Discover The Ideal Home Base: Your
Four Seasons Private Residence

Warm sun, gentle breezes and a laid-back lifestyle: Your life is always a vacation when you live in a resort destination. Whether you’re looking to escape the winter chill with beachside bliss in Anguilla or embrace year-round adventure with a home in Vail, make the most of your time at home – exceptional service and amenities are just a few of the benefits of owning a Four Seasons Private Residence. You’ll live like a local in some of the world’s most sought-after vacation destinations, enjoying the privacy, security and comfort that you expect from Four Seasons.

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Your private oasis in Sharm El Sheikh

Discover a tropical hideaway on the shores of Egypt’s Red Sea: Sharm El Sheikh, situated on the Sinai Peninsula, is known for its sandy beaches, clear waters and diverse marine life. Your home at the newly expanded Four Seasons Private Residences Sharm El Sheikh is the ideal sanctuary, offering space to recharge, refresh and reconnect with loved ones.

Bask in year-round sunshine on the golden-sand private beach or dive under the waves to explore an underwater world – your new locale is yours to explore by land or by sea. Hundreds of coral reef sites make the waters of Sharm El Sheikh one of the world’s most breathtaking diving destinations – explorer and scuba-diving pioneer Jacques Cousteau once described the Straits of Tiran’s coral garden as one of the most magnificent he’d ever seen. Not in the mood to take the plunge? Set off to explore the Sinai Desert on a family-friendly camel tour, browse the stalls and boutiques at the Old Sharm marketplace or the upscale Il Mercato, or gather with friends at a waterfront café on palm-lined Naama Bay. Your dedicated Concierge can arrange it all for you.

Whether you opt for an Arabesque-style Private Residence or one of the newly added chalets or bespoke villas, you’ll enjoy endless ways to spend your time together: Raise a glass with friends and family at one of the Resort’s world-class restaurants, plan an evening soirée in your residence’s lush garden or celebrate with family over a dinner prepared by a Four Seasons chef in your fully equipped kitchen. Your home’s privacy and comfort, plus seamless Four Seasons service, make it easy to focus on being present in the moment.

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An island paradise in Belize

Between Guatemala and Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula lies your own secluded beachfront haven – a distinctive island community in the heart of Belize’s largest marine sanctuary. Just an eight-minute flight or 30-minute boat ride from the mainland, Four Seasons Private Residences Caye Chapel, Belize offers easy access to the pristine, awe-inspiring natural beauty of the Belize coast, delivering equal parts adventure and barefoot bliss.

Tee off on the Greg Norman–designed White Shark Golf Course, where every hole presents water views, or set out with an expert from the Fabien Cousteau Nature and Conservation Center for an open-water excursion to the Great Blue Hole. Perched on the edge of the Belize Barrier Reef Reserve System – in the UNESCO World Heritage List and the largest barrier reef in the northern hemisphere – Caye Chapel is a diver’s delight, offering a look at marine turtles, manatees and ancient stalactites. Explore it all with the assurance that conservation is front of mind: Four Seasons is dedicated to preserving the area’s biodiversity with sustainable practices such as a native plants nursery; ecologically inspired architecture; and a residency program to bring ecologists, marine scientists and environmentalists to the region.

Also front and centre: A focus on your effortless ownership experience, including a dedicated team available around the clock via Four Seasons Chat to take care of everything from housekeeping, maintenance, and financial and lifestyle services to arranging early-morning yoga retreats at Sunrise Sanctuary and reservations at the Resort’s elevated dining outlets. You’re free to find inspiration in the pace of Belize and embrace the island’s laid-back lifestyle.

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Adventure for all seasons in Vail

Discover the thrill of life in Vail: majestic mountains, beautiful lakes and rivers, lively shopping and dining. At Four Seasons Private Residences Vail, you’re perfectly positioned to enjoy this history-rich village year round, with easy access to sought-after ski slopes, hiking and biking trails, and art galleries.

