfield purchased at the same time and renamed Copperfield Bay. Guest can even request a personal meeting with the magician if he’s on the property.
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© Musha Cay Illusionist David Copperfield bought this exotic 150-acre island in the Exumas in 2006, and at this price you might think your eyes are playing tricks on you. You can rent Musha Cay, in the Bahamas for $32,250 per day for 12 or fewer people. |
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© Isla de sa Ferradura This glittering, horseshoe-shaped Mediterranean island just off the rocky cliffs of Ibiza, Isla de sa Ferradura hosts a maximum 14 people for minimum one-week stays that average U.S. $30,000 a day ($212,700 per week (minimum stay) for up to 14 guests). |
And what of the future? According to Villazzo’s Thierry Morali the sky is, quiet literally, the limit. “People who can afford to stay in these places are the people who always want the next best thing, and that means the more adventurous and our there places. Camping in the Sahara desert, trips to Antarctica, flights into space. That’s the future. Have you heard of Virgin Galactic?”
That would be Richard Branson’s plan to send people on space flights into sub-orbit at $200,000 a pop. Watch this space.
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