<%@LANGUAGE="JAVASCRIPT" CODEPAGE="65001"%> JAXFAX Travel Marketing Magazine
READ IT ONLINE

February 2012 eMagazine
Cover feature: Egypt
cov
Includes Editorial & Listings

January 2012 eMagazine
Cover feature: Thailand
cov
Includes Editorial & Listings

December 2011 eMagazine
Cover feature: Korea
cov
Includes Editorial & Listings

November 2011 eMagazine
Cover feature: Turkey
cov
Includes Editorial & Listings

October 2011 eMagazine
Cover feature: Germany
cov
Includes Editorial & Listings


ARCHIVED DIGITAL ISSUES
201120102009 • 2008



EDITORIAL ARCHIVES
from 2001 to 2012
CLICK ON A REGION
TO VIEW DESTINATONS

AFRICA
ROUND UPS
Safari Surprises 0212
Luxe Africa 1111
Golf in the Middle East 811
Family Safaris 0611
Luxury Safari Camps 0211
Safari Planner 10/10
Southern Africa’s Diversity 5/10
BAHRAIN
Secret Formula • 10/08
BOTSWANA
Southern Africa’s Diversity 5/10
Classical Deviations • 10/07

ETHIOPIA
Religious Sojourn 1011
Cultural Heritage 0311
Northern Treasures 11/10
Riding Modern Wave 0708
Endearing Ethiopia • 01/ 07
Cover feature • 02/ 02

JORDAN
Historical Days & Arabian Nights 7/10
KENYA

Great Routes 711
Make a Dash for Kenya 6/10
A Great Adventure 3/10
Kenya’s Annual Epic 11/09
Kenya’s Big Five Appeal 7/09
Selling Safaris 1/09
Safaris (cover) • 06/ 08
Under the Stars • 12/07
...and Tanzania • 09/07
Ecotourism Nation • 06/ 07

MOROCCO
Marrakech & Foothills 0511
Morocco Mosaic 9/10
Marrakesh, so Magically 10/09
Unlimited Appeal 10/08
Millions in Visitors • 01/ 08

Large & Lovely • 08/ 07
Off the Beaten Road • 02/06

QATAR
Flourishing in the Desert 11/10
SOUTH AFRICA

Open for Business! 710
Soccer in 2010 10/09
ASTA IDE 2009 1/09
Re-Invents Itself • 05/ 08
Wine Harvest • 07/ 07
Western Cape • 03/ 07

TANZANIA
Exploring Tanzania 911
Southern Africa’s Diversity 5/10
Safaris Without Borders 1/10
Classic safaris • 09/08
Its Own Mission • 05/ 08
No longer little sister • 09/07

TUNISIA
A Taste of Tunisia • 05/06 UGANDA
Emerges from Shell• 08/06
ZAMBIA
Southern Africa’s Diversity 5/10
Classical Deviations • 10/07

ZIMBABWE

Southern Africa’s Diversity 5/10
Classical Deviations • 10/07


ASIA
ROUND UPS
Fabulous Fall Festivals 811
Summer Festival Calendar 0411
AUSTRALIA

Town & Country Culture 1/12
Wine Trail 711
Natural Wonders 12/10
Ten Things To Experience in Sydney 8/10
From Culture to Nature 12/09
Aussie Outback 1/09
Melbourne's Wild Side• 0708
Driving Business • 02/ 08
Hidden Secrets • 08/ 07
Stellar Attractions • 02/ 07

CHINA
Zhangjiajie Marvels 1/12
Group Travel 1011
Traveling with Children 0611
Beijing Your Way COV 1/11
Hotel Boom Continues 10/10
Voluntourism 7/10
Tthe Real China COVER 1/10
Beijing Hotel Boom 11/08
Reaches for the Moon • 03/ 08
Tourism Wave • 11/07
Guangzhou • 03/ 07

COOK ISLANDS
Live out your dream 09/08
The latest Hot Spot • 12/07
Paradise Contention • 10/07

FIJI
Marriage Fiji Style 0212
Fiji’s Many Faces 9/10
Tropical Touchdown 10/08
Smile You're on Fiji • 02/ 08
Tropical Getaway • 01/06

INDIA
Romancing India 1211
Travel Like a Maharajah 1111
Selling Strategies COVER 0411
Rail Odyssey 0311
A Bright Future 10/10
Awestruck in India &
New Travel Products for 2010-11
Expands Tourism Territory 3/10
Cultural Journey 12/09
Mumbai Revisited 3/09
Kochi: Calm, Complex 12/08
Sacred to Sublime • 08/08
Mumbai's Bollywood • 05/ 08
Driving Business • 12/07
Madyha Pradesh • 07/ 07
Maharashtra • 06/ 07
What's New • 05/ 07