Known as one of the world’s top ski destinations, Vail Mountain offers 195 runs for skiers and snowboarders to explore, while the famed Back Bowls hold even more opportunities for deep powder. The Four Seasons Ski Concierge building – conveniently located near Gondola One – is your home base for mountain adventures, with team members on hand to provide ski equipment and trail advice or to arrange a guided snowshoe hike in the back country. Outdoor offerings are equally appealing in the warmer months: Take your mountain bike up via the gondola for breathtaking views of the Gore Range as you pedal downhill through aspen groves or paddle your way through heart-pounding whitewater rapids. Looking for calmer waters? Try a float trip that ends with a tasting session a local vineyard.

After a day spent exploring, gather with friends around a roaring fire in your private living room or host a family dinner in your open-concept kitchen: Your Private Residence is designed for quality time together in any season. Your concierge team handles all the details – such as stocking your kitchen before you arrive, 24-hour laundry services, and storing and delivering packages if you’re not home – ensuring you can make the most of each minute on the mountain.

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Barefoot luxury in Anguilla

Take relaxation to the next level at Four Seasons Private Residences Anguilla: Set out on a day trip to explore St Maarten or St Barts, discover the flavours that make Anguilla the culinary capital of the Caribbean, or simply breathe the salty sea air and let turquoise waters wash your worries away. Supported by your attentive Four Seasons team, your life at this secluded island sanctuary is effortless.

You’ll enjoy peace of mind knowing that your concierge team is available around the clock, taking care of your residence whether you’re home or away. Your team can also schedule dining reservations, arrange spa treatments, and plan excursions for you and your guests – all you have to do is ask.

Greet the morning with yoga on the beach or breakfast on your sweeping private terrace as you watch the sun rise over the bay: The day is yours to spend as you like. Head to the Sea Centre for beach supplies like umbrellas or snorkelling gear and spend the afternoon in the sand. Stroll along serene Barnes Bay Beach, stopping for a light lunch or refreshing frozen drink at Half Shell Beach Bar, or soak up the sun at the adults-only infinity-edge pool overlooking the bluff. Homeowners have full access to the amenities at Four Seasons Resort Anguilla, including the Sports Pavilion with its basketball court, a multilevel rock-climbing area and three tennis courts. You’ll discover plenty of opportunities – join a game of dominoes, dance to the beat of SOCA music, cheer as boaters race across the water at one of the popular regattas – to embrace the island lifestyle.

A Mother-Daughter Quest to Reconnect

My mother is everything to me. I was born when she was 23 years old. Although we had a small support system, it was mostly just the two of us. But I never felt that I was lacking another parental figure. That’s a testament to how amazing she is: Life was always an adventure.

She instilled in me a desire to chase experiences instead of objects, whether hiking in the summer, ice-skating in the winter or spending entire days daydreaming at the library.

As an adult, I’ve often felt that life is like pulling on a loose thread and worrying everything will unravel.

As an adult, I’ve often felt that life is like pulling on a loose thread and worrying everything will unravel. In the past two years, I’ve had the added pressure of devoting myself to work. I love my job – but working as a social media manager often goes beyond the standard nine-to-five. I feel I must be constantly answering direct messages from clients or e-mails from management.

A lot of times I feel the need to travel – it’s that sense of wanderlust and being away from it all.

Rediscovering What Matters

My mindset shifted with a surprise five-night stay with my mother at Four Seasons Hotel Gresham Palace Budapest.

Upon landing, we were greeted by Drew Clarke, Director of Marketing at the Hotel, who whisked us away to a handsome VIP lounge. He made our luggage appear within minutes. I knew then that the entire journey to come would be flawless.

It was impossible not to be excited. And I soon discovered it was impossible not to stand in awe of the Hotel, a restored palace steeped in history, with its millions of mosaic tiles and intricate wrought-iron peacock gate, Páva Udvar. After settling into our room, I couldn’t help feeling profoundly grateful as I looked out on the Chain Bridge along the Danube.

