Tuesday 17 July 2018

Random Fun Sleeps: JUMBO Stay, Arlanda Airport, Stockholm, Sweden



Random Tyke Ranking: 10/10
Clean: 10
Convenient: 10
Comfortable: 9
Check-in/out; booking: 8
Fun Factor: 10



The Swedes, my friend remarked, recycle 

everything, even their Jumbo Jets.
I spend much of my life on planes, and it’s decades since I stayed at a hostel, so my emergency exit drill was at the ready, but I didn’t need it. Even seasoned travelers experience a frisson of excitement disembarking the shuttle and looking up at the enormous awaiting Jumbo, especially when it’s dark (Sweden,  winter) and floodlit from below.
Engine rooms
The young receptionist told us the free airport shuttle ran “two times each year”, a worrying but ultimately linguistic error. We arrived at 1:15 am outside the terminal building to a mile-long taxi queue, and a suspiciously short bus queue, but Alpha Bus 3 loomed up in the almost-dark just 5 minutes after we did, and after a few stops and under 10 minutes, we were deposited in the shadow of this gentle giant.

On entry you’re greeted with signs to prepare for takeoff – as in, your shoes – none are allowed inside. It’s not overdone, but character is milked to the nth degree, and every inch is utilized, including the engines and  the wheelhouse, which have become cute, self contained tubular sleeping spaces (but an outside trek from the shower rooms, and possibly worth a miss if you're claustrophobic).


We had a standard room for 2 in the main cabin – a double bed below, a single above, super clean and super comfortable – a thick mattress topped with a mattress topper, and beds are not physically connected so there’s no bunk shaking every time 1 person moves. Small, but no smaller than your average ferry cabin and much more comfy.
These rooms retain original aircraft fittings (as does the whole plane) : overhead luggage storage, 2 porthole  windows (with curtains) and various signage. We were there in a heat wave, and it was cool as well as quiet – in spite of bathrooms being at 1 end of the corridor, exit door at the other, and, presumably, people getting up at all hours to catch flights. We did not hear them. The exception would be in a dorm space, because people are bound to come and go at odd times. Bathrooms are shared, super clean, and showers are hot and powerful.
Staff encourage you to explore the plane – you can walk and sit on the wing and see other spaces when unoccupied, such as the conference room, and the cockpit suite upstairs, a small, twin bedded space with its own bathroom, and enough levers and buttons that, were this a movie, the occupants could surely figure out takeoff.



Breakfast helpers dress like pilots; the airspace is a little cramped at peak times, but the food is good and unlimited. Other times you can buy snacks and drinks, including alcohol, from reception.
Insider tips: 

  • The plane is 5 minutes walk across the street from the car rental center
  • Standard rooms have 2 power outlets
  • WiFi is free and effective

Fun sleeps should ensure good sleep as well as fun, and Jumbostays excels at both.
Getting there: Free and frequent shuttles from Arnanda airport terminals. Easy access to the E4 motorway, and across the street from the airport car rental center.
Price Range: 550 - 1895 SEK (shared dorm room to suite).


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Wednesday 11 July 2018

Random Fun Sleeps: BLOC Gatwick Airport, England


Characteristic purple neon window lights!
Random Tyke Rank: 10/10
Clean: 10
Convenient: 10
Comfortable: 10
Check-in/out; booking: 10
Fun Factor: 10

BLOC guests can control the room without getting out of bed, just as well, since the bed takes up most of the space. Then again, beds are huge and comfy, so there’s not much reason to get up.
Cubic decor
BLOC lives up to its super-cool pitch per the surfer dudes on their ads. It’s just an elevator ride to your room, on the England side of check-in, at Gatwick’s South Terminal. Signage inside is iffy and one risks wandering the corridors beyond bedtime in search of that elusive right turn, but once you’re installed, the cabin-like, cubic rooms are quiet, stylish, and super-modern, if a little short on space.