JAPAN
Spiritual and Green 0212
Rail Is Back Online 0611
Neo-Ryo 11/10
2010 is Visit Japan Year 5/10
Jeju’s Enticing Mix 12/09
Luxury Travel Forum 1/09
In and out of Tokyo • 08/ 08
KOREA
From Seoul to Ancient Buddhist Temples 12/11 COVER
Korea Takes the Stage 911
UNESCO Folk Villages 0211
Ceramic Arts 9/10
Historic & Cultura 5/10 COVER
48 Hours in Seoul 11/09
Traveling to Korea to Eat 10/09
Affordable Seoul 1/09
New Arts Center • 09/08
Sancturay in Temples • 12/07

Jeju Island • 02/ 07
ASTA Expo • 01/ 07

LAOS
Cave City Opens • 04/ 07
MACAU
Beyond Gaming • 01/ 08
Taking a Bow • 07/ 07

MALAYSIA
Sizzling Malaysia 3/10
Sight seeing • 02/06
NEW CALEDONIA
The Secret is Out • 07/08
NEW ZEALAND
A Taste of Wine Country
Bumped Ski Season 08/09
Discounted Five-Star 3/09
Luxury & Adventure • 04/ 08
Hidden Secrets • 08/ 07

PHILIPPINES
Reefs and Wrecks: Diving 1011
Man’s Conquest, Nature’s Bounty COVER 0511
SINGAPORE

What Makes Singapore Hot for 2010? 01/10
Singapore Corners SE Asia Market 10/09

Value and Deals 7/09
TAIWAN
Lantern Festival 3/10
Warm Welcome • 03/06

THAILAND
Amazing Thailand12/11
Songkran Festival, Spas 1111
Thai the Knot 0511
Don’t Call it a Comeback 0311
Welcomes Visitors Back 8/10

City Chic to Rural Respite 5/10
Asia’s New Island of Tourism 3/10
Elephant Back Riding • 08/06

Exotic Bangkok • 02/06
VIETNAM

Luxurious Adventure • 09/07


CARIBBEAN
ROUND UP FEATURES
Gal Pals in the Tropics 1/12
Blue & Borrowed 12/11
Teeing Up 811
Spanish Flavors: 711
Family Stay & Play 0611
Natural Attractions 0511
Top Beaches 0411
Culinary Tour 0311
SPA-tacular in Caribbean 0211
Caribbean Family Holiday 11/10
Summer Deals 5/10
Passion in Paradise 1/10
ANGUILLA
Caribbean Chic 1111
Happy in Eastern Carib 12/10
A Sliver of Shangri-La
Big Agent Plans for 2010 10/09
Branding of Anguilla 11/08
New Celebrity Status • 04/ 08
Winter Curtain Call • 01/ 08
Secret is out • 05/ 07 cover

Off-Posh Prices • 04/ 07

ANTIGUA & BARBUDA
Beauty on the Beaches COVER 711
The Beach is the Beginning 10/10
The Sandy Sister 02/10
Spread Carnival Fever 7/09
Festive Side 09/08
Wedding Bells- 07/08 Cover
Tropical Paradise • 05/ 08

Blessed with Beauty • 09/ 07
Twin Deals • 06/ 07

ARUBA
Easy as A-B-C: Selling the Dutch Islands 810
Divi"s Inside Edge 12/08
BARBADOS
Caribbean Panache: 911
A Blue Sky Holiday 6/10
The Bajan Macation • 04/ 08
BAHAMAS
Cable Beach • 06/08
BONAIRE
Easy as A-B-C: Selling the Dutch Islands 810
CAYMAN ISLANDS

CITE Report on Caymans 7/09
CITE Report • 09/ 07

CURACAO
Easy as A-B-C: Selling the Dutch Islands 810
Onsite Report 4/07
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Five Star Race • 0608
La Romana • 11/07
New hot Spot • 0107

GRENADA
Moves into Tourism
GUYANA
Land of Many Waters • 04/06
JAMAICA
Tie The Knot 0111
Jamaica on a Roll 710
The Heart of Jamaica 11/09
Luxury in Jamaica 11/09
Committed to Tourism 8/08
Cool Green • 02/ 08

Waterparks • 10/07
Hidden Charms • 03/ 07

MARTINIQUE
Isle of Flowers • 05/ 07
Living Well • 02/06
PUERTO RICO
Selling the Caribbean 0212
Beyond the Surf, Sand 3/10
Golfing 08/09
Star-Studded 12/08
SAINT MARTIN
CTC Takes Center Stage 1111
Paassionate & Plaayful
Taste of Europe 12/08
Upper Market • 07/08
SMART Report • 07/ 07