After settling into our room, I couldn’t help feeling profoundly grateful as I looked out on the Chain Bridge along the Danube.

The next morning, at the Spa, my mother and I received Omorovicza facials using luxurious local ingredients, followed by a traditional Hungarian facial massage. The experience was a firm reminder: Self-care is necessary. The treatments gave me a stretch of uninterrupted time to take a breath and reach for thoughts and ideas that I often feel too busy to dive into.

That sense of awareness and presence permeated the trip. One night, my mother and I, along with Katalin Czeller, a tour guide introduced to us by
Four Seasons, boarded a private sunset cruise on the Danube. Watching from the water as Budapest shifted from day to night is something I’ll always remember.

Instead of my phone, I held my mom’s hand, intoxicated by the cool air, the grandeur of the Hungarian Parliament Building staring back at us, and the light reflecting on the water.

Finding Transformation

One of the best parts of the city is its ever-present creative buzz. Ruin bars, unused spaces converted into the city’s liveliest places to drink, are perfect examples of Budapest’s brilliant ability to rebuild and reinvent itself.

One afternoon, Drew took us to Szimpla Kert, an iconic ruin bar based in the Jewish Quarter of Budapest’s 7th District. Twenty years after my mom told me not to vandalize anything, she handed me a pen and said I should draw on the wall. I went over to the wall – already scribbled with thousands of notes – and left a part of myself there.

Four Seasons Hotel Gresham Palace Budapest

I began to notice that my mom was somehow different, too. I’d never seen her so open and adventurous. So much happened on our trip: She relinquished control and let the chef and sommelier at the Hotel’s Kollázs – Brasserie and Bar give her a blind taste test of foie gras, Tokaji sweet wines and horseradish ice cream. Drew and Katalin taught her how to greet strangers in Hungarian. At the Workshop, a bar that embodies Budapest’s creativity, she drank shots of Unicum, a dark, bitter herbal liqueur that packs a punch, and relaxed with an artistic, laidback crowd.

I couldn’t have asked for a better travel partner or better arrangements. I already knew that would be the case, but it really hit me one morning when we were ice-skating together, the way we did when I was a kid.

Travelling with my mom and being cared for so well by the Hotel, I was able to let go
of the incessant pressures of work and actually be present. I was doing something familiar – made even richer by being in a new place – with the person who knows me better than anyone in the world.

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Take Your Time in Budapest

ONE MINUTE: Admire Fairy-Tale Views

Immerse yourself in the beauty of the gleaming lights of Budapest’s skyline while sipping a glass of sparkling wine from the comfort of your Danube River-View Room.

ONE HOUR: Take Tea at the Palace

Taste lavish cakes and savoury delights served in Herend hand-painted fine porcelain sets. Lean back in your comfortable armchair and enjoy live piano melodies under a magnificent glass cupola inside the Hotel’s historic Peacock Passage.

ONE DAY: Tour and Taste

Learn the history and secrets of the city with our expert guides, followed by a blind taste test dinner, where the chef and head sommelier at the Hotel reveal a five-to eight-course meal paired with wine tailored just for you and your loved one.

Photography courtesy Muse Storytelling, Krissy Rouse, iStock

YOUR JOURNEY BEGINS HERE

How will you take your time?

City by river

The Vision of Four Seasons

In the past six decades, Four Seasons has grown from a single hotel to a global collection that spans land, sky and sea. Today’s Four Seasons is the product of an ongoing vision – one that focuses on the guest, first and foremost – and constant innovation. Previously, in this three-part series, we’ve recapped the developments of the 2000s to the present and the 1980s and 1990s. Here, we go back to the brand’s origins: its commitment to a culture of service in the 1970s and its beginnings in the 1960s, including the reflections and predictions of Founder and Chairman Isadore Sharp.   