The en suite bathrooms feature “zen showers” which pour with rain or massage your back at the flip of the tap; it sprays all over the bathroom, but you're not mopping up, so who cares? 
Corner room
BLOC offers different bed configurations for singles, couples, and families. Lowest priced pods are windowless; corner suites have space and panoramic runway views, and the best way to get a great room is via their creative upgrade scheme – sign up for their pre-arrival email upgrade gamble, and if the room’s available at check in you get a deluxe space for far less than regular price.
I wouldn’t stay anywhere else at Gatwick – why wait for shuttle buses – and with the fast train direct into Victoria, if you do make it out of bed, it’s worth considering as decent London accommodation for a couple of days, not just as an airport stopover.

Insider tips:
  • Customer Service is superb, check-in speedy, and BLOC made good on their promise to match a lower price I found online with a booking service.
  • You can book rooms for days or nights, but not by the hour.
  • Victoria Station and Gatwick have left luggage.
Fun sleeps should ensure good sleep as well as fun, and BLOC Gatwick Airport does that with style.

Getting there: BLOC Gatwick is at check in at South Terminal, Gatwick Airport. It’s accessible by the Gatwick Express from Victoria Station, or the Heathrow-Gatwick transfer bus and other buses from central London. Note that there is no tube to Gatwick airport.
Price Range: Around 100 British pounds per night or day.


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Sunday 8 July 2018

Live Matches, Missing Trophies, and Messi’s Boots: FIFA’s World Football Museum in World Cup Mood

A decent hologram
Something's missing from the FIFA World Football Museum in Zurich, Switzerland, during World Cup month – the World Cup. Still, there’s an immediacy of excitement to its absence; a hologram makes a great sub, and other events kick in to compensate: live screenings of all World Cup games, and free entry to anyone who shows up during the World Cup in a national team shirt.
FIFA's showcase museum at its Zurich HQ has taken stick in the past – it cost £114 million to create and lost over £24.5 million in its first year of 2016 – hardly a banner year for FIFA. Still, on a recent visit, like a true England fan, I put disillusionment behind me and indulged in a best-case scenario ticket. I wasn't disappointed.
First, FIFA neatly sidesteps the boring cases-of-trophies and sweaty-signed-shirts syndrome that prevails in many stadium museums. Instead, in an example of high tech coming-of-age, this museum indulges in modern media, yet skillfully showcases football, not the medium itself.  

Will England get a new
show case in 2018?
 
Put yourself in the
World Cup picture!
On entry (and directional flow is managed with a severity only the Swiss can muster) you’re surrounded by 2 storey video scenes of street and beach soccer,. 
On the next level, you can (usually) see the World Cup, follow football’s history, and play the commentator or the referee in very cool virtual settings. 
Life size football pinball
Football pinball wizard
















Messi's boot:
A mere 740 SF
The mandatory movie is action-packed and fast-paced, cleverly blending top games and players, past and present, with admirable flow of both the film and the visitors, who are politely herded through the theater into a large glass elevator towards the next level. 
Here, you can test your soccer skills by dribbling, shooting, and curving balls around dinging, buzzing obstacles in life-size, football pinball machines. In keeping with the museum's clever balance between traditional and virtual reality, you can also listen to World Cup anthems in impossibly soundproofed open seats; play good old fashioned table foosball, or set the kids up with crayons for an impromptu football art project.
Traditional games meet hi-tech 
This is Switzerland, so when the game inevitably ends in a shop, prices are exorbitant. Still, where else can you buy golden signed Messi boots or gold-look World Cup keyrings? 
No, nothing beats being at the game – but this place is well worth a visit either in World Cup season, or in the long bleak wait for another hologram to replace the hallowed trophy.

Getting there: The FIFA World Football Museum is right beside the Enge Zurich train station, and 2 stops away from the harbour on the number 5 tram. Public transportation is best as there’s no parking onsite.

Cost: 24 Swiss Francs for adults;  14 for children 7-15; under 6 – free


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