ST. KITTS
Caribbean’s Sweetheart 910
Expansion Plans • 03/ 08
ST. LUCIA
The Newest Edge 12/09
For Kids & Grown-Ups 10/08
Almond Smugglers • 09/ 07

From Golf to Marinas • 06/06

ST. VINCENT &

THE GRENADINES

Island Hopping • 03/ 08
TURKS & CAICOS
Gold Coast 10/09
U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS

Selling the Caribbean 0212
America’s Caribbean 3/10
Team Spirit 12/08

EUROPE

ROUND UPS
Mediterranean Islands 0212
Skiing the Alps 1/12
Soft Adventure Capitals 911
City Break 711

Summer Festivals 0611
Baltic Cities 0511
Central & Eastern Europe 0311
Jewish Heritage 0111
Central Eastern Europe 03/10
AUSTRIA
Vienna Tops the List of Best Cities To Live In 6/10
Waltz through Vienna 11/09
Vienna: Hip & Festive 3/09
Vienna's Passion 10/08
Vienna Culture • 05/ 08
Along the Danube • 04/ 08

New Properties • 09/ 07
atcb Unites Region • 06/ 07
Vienna Happenings • 03/ 07

BELGIUM & FLANDERS
Flemish Landmarks and Festivities
River Towns 12/10
FLANDERS for the Casual Connoisseur 9/10 COVER
FLANDERS
Cultivating a
Taste for Finer Things 3/10
FLANDERS Antwerp 12/09FLANDERS: Stellar Sites 10/09
Arrive as a Visitor, Leave as a Belgian 08/09
Belgian Hotels • 07/08
Wallonia • 10/07

BRITAIN
Trail Back to London 3/10
Weekend in London 12/08
Top Hotels 06/ 08
Liverpool • 04/ 08
Eurostar Paris/London • 1107

BULGARIA
Central Eastern Europe 03/08
CANARY ISLANDS
Classics in Canaries • 01/08 Sunny Canaries • 11/ 06
CROATIA
Welcomes Traveler in Style 1111
A Country for All Seasons 910
Croatia’s Adriatic Coast 3/10
Europe’s Newest Riviera 4/09
Something big in 2009 • 09/08
Wine Country • 04/ 08

Cultural Circle• 10/07
Heart & Soul • 04/ 07

CYPRUS
The Best of Cyprus 1011
Highlights From the Birthplace of Beauty Cover Nov. 2010
Cyprus thru Centuries 1/10
Golden Anniversary 10/09
Cypriot Primer 10/08
From Wine to Water 6/08
Loving the Island • 10/07
Cool Cats • 09/ 07

CZECH REPUBLIC
Gentle Evolution Cover 7/10
Bohemian Attractions 12/09
Footsteps of princes 10/08
For Young at Heart • 08/ 07

DENMARK
Scandinavian Smorgasbord 810
Culture & History • 01/06
FINLAND
Helsinki By Design 810
Scandinavian Smorgasbord 810
Not just in Summer 10/08
Helsinki's New Face • 04/ 08
Rauma • 05/06

FRANCE
Design Hotels In Paris 11/10
France’s Big Summer Festivals
Still Among Top Five 1/09
Rhone Alpes Region • 02/ 08
ASTA in Lyon • 12/ 07
Eurostar Paris/London • 1107

GERMANY
Northeast Region COVER 1011
Another Eventful Year 1011

FIFA Women’s World Cup 0311
Promoting Health & Wellness 10/10 Cover Feature
Mainz and Much More 6/10
Designs on creative Germany 3/10
The Great German Southwest 909
Oberammergau Passion Play 08/09
GTM ’09 Visits Northeast 7/09
Networking in Bavaria • 09/08
Beating the Euro • 04/ 08
Posh Palaces • 03/ 08

Automotives • 03/ 07
What Not to Miss • 02/ 07
Dusseldorf • 09/06
GREECE
Magical Greek Islands 1211
Northern Escapades 10/10
Greek Suppliers • 08/08
Greek Cruises • 02/08
Island Trio • 08/ 07

GREENLAND
New Access • 05/ 07
HOLLAND
Rembrandt & Tulips • 01/06
HUNGARY
High End Value, Old World Ambience 5/10
Budapest Live Arts 12/08
Celebrating Budapest • 04/ 08

IRELAND
Go where Ireland Directs your 310
Finding Yourself • 03/ 08
Dublin • 11/07
Foynes SeaPlanes • 10/07