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1970 to 1979: An Emphasis on Excellence

Despite his beginnings in construction and building, Isadore Sharp knew that luxury and quality weren’t just about the materials – they were primarily about the guest experience. 

A few years after opening the first Four Seasons, Isadore Sharp happened to meet a British family who planned to put a hotel on some property they owned in London’s Hyde Park area. Initially, they were set on offering very basic accommodations as an alternative to the city’s grand hotels. It took some doing, but Sharp eventually convinced them that they could drop any pretence and stuffiness while still treating guests like royalty, and the Inn on the Park London opened in 1970. It was the first Four Seasons outside of Canada, just in time for the immense growth in international jet travel during that decade. 

“Four Seasons has always pioneered in luxury hospitality, and the London opening – with the vision of being the best hotel in the city, as part of a globally recognized brand – was no different,” says Michael Hagan, Head Concierge at the Hotel, which is now known as Four Seasons Hotel London at Park Lane. “It remains one of the flagship properties to this day.” 

Hagan, who joined Four Seasons as a Concierge, has been in his current role for 11 years and still loves every minute of it: “Every day is wonderfully different, and we get to meet amazing guests and create unforgettable experiences for them,” he says. “I still get the same joy and satisfaction from this as I did when I first worked in the concierge team all those years ago.” 

Quality was key to the success of that first London Hotel. It was small but well-appointed, with a central location and personalized 24-hour service – and it stayed fully booked. After a couple of years, Sharp knew he had arrived at a winning formula that would become a pillar of the Four Seasons business model in 1972: a focus on medium-sized hotels of exceptional quality that would strive to be the best in the destination. 

Over the next few years, Four Seasons refined the concept that would become its second pillar: luxury defined by service. The highly skilled concierge teams, especially, take that mission to heart, treating every guest as a VIP: “Our guests rely on the Concierge to get that impossible ticket or restaurant reservation,” Hagan says. “They stay with us because we have the reach and connections to make the impossible possible.” 

Four Seasons employees are empowered to tap into the collective expertise of their teammates around the globe. “The fact that we can call our colleagues anywhere in the world and share our knowledge and work together is priceless and truly sets Four Seasons apart from the rest,” Hagan says. And that network continued to grow throughout the rest of the decade as Four Seasons continued its expansion into the U.S. market with properties in San Francisco and Washington, DC.

In the 1970s, Four Seasons grew from three properties in a single country to a singular hospitality brand with more than a dozen properties in three countries. All these years later, the trend continues: “Four Seasons is continually growing,” Hagan says, “and with more openings happening soon, the future is very exciting.” 

Four Seasons Palm Beach, Florida

1961 to 1969: A New View of Hospitality

The first Four Seasons was a small hotel with a big idea: to treat every customer as a special guest. 

Isadore Sharp didn’t set out to create a visionary hospitality brand, but it’s hard to imagine his path taking any other direction. And that’s not just because the business has been a 60-year passion for him. It’s because hospitality lies at the core of who he is and how he approaches the world – in the office, at hotels and in every moment of life. 

When he built the first Four Seasons, working with his contractor father, Max, he considered himself primarily in the construction business, not hospitality. But Sharp’s true vocation – caring for and investing in people – was evident. He was driven to learn how to get other people to work in a way that they enjoyed. Establishing rapport among all team members was key, as was encouraging people to rise to the challenges ahead of them.  

“The idea of empowering people is just natural,” he says. “You want people to feel that there’s a purpose in what they’re doing, that they have a meaningful role. Ownership or responsibility really brings out the best in people.”  

It took more than five years to get that first hotel, a 125-room motor hotel in downtown Toronto, financed and built. But when it opened its doors, it was all about the guest. To inspire and empower every team member to provide exceptional care for guests and for each other: It was a visionary idea, one that other companies still strive to emulate. 

Sharp learned early on to trust his intuition and follow his heart – and what they told him was to look at his business from the point of view of the customer. Sometimes, “it’s just a subliminal thought process, and I guess that’s what I have developed, working in hospitality,” he says.  

