While some resort operators sweat over plans for the next hot nightclub, celebrity chef restaurant or pool lounge, tech geeks at the under-construction Fontainebleau Las Vegas are abuzz over their kind of eye candy.
The $2.9 billion resort, which opens in October with 3,815 rooms, will have eclectic restaurants and night life as well as a futuristic, Miami Beach-like vibe. But in the luxury resort arms race under way on the Strip, the Fontainebleau Las Vegas' secret weapon lies in wait, behind sealed walls. It's a distributed antenna system, basically a giant antenna that will provide wireless coverage from cell phone carriers and wireless Internet access, as well as police and fire emergency systems and the two-way radios employees will use.
This doesn't sound too sexy unless, perhaps, you're among those who have experienced dropped calls or spotty Internet access. Fontainebleau is expected to be free of dead zones that are common in big hotels, where steel columns and layers of concrete can interfere with wireless signals.
Although many smaller hotels in major cities have completely wired their properties, Las Vegas resorts generally have vast areas that are left unwired, which can be problematic for customers attempting to carry on a long conversation from, say, the parking garage to a convention hall to a hotel room, says Tim Rod, Fontainebleau's chief financial officer.
For technophiles, the better eye candy will appear in every Fontainebleau hotel room, where iMac laptops will replace the well-worn information binders found in most hotels. Besides surfing the Internet, guests will be able to use the laptops to order room service, set up wake-up calls, talk to a concierge and create travel itineraries. Members of groups staying in the hotel will be able to communicate with one another over the system.
Fontainebleau also will offer large touch-screen displays throughout the property offering information and directions.
"We are building the Fontainebleau brand around technology and the customer's experience with the technology," said Rod.
Last year, Rod, who worked for Apple Computer in the early 1990s, put iMacs in the 1,504 rooms of the company's sister Fontainebleau resort in Miami Beach, Fla. -- the largest rollout of Macintosh computers in the hotel industry.
Many casinos have distributed antenna systems in public spaces such as lobbies but not in their hotel towers. Wiring an entire hotel is expensive without offering much upfront profit potential. That's because the major wireless network providers, at least before the recession, helped pay the cost of wiring a hotel's public space in exchange for a hoped-for increase in cell phone service in that hotel. Because guests tend to use their cell phones less in their rooms than in public areas, many hotel rooms remain unwired, resulting in spotty service, Rod said.
The hotel's MobileAccess Universal Wireless Network, which has also been deployed in various football stadiums hosting the Super Bowl, will allow customers to communicate uninterrupted on cell phones, PDAs or even laptops that are carried throughout the property, balanced in one hand with a cocktail or stack of casino chips in the other.
Rod expects that a powerful antenna will become a bigger selling point in future years as older networks offered by hotels that don't upgrade won't be able to keep up with faster wireless services offered by cellular carriers. More of those customers' calls will be dropped, he said.
For now, the tech geeks are happy.
The hotel won't be unfurling banners labeled "more than 10 million square feet of coverage" throughout the property, or out front. But Rod expects word-of-mouth about the technology to spread.
"When we sell a convention, it will be a differentiator," he said.
(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.)
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That is the first hotel I have ever heard who is actively promoting the fact they have 0 dead zones. They should be advertising on our web site and might find lots of qualified clients.
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