ITALY
For Food Lovers 1/12
Tuscan Spas 911
Salerno, Amalfi Coast 11/10
Get Lost in Erice, Sicily 5/10
The Veneto 1/10
Tuscany 03/09
Roman Revival1/09 Cover
Ri mini celebrates 11/08
Deals & Sunshine 09/08
Affordable Italy 6/08
Western Sicily • 01/ 08

Abruzzo • 07/ 07

LITHUANIA
Close up at Vilnus • 08/ 07
MALTA
Historic Tempos 12/08
Many Faces • 05/04

NORWAY
Scandinavian Smorgasbord 810
Stavanger • 04/ 08

In the fjords • 01/06

POLAND
Health, Fitness, Outdoors 1011
Passage to Poland 811 COVER
Fall In Love With Warsaw 810
Top Summer Destination 510
Old cities Revisited 11/08
New Found Power • 04/ 08
Gdansk • 05/ 07

Krakow • 02/06

PORTUGAL
36 Hours in Lisbon 811
Azorean Journey 0111
What’s New in Portugal? 9/10
Invests for Tomorrow 10/09
Heritage Travel 1/09
Affordable Luxury • 07/07
Hosts Wine Tasting • 10/07

Out of Lisbon • 11/07
ROMANIA
Town and Country 11/09
CEE Round up • 03/08

Great Value • 06/06
RUSSIA
Siberia and the Trans-Siberian: The Mother of Rail Rides 07/09
St. Petersburg • 07/08
W inter Festivals • 11/07
St Peterburg • 02/ 07

SCOTLAND
Exploring in Scotland 1211
Scotland's Spirit • 12/07
Glasgow with Style • 0706

SLOVAKIA
CEE Round up • 03/08
10 Reason to Visit • 10/04
SLOVENIA
CEE Round up • 03/08
SPAIN
Sephardic Trail 1/12
Castile and Leon 811
Spain’s Intangible Soul 0211
Road to Santiago 3/10 Cover
Valencia Shimmers 11/09
Barcelona & Costa Brava
Discover Galicia 1/09
Barcelona 12/08
Great Off Season Value 10/08
Andalusia (Cover) • 08/08
Malaga's Culture• 05/ 08

Zaragoza • 01/08

Iberia's Capitals • 12/07
Prado's Debuts • 11/07
Cutting Edge Madrid • 08/ 07
Valencia • 04/ 07

SWEDEN
Scandinavian Smorgasbord 810
SWITZERLAND
Eye on Premium Prize 7/09
Cultural Lavaux • 02/08
Basel, Fribourg • 09/ 07
Basel Quietly Classy • 05/ 07
Scenic Postbus • 01/ 07

TURKEY
Turkey’s Elegant Aegean 1111
Crossroads of Empires 711
The Best of the West 0511
Cave Hopping in Cappadocia
Turkey’s Treasures 12/09
Seductive Istanbul 5/09
Hideaway 'St. Tropez' 11/08
Land of Sunrise • 05/ 08
Endless Mysteries • 07/ 07

UKRAINE
Top Ten Sights • 07/ 07


LATIN AMERICA
Round Up Feature
Central America Update 1/12
Couple’s Retreats 1211
Best Hikes 911
Inland/Island Vacations: 711

Road to Machu Picchu 0511
Mundo Maya Update 0411
UNESCO Sites 0211
Live The Dream 1210
S. & C America • May 2008
ARGENTINA
Summer Escapes 0111
Maté to Malbec 810
24 Hrs in Buenos Aires 12/09
From A to C • 11/07
Learning to Tango • 10/05

BELIZE
Accessible Inland/Island Vacations 810
Belize Cruises 1/10
Heritage Groups • 02/08
Family Adventure • 07/ 07

BOLIVIA
May 2008
BRAZIL
Big, Fat Party in Brazil 10/09
Heart & Soul • 08/08
Bossa Nova Beaches • 03/08
Carnival • 09/07
Agent's Bargain • 05/ 07

CHILE
Sacred Journeys 1011
Comunas to Cordillera 710
Atacama Desert Gets Hotter 3/10
Chilean Surprises 11/09
From A to C • 11/07
Isla Negra • 07/0
6
COLOMBIA
The Magic 1111
Islas del Rosario 5/10
Cartagena Day Trips 08/09
Takes Giant Leap • 12/06
COSTA RICA
Luxury Hotels 12/11
Natural Wealth 9/10
Eco Tourism at the Source7/09
Green Pot of Gold • 07/08
T he Greening • 10/07
A Front Runner • 03/07

CURAÇAO
Down Under • 04/ 07
ECUADOR & GALAPAGOS
S. American Native Culture 0212
Ecuador – Love Life 811
Best of Both Hemispheres 710
Visiting Paradise 08/09
Secret Pacific Coast 3/09
Ever Changing 11/08
Traveling Mindfully • 01/08

Fragile & Focused • 08/ 07

EL SALVADOR
New World (Cover) • 11/ 07
GUATEMALA
Meet me at the fountain 12/08
Land of everlasting Spring 05

HONDURAS
Hello to Honduras 2/05 Cover
May 200
8
MEXICO
Family Adventures 0611
Ixtapa and Zihuatanejo 0311
Colonial Mexico 10/10
Fulfilling Your Basic Needs 6/10
The Soulful Side 12/09
Los Cabos for Luxurious Adventure 7/09
Hotel Chains 12/08
Uncommon Retreats • 0708
Report from Tianguis • 6/08
Puerto Vallarta • 12/07
Yucatan Glory Days • 07/ 07
Yucatan Peninsula • 05/ 07

NICARAGUA
May 2008 Round Up
Natural Beauty • 01/06

PANAMA
Growth Spurt • 0/ 07
Boca del Toro • 05/06

PARAGUAY
May 2008 Round Up
PERU
Road to Machu Picchu 0511
Amazon Odyssey: 11/10
Ancient Powers • 0908
Machu Picchu • 4/ 08
Festivals • 04/ 07

URUGUAY
May 2008 Round Up
VENEZUELA

May 2008 Round Up

Explore Switzerland’s Cultural Landscape in Lavaux

swissBy Barbara Radcliffe Rogers

In September 2007, UNESCO named Switzerland’s Lavaux region, on the sunny north shore of Lake Geneva, a World Heritage Site for its “cultural landscape” of vineyards and farms. Only five other wine-growing regions have achieved this UNESCO status.
The citation noted the authenticity of the land, divided into small plots and held in place by stone terraces, some dating from the Middle Ages. Along with its rich wine-growing heritage (the first vines were planted by the Romans 2000 years ago) the region has the country’s highest concentration of Michelin stars.
While your clients may expect sweeping views of snow-covered Alps and sumptuous Belle Epoch hotels overlooking the lake, they may be surprised to find mile after mile of hillsides neatly striped in grapevines. In this small area, six wine regions include 28 controlled appellations (DOC), and although rarely found outside Switzerland, the wines consistently win world competitions.

Lavaux’s Gastronomic Terrace Trails
A series of tourist routes has been created to showcase the scenery and the food and wine experience. To help you advise clients interested in exploring these and finding other authentic experiences, the Lake Geneva Region has several new (and free) publications, including the full-color “Gourmet Worlds,” filled with food and wine destinations.
Several food trails are mapped in great detail on the website (www.lake-geneva-region.ch). Posted with food and wine signage, the 18-mile Discover the Lavaux Terraces Trail is easily broken into shorter walks reached by the Swiss Rail network.
The route begins at Château de Chillon, among Europe’s most beautiful medieval castles, and follows the lake shore through Montreux before climbing into vineyards to follow terraces to Lausanne. The shorter Vully Vineyard Footpath also passes winegrowers, craftsmen and food shops where travelers sample products. The six-mile circular Coeur de La Côte vineyards walk combines splendid views with stops at country inns, winegrowers and village cellars. Advise a stop in Bougy-Villars to visit artisanal chocolatier, Tristan.
Steer dedicated foodies to vineyards and villages of the Vaud’s “breadbasket,” where the Bread Museum fills a 17th-century farm in Echallens. At Vieux Leysin Cheese Dairy they can watch cheesemakers work, and sample the product.
Walking is not the only way to enjoy the Lavaux. The Beau-Rivage Palace provides meals on board the Belle-Epoch paddlewheeler Montreux July-Sept, where cuisine has strong competition from the scenery. The Train-Resto Gros-de-Vaud and BAM Saveur are gastronomic trains with vintage cars where local foods and wines are served. The Train des Vignes travels through the vineyards from Vevey. Advise clients to spend some time in this lakeside city’s Alimentarium, a museum of food filled with engaging interactive exhibits. Summer Saturday mornings, a farmers market fills the main square. For clients who prefer to maximize their time by engaging a guide, suggest Fabienne d’Alleves-Ostersetzer, an excellent choice for her knowledge of regional history, art, wines and cuisines.
Call 011-41 21 943 1318; E-mail: fabienne.dalleves@hispeed.ch

Sampling the Local Treasures
Clients will certainly want to sample the traditional and fine dining options. At Philippe Rochat’s Hotel de Ville in Crissy, one of only two restaurants in Switzerland awarded three Michelin stars, each course is a work of art (011-41 21 634 0505; www.philippe-rochat.ch). In vertiginous Saint-Saphorin, L’Onde is a well-loved auberge where the chef makes richly flavored pates and terrines (011-41 21 925 4900; www.aubergedelonde.ch).
The Swiss Riviera has been the playground of generations of rich and famous, whose every whim is graciously catered to at grand hotels lining the Montreux and Lausanne lakefronts. I was treated with the same attention during my recent stay at Lausanne’s Beau-Rivage Palace (www.brp.ch), now celebrating its 150th birthday. The interior is sumptuous in frescoes, paneling and original art. Commissionable rates for two-night packages with spa treatments and lunch begin at $985.
Less grand, but sparkling from recent renovations, Hotel City (www.fass bindhotels.com) offers doubles from $200. Picasso Tours (www.picassotours.com) offers this three-star hotel as its lower-priced option for three-night packages starting just over $300, a bargain with breakfasts, excursions and entrance to Chillon Castle.

Getting There and Getting Around
Star Alliance partner Swiss International (www.swiss.com) flies direct to Geneva daily from JFK’s Terminal 4, where First and Business passengers relax in the new Swiss Lounge. Flights from Boston, Chicago and Miami connect through Zurich. OnePass partner Continental (www.continental.com) flies to Geneva from Newark five times weekly.
Good news for agents: save clients as much as 15% -- and earn a 5% commission – with advance-purchase Swiss Passes through Rail Europe (http://agent.raileurope.com, 888-382-7245). Along with free travel on trains, buses and lake steamers, Swiss Passes offer free admission to 400-plus museums, and free travel for children under 16.
Another value-added is the free Riviera Card offered by hotels, for free travel on local buses and 50% discount on train and boat excursions and museum admissions.
Contact Switzerland Tourism, 800-794-7795; www.MySwitzerland.com or www.lake-geneva-region.ch www.montreux-vevey.com for special packages.

September 2007 Feature

Show Time in Switzerland

by Tom Bross

Basel does the hosting; 2007 anniversary festivities in Fribourg & Stein am Rhein
Basel doesn’t rank in the Top Four of Switzerland’s best-known, most-visited urban centers. Zürich, Geneva, Lucerne and capital-city Bern consistently occupy highest perches in the touristic pecking order. But northerly “Number Five,” so remarkably situated that its outer neighborhoods converge with both French and German terrain, has plenty of attractions and serious artistic prestige.
Agents and tour operators found opportunities to explore the local and regional scene, thanks to Rhine-riverside Basel’s hosting of the 14th Swiss Travel Mart, last May 10-12, convening 350 nationwide suppliers, who welcomed 490 buyers from 41 countries. Over the past three years, the country’s incoming tourism (meetings and conference) totals have been steadily increasing, from 620,000 to 900,000 annually.
For getting-around purposes, visitors can easily adjust themselves to Basel’s transportation infrastructure.
Take the main railroad station as a prime example. SNCF French and SBB Swiss trains travel on separate tracks in separate sections of that same busy facility. DB German trains, meanwhile, chug to and from a different station—clock-towered Basel Badischer Bahnhof—about a mile beyond the river’s northern embankment. Then there’s the metro area’s unique EuroAirport (www.euroairport. com), 16 miles northwest of town and therefore situated in France. Serving Swiss Basel, French Alsatian Mulhouse and German Freiburg im Breisgau, it functions on the basis of a 1949 treaty negotiated between Switzerland and France, making this the world’s only two-nation airport.

Great Art Museum, High-Towered Rathaus
Mention Basel (population 163,186, a notch below Geneva’s total) to knowledgeable travelers and they’ll most likely begin by praising the Kunstmuseum, generally regarded as housing Switzerland’s biggest and best fine-arts collections. Old Masters (Dürer, Holbein, Cranach, Rembrandt, Breughel) are well-represented; same for French Impressionists, German Expressionists and American avant-garde notables. Roy Litchtenstein’s Hopeless, painted in 1963, depicts a comic-strip blonde in larger-than-life tearfulness. Coming in 2009 (April-Sept.): a major showing of landscapes by Vincent van Gogh.
From there, turning a corner to reach a street named St. Alban-Vorstadt brings visitors to Europe’s foremost Caricature & Cartoon Museum, which occupies a townhouse standing since 1422. Walking uphill in a different direction gets them to the continent’s oldest cathedral north of the Alps—a pink sandstone, twin-steepled Gothic landmark that’s dominated Basel’s skyline for 650-plus years. The church’s wide-open, harmonious Münsterplatz deserves notice as a terrific vantage point for panoramic views of the city layout and its four bridges spanning a sharp bend (Baslers call it the “knee”) of the Rhine.
Looming over the marketplace down in the historic and commercial heart of Basel, the 16th-century Rathaus makes a visual statement with its red sandstone tower, belfry pinnacles, multicolored roof patterns, heraldic sculptures and fresco-ornamented courtyard. Your clients should be encouraged to delve into the tangle of narrow, interestingly named old streets in the town hall’s immediate vicinity. (Among our favorites: Elftausend Jungfern-Gässlein—which means Eleven Thousand Virgins Lane).
Half a dozen other topnotch museums exemplify the city’s cultural eminence. Not to be missed, worth a public-transit commute (via #6 tram) to suburban Riehen: Fondation Beyeler, a major repository of “classic modern” art on a stunning garden site completed a decade ago, designed by superstar architect Renzo Piano.
Visit www.baseltourismus.ch for more about the city and the multinational Baselland region. Also see the article featuring the destination in JF’s May issue.

Mountain Country on the Big Screen
Beginning this spring, a movie entitled The Alps has been packing audiences in IMAX® theaters world-wide. Viewers take a cinematic train ride on the Glacier Express, bungee-jump off the Verzacsa Dam, poke into mountain villages and climb the Eiger North Face. For theaters and schedules, visit: www.alpsfilm.com.
The movie’s release coincides with this year’s 150th anniversary of the founding of England’s Alpine Club, a Swiss mountain-climbing pioneer. Soon after that 1857 startup, the Thomas Cook Company introduced alpine excursions in its “grand circular tours” offered to British vacationers.
Current civic celebrations mark the 850th anniversary of western Switzerland’s Fribourg, a beautifully preserved medieval city clustered around a 15th-century town hall and Gothic St. Nicholas Cathedral; www.fribourgtourisme.ch. Eastward toward Lake Constance (the Swiss/German Bodensee), picturesque little Stein am Rhein is in the midst of year-long festivities commemorating its 1,000th anniversary.
Flamboyant frescoes embellish the town center’s timber-framed houses; www.steinamrhein.ch.

Getting There
JAX FAX flew round-trip Boston-Zürich-Boston aboard Swiss International Airlines, code-share partnered with Star Alliance, established 10 years ago this past May. Arrival at Zürich’s super-efficient international airport was followed by a quick westbound transfer to Basel’s midcity train station (thank you, Rail Europe for Flexipass ticketing). Other U.S. gateways for nonstops to/from Zürich: New York JFK, Newark EWR, Chicago ORD, Los Angeles LAX, Miami MIA, Washington WAS. The airline also operates nonstop service between JFK and Geneva. Additionally, USAirways inaugurated Philadelphia-Zürich flights in June.

For general information about Swiss destinations, also about promotional materials and special-events updates, contact Switzerland Tourism offices in New York City, Los Angeles and Toronto. Phone: 877-794-8037; www.MySwitzerland.com. That website now features 200 excursion proposals and downloadable Swiss Cities Podcasts. Among available marketing publications are Cities (previews of a countrywide two dozen) and Selling Switzerland, an all-purpose sales guide that includes detailed Swiss Pass info, travel distances, categorized lists of incoming operators, schedules of events, FIT guidelines, PostBus offers and recommendable packages.

May 2007 Feature

Basel: Discreetly Swiss and Quietly Classy

basel
By Christine H. O’Toole

As I emerged from the train station into Switzerland’s wealthiest city at midnight, I expected dazzle. Bling. Oceans of Cristal, being guzzled in black-windowed limousines, cruising through a sparkling city.
But that’s not the way that Basel rolls. Though they share the Art Basel name for annual shows of outrageous art, this old-world city is decidedly not Miami. Wealthy, discreet Basel keeps it on the down low.
The first European bridge across the river was built here in 1225, and Basel has prospered ever since. Its medieval history is illuminated in its center, dominated by the famous thirteenth-century Munster and riverfront promenades. Art Basel is held here each June. But its artistic edge is best shown, appropriately, on the city’s fringe, where Switzerland touches France and Germany.

New architectural landmarks have sprouted in the suburbs. Many are world-class museums. The Swiss partnership of Herzog and de Meuron (designers of the new Miami Museum of Art), who make their headquarters here, contributed the hulking Schaulager, archive of the Hoffmann Foundation. Fellow Swiss Mario Botta added his signature curves to the waterfront at the Tinguely Museum. The Fondation Beyeler commissioned a nearly transparent home by Renzo Piano. And the Vitra Design Museum campus is packed with big name-buildings, with works by Frank Gehry, Nicholas Grimshaw and others. All told, the city boasts 40 handsome museums in its 40 square kilometers, all easily reached by tram.
From my central base at the Three Kings Hotel (five-star bling on the Rhine since 1681), it was a ten-minute tram ride to my next stop, the futuristic Schaulager. A high-tech warehouse for mixed media works in the vast Hoffmann Foundation collection, this massive concrete structure by Herzog and de Meuron was opened in 2003. Inside, the space is vast and white, with a few compressed windows. Light’s not required. The room-sized installations, including contemporary pieces like Katharina Fritsch’s menacing “Rat King,” are stored for future exhibits elsewhere behind foot-thick walls. If the Alps ever crumble, this fortress would probably remain.

Equally enduring is St. Alban Tal, a newly chic 700-year-old neighborhood that’s home to another museum district. It takes its name from an ancient city gate on the southern bank of the Rhine. Clustered along the immaculate pedestrian river walk were museums the contemporary Museum fur Gegenwartkunst (an offspring of the Kunstmuseum), the Karikatur and Cartoon Museum, and the Papiermuhle, a former paper-making factory beside a water wheel that still turns.
I hopped another shiny tram across the river to Solitude Park, where a shrine to a local hero awaited. The Rube Goldberg-type fountain at the entrance introduced the museum dedicated to Jean Tinguley, an avant-garde Sixities artist who poked fun at modern mechanics. The curvy building by architect Mario Botta faces the Rhine, pouring light into huge galleries displaying Tinguely’s work.
Tinguely was a lifelong Baseler; only a native could subvert its efficiency and invention so slyly. His works included film, performance and “self-destructive machines,” all of which demand space; a contraption called “Din” included a moving tractor, cymbals, and smoke.

At evening rush hour I departed from the Tinguely for the Fondation Beyeler. Like Philadelphia’s Barnes Foundation, this collection of 200 modern masterworks draws international art lovers to the suburbs.
Alighting from the tram at Riehen, I followed a path towards a building that seemed, in the twilight, like a lozenge of glowing glass. Renzo Piano’s ten-year-old home for the collection donated by the Beyeler family seemed brand-new. Works by Picasso, Cezanne, and Monet got sensuous display here, in spacious galleries that paired Monet’s “Nympheas” with the strains of “Claire de Lune.”
I headed by tram over the German border. In the Vitra Design Museum in Weil-am-Rhein, pieces of furniture are the works of art. But the buildings scattered across a broad country field are works of art, too. Frank Gehry’s first European commission, the tumbling white museum, opened in 1989; a Buckminster Fuller dome, a sleek Tadao Ando designed conference center, and a high-tech fire station by Iraq’s Zaha Hadid sit alongside. Guided walking tours are conducted (in impeccable English) twice a day.

For lunch afterwards, a contemporary bistro seemed fitting. Acqua Osteria, near the city zoo, is set in the walls of a municipal water plant, with glass tiles showing bubbles under the floors. Acqua is where chic young Baselers take long lunches, with a prix fixe menu and carafes of local wine on every table.
I spent the afternoon in the sunshine along the Freiestrasse, where window shopping for Hermes and Armani, Bucherer and Prada was free. For city souvenirs, I’d already splurged on art: works from eight of the country’s most intriguing museums, stacked on postcards for my personal home gallery.

Basel is 16 miles from EuroAirport and one hour by train from Zurich International Airport. Beginning June 10, the French high-speed TGV line will offer service from Paris to Basel in three hours and twenty minutes. Swiss Travel System passes, good on transport from high-speed trains to lake steamers, can be purchased in the U.S. before departure (www.sbb.ch). The passes include free admission to 400 museums nationwide.
Basel Tourism offers a wealth of detail for English-language visitors at www.baseltourismus.ch. for links to museums, dining options, sample itineraries, detailed transit schedules and more. Basel Tourism also sponsors guided walking tours of the city daily from May through mid-October (Saturdays only October-April); tickets cost under $20 for adults.

The Basel Mobility Pass offers free public transit to all overnight guests in the city, while the Basel Card offers museum, dining and nightlife discounts. Get the card through Basel Tourism (two locations open daily, at the SBB train station (011-41-(0)-61-268-68 68) and at the Stadtcasino, Barfusserplatz (011-41-(0) 61-268-6868). Also available at EuroAirport, museums, and at some hotels.


For more information, contact Switzerland Tourism, 212-757-5944; www.myswitzerland.com