“In the beginning, not having any technical knowledge about the way to operate a hotel,” he recalls, he shifted his perspective from “What should I be doing?” to “What does the customer want and need?”  

“We weren’t looking for gimmicks or tricks – all the things that we incorporate really have a purpose,” he says, recalling the early idea of placing a doily under a coffee cup to communicate to other team members that a guest is drinking decaf. Small practices like that continue today, and they planted the seeds for much bigger guest-first initiatives.  

“Probably the most dramatic innovation as a result of the pandemic was the idea from [President, Global Operations] Christian Clerc to engage an internationally recognized academic institution to help us confidently navigate the complex path ahead, with an emphasis on science and accuracy. This engagement helped us define our enhanced health and safety program, Lead With Care,” Sharp says. “What could be more important today than giving people that comfort level about their health and protection?” When you look at things from a customer’s perspective, he says, “innovation never stops.” 

By the end of that first decade, Sharp’s construction portfolio included two more hotels: Toronto’s Inn on the Park, which opened in 1963, and a third property in the late 1960s that would set the stage for the developments of the 1970s. Architect Peter Dickinson, whom Sharp had commissioned to design the first hotel, designed the Inn on the Park – an urban resort-style hotel perched on a hill above a broad expanse of parkland and housing one of the city’s top restaurants.  

As Sharp reflects on the time since that first opening in 1961, he says his biggest points of pride are the creation of a company that holds continued promise for the future, and the positive effect that Four Seasons has had on the lives of its team members around the world. And he is confident that the brand will continue building on this legacy. “When I look at the future, I can only see one thing: The company will continue down this path of achieving, of reinforcing what the brand stands for,” he says. With more than 50 projects in the pipeline and a number of new business deals expected each year, Sharp sees unlimited potential for growth. “I believe when we celebrate our 100th anniversary, we will still be recognized as the leader in luxury hospitality.” 

Read more: Mr. Sharp shares more stories from the last 60 years – plus four insights into the heart of hospitality – in Issue 4 2021–22 of Four Seasons Magazine.  

Eric Christian Olsen on the Magic of Mini Family Vacations

There are two reasons my wife, Sarah Wright, will never forget Four Seasons Resort Punta Mita. One: She was obsessed with the fresh guacamole, magically refilled by the staff. And two: After a beautiful dinner, three desserts and bottle of Bordeaux on the beach, I got down on one knee and proposed in the moonlight. That was seven years ago. It was our first Four Seasons experience, and we haven’t stayed elsewhere since.

Sarah and I both believe firmly in the fundamental philosophy that happiness is the journey, not the destination. The things that I remember most about my childhood are experiences like loading up the family station wagon for vacations in the Cascades, fishing in the Teton Mountains or bodysurfing with my dad for hours along the Oregon coast.

Sarah and I both believe firmly in the fundamental philosophy that happiness is the journey, not the destination.

We knew we wanted to recreate that with our kids. So, when I renegotiated my work contract, instead of asking for more money, I asked for four weeks off during production. This has allowed our family to take mini vacations throughout the year. We even created a vacation folder of all the places we want to explore next together.

We started planning family trips from the moment our son, Wyatt, was born. He travelled like a pro – toting a carry-on Gruffalo suitcase filled with books and Legos, wearing sandals to expedite security checks, and earning platinum airline status before he was 2 years old.

 

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And we soon discovered that while a lot of hotels shun kids, Four Seasons truly welcomes every member of the family. I honestly think the staff is specially trained to handle toddlers with jet lag. One night, we arrived really late at Four Seasons Resort O‘ahu at Ko Olina. It was way past Wyatt’s bedtime when we sat down to a starlit dinner at the restaurant. The waitress could tell he was exhausted, so she asked him his favourite singer and he said, “John Denver!” (Totally my fault.) Suddenly, the restaurant musician started playing “Take Me Home, Country Roads.” The look on Wyatt’s face was pure joy.

Four Seasons Oahu at Ko Olina

When travelling with toddlers, you have to plan on things going sideways. But when we’ve stayed with Four Seasons, they go out of their way to pick up the slack. In London, my shuttle to MCM Comic Con never showed up. The Concierge at
Four Seasons Hotel London at Tower Bridge didn’t just drive me 16 kilometres through traffic in the house Maybach – he offered to do it every day.

 

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At Four Seasons Resort The Biltmore Santa Barbara, it started pouring rain just as my family finished breakfast. You could tell Wyatt was nervous about navigating this deluge until one of the Resort staff members appeared with a kid-sized umbrella. Wyatt took it and sprinted out into the rain, jumping through puddles the whole way back to our bungalow. That simple act of thoughtfulness became a teachable moment for him: We navigate those unexpected obstacles while embracing and finding happiness in the present.

Four Seasons Resort The Biltmore Santa Barbara

On a trip to Grand-Hôtel du Cap-Ferrat, A Four Seasons Hotel, a Concierge team member scooped up Wyatt as soon as we stepped in and gave him a stuffed sea turtle. Wyatt’s favourite activity is swimming, and he learned to swim there in the Club Dauphin seawater pool overlooking the Mediterranean while that stuffed sea turtle watched supportively from the pool deck.

 

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When we ask Wyatt where he wants to go next, he consistently says Oahu. He will tell you about a hidden beach, down the road from the Resort, where he can swim with turtles and eat avocados (secretly provided by Chef John). He’s 5 years old now and already has developed such an emotional connection to the Oahu staff. The chefs there know that he is obsessed with the movie Ratatouille. After lunch during one recent visit, they gave him a chef’s jacket and hat – which he carried around for the next eight months – and invited him into the kitchen to make chocolate sea turtles. That was a life highlight for him.

 

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Experiences like this make me fall in love with Four Seasons time and again. It’s why I know we’ll continue to share milestones and once-in-a-lifetime moments on our travels. This journey of life is magical and fleeting, and we want to make sure we are taking stock of every experience we can.

YOUR JOURNEY BEGINS HERE

Where will your next journey take you?

Waves lapping onto beach

Teach Your Kids the Art of the Getaway

Summer may be drawing to a close, but there’s still plenty of extracurricular learning to be had. Teach your kids how to make the most of the new season with an American road trip, an urban retreat or a breather in cowboy country. Read on for four easy escapes that pair adventure with our exceptional service.


skyline of DC and Washington Monument

Drive Along the East Coast

Get behind the wheel for a road trip, full of history and fun, that links two U.S. East Coast cities – Washington, DC and New York. Your family journey begins in the nation’s capital, where the staff of Four Seasons Hotel Washington, DC, greets young guests with in-room amenities such as kid-size robes and slippers.

A trip to the U.S. capital is a vivid lesson for every school-age kid. There are countless museums to suit every child’s interest, such as the Smithsonian National Museum of American HistoryThe National Air and Space Museum, and The International Spy Museum. The Hotel can also book a private tour for you around historical sites like the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial.


Kids enjoying activities

After a day packed with exploring, the team at the Hotel welcomes you and your family back with more fun. “Seeing the smile on a kid’s face as I wheel out our little red wagon filled with games, treats and toys makes my day, every single time,” says Guest Relations Manager Colin Moneymaker. “Between our life-size chessboard in the garden to our mural painting workshops at brunch, I have so much fun showing off all that there is to do for kids at our property.”

Consider a coastal detour on your way to New York City. Seafood restaurants, laid-back beaches and iconic lighthouses punctuate the drive if you go by way of Annapolis and Kent Island, Maryland, and cut through Delaware.


