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Eight Global Luxury Stays That Come With a Shatafa

Eight Global Luxury Stays That Come With a Shatafa

CairoScene12-07-2025
From Las Vegas to Helsinki—these eight hotels don't just serve five-star glam, they also take bathroom goals very seriously.
There's a certain allure to traveling abroad, to crossing borders into worlds hitherto only explored through unnecessarily cinematic drone shots on Tiktok, aesthetic Instagram carousels with an influencer-type photobombing an ancient castle, and the occasional celebrity spotted glamping in some remote US desert or other.
Yet, those of us who have ventured outside the borders of the Middle East and North Africa have one troublesome bit of news to share—it's not all glittering casinos, glamorous galas and picturesque forests. In fact, when planning one's trip outside the region, there seems to be one glaring(ly dry) problem to consider: WHERE IS THE SHATAFA?
The blessed spray.
The unsung hero of Middle Eastern hospitality.
Gone. Absent. Tragically underrepresented.
Or so we thought.
After some rather shameful sleuthing on Reddit—wherein I seem to have lost my dignity but somehow affirmed my journalistic integrity—and endless hours spent doom-scrolling through random strangers' inexplicably lopsided and hyper-zoomed in images of hotel room toilets (???), I managed to curate a verified list of eight global luxury stays that do, in fact, match your backside hygiene flow for flow. That is to say: YES, THEY COME WITH A SHATAFA.
BumGun lovers, rejoice. This one's for you.
1. The Palace Hotel – San Francisco, USA
An icon of the Gilded Age, this 1875-built landmark is all chandeliers, marble columns, and a glass-domed Garden Court where presidents and poets have dined. Rebuilt after the 1906 earthquake, it remains one of the most storied hotels on the West Coast.
Bathroom flex: Toto washlets in select suites. Think warm seats and auto-lids fit for a Gilded Age queen.
2. The Royal Hawaiian Resort – Waikiki, Hawaii
Also known as the 'Pink Palace of the Pacific,' this cotton-candy-colored beachfront resort has been a celebrity magnet since 1927. Elvis stayed here. So did Marilyn Monroe. So can you.
Bathroom flex: Ultra-clean, no-fuss washlets with that unmistakable island breeze.
3. The Phoenician – Scottsdale, Arizona
A desert masterpiece with its own art collection, cactus garden, and a spa that deserves its own zip code.
Bathroom flex: Bidets in premium suites that leave you feeling fresher than a dip in the infinity pool.
4. Hotel President, a Luxury Collection Hotel – Geneva, Switzerland
The kind of place where diplomats, billionaires, and Bond villains might all be checking in at the same time. Home to one of the most expensive hotel suites in the world.
Bathroom flex: Classic European bidets. Because global power moves deserve proper plumbing.
5. Aria Resort & Casino – Las Vegas, USA
A sleek, modern mega-resort in the heart of the Strip with floor-to-ceiling views, smart-room tech, and just the right amount of Vegas sparkle.
Bathroom flex: Toto washlets in Sky Suites. Mood lighting, seat warming, and the kind of cleanse that makes you feel like you just hit the spa jackpot.
6. JW Marriott South Beach – Singapore
High above Singapore, this Philippe Starck-designed hotel is a maximalist dream — part art gallery, part luxury resort, part futuristic spaceship.
Bathroom flex: Toto washlets with remote controls that feel more sci-fi than spa.
7. Hotel St. George – Helsinki, Finland
A former printing house turned boutique marvel, with a poetry room, in-house bakery, and winter-ready coziness at every turn.
Bathroom flex: Heated washlets because Finland doesn't mess around with cold seats.
8. Braemar Lodge – Hanmer Springs, New Zealand
Tucked in the mountains with alpine views and private spas, this South Island hideaway is quiet luxury at its best.
Bathroom flex: Bidets in suites that feel like you're being baptized in glacial spring water.
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‘They don't want the rabble anymore:' Why Europe is rising up against mass tourism
‘They don't want the rabble anymore:' Why Europe is rising up against mass tourism

Egypt Independent

time5 hours ago

  • Egypt Independent

‘They don't want the rabble anymore:' Why Europe is rising up against mass tourism

As protestors have taken to the streets across Spain, disrupted a billionaire's wedding in Venice, and even caused a shutdown of the Louvre in the shape of a staff mutiny about overcrowding, Noel Josephides has been watching with one phrase on his mind: I told you so. 'I could have told you that would happen 10 years ago,' he says. 'And I said so. I said, 'This is going to get out of control.'' Josephides is the longstanding chairman of Sunvil, a UK-based tour operator that has been sending comfortably-off Brits on vacation since 1970. He's also a former chairman of ABTA and AITO, both UK travel industry bodies, which makes him one of the big beasts of European tourism. And he says he saw Europe's current overtourism meltdown coming. 'I said there'll be enormous problems going forward,' he recalls of a speech he delivered to the ABTA annual convention, held in Dubrovnik, in 2013. He delivered that warning as the sharing economy — spearheaded in travel by Airbnb — was mushrooming across Europe. His concern, however, was not just short-term rentals. What he saw coming was a perfect storm: rapidly expanding budget airlines working in tandem with proliferating short-term rentals to create vast new vacation capacity, driving down prices and ushering in a new era of large-scale budget travel. Of course, as a tour operator, Josephides works in direct competition with short-term rentals and the independent travel-planning that budget airlines encourage. Yet today, he seems like a Cassandra figure — he foresaw the chaos, but no one acted. Now his worst fears have come to pass. 'The local populations are quite right,' he says about the spiraling protests. 'It's out of control. I'm on the side of the protestors, even though it affects my business.' The Covid-19 pandemic was the only time in years that Barcelona's Las Ramblas was tourist-free. Josep Lago/AFP/Getty Images 'A salmon going against the flow' The situation in Europe this summer is a far cry from the empty streets and clear waters of the summer of 2020. During the pandemic, many destinations vowed to reinvent tourism for the better. But once travel restrictions were lifted, things quickly reverted to the old ways — and in many cases got worse, thanks to what came to be known as 'revenge travel.' For some locals, the memory of lockdown has taken on a halcyon glow. 'I remember walking in the streets very close