Statue of Liberty

Once in the Big Apple, check into Four Seasons Hotel New York Downtown, a block from City Hall Park. Tickets for a ferry ride around the Statue of Liberty can be waiting for your arrival. Explore the nearby Oculus (aka Westfield World Trade Center), the elegant transportation and shopping hub designed by Santiago Calatrava, “and be sure to stop by Eataly for gelato,” says Guest Services Manager Daniel Gomez.


Chicago downtown skyline

Explore Chicago

This Midwestern metropolis comes alive during the summer and fall, an ideal weekend destination for all ages. Four Seasons Hotel Chicago is located on the Magnificent Mile, a perfect jumping-off point for the city’s top attractions.

“I always suggest families take advantage of the many waterfront activities available to them, whether it’s an architecture boat tour on the Chicago River, biking along the 18-mile Lakefront Trail or enjoying a meal at one of the many beach cafés,” says Chef Concierge Kristen Klus. When your family returns to the Hotel, schedule the popular ice cream cart service and surprise the kids with a make-your-own-sundae experience. The cherry on top? A cool-down in the Hotel’s 50-foot Roman-inspired pool.


Ferris Wheel and Ice Cream Sundae

When Sunday rolls around, start the day with a Sunday Side Up brunch at Allium Restaurant. “Fuel up and head to Lincoln Park Zoo, which is free 365 days a year,” says Executive Sous-Chef Tristan Baker. “Keeping on the animal theme, venture to the Shedd Aquarium, one of the first inland aquariums in the world with 32,000 animals.” Finish off the ideal weekend with a Ferris wheel ride at Navy Pier, showcasing wide-angle views of Chicago’s skyline and Lake Michigan.


Jackson Hole landscape

Escape to Jackson Hole

What better place for a peaceful weekend retreat than Jackson Hole, Wyoming? “There is something truly magical about Jackson Hole,” says Director of Marketing Cory Carlson. “The vast mountains, the wide-open skies, the thriving wildlife and the night sky akin to an illuminated canopy of stars create lasting memories for the whole family.”


Kids jumping in pool/outdoor fireplace

At Four Seasons Resort and Residences Jackson Hole, kids can clamber around in the outdoor ropes course while parents enjoy the heated outdoor pool. From 5:00 to 8:00 pm, the whole family can head to the Commons for free live music (dancing is strongly encouraged). End the night with a kit for s’mores ready to be roasted by the outdoor fireplaces.

“Children of all ages can enjoy the wonder and beauty of the area,” says Chef Concierge and Member Les Clefs d’Or USA  Hope Maloney, “whether on a hike in Grand Teton National Park, riding the aerial tram to the top of Rendezvous Mountain or seeing Old Faithful erupt.”


Mountain tram and family

Directly outside your back door is the Wildflower Trail, an intermediate hike for families to enjoy together. And the national park is just a mile away – ask the Hotel can arrange for a local ranger to lead young visitors through and talk about wildlife preservation and safety.


Woman in hotel room with balloon

Discover San Francisco

The Golden City is an ideal urban retreat, especially for travellers looking for moderate temperatures – almost surrounded by water, the city is often the coolest spot in California. As for the indoors, at Four Seasons Hotel San Francisco the family can spread out in connecting rooms or an executive suite. Make sure to ask for kid-size duvets and blankets, as well as popular in-room tents.

“From here, you’re well positioned for a walk across the Golden Gate Bridge,” says Chef Concierge Andreas Rippel, “as well as a post-museum trip to Lappert’s for ice cream.” He can round up advance tickets to the California Academy of Sciences in Golden Gate Park, home to a four-storey rainforest and an aquarium that houses a 200,000-plus-gallon coral reef fish tank.


Aquarium / Golden Gate Bridge

Close by, ascend the de Young Museum’s Hamon Tower – aspiring photographers can focus on the surrounding cityscape – and investigate the Koret Children’s Quarter Playground, where kids and grown-ups delight in trips down the jumbo concrete slides. By day’s end, those blankets and tents are going to look especially inviting.

Your Journey Begins Here

Where will you and yours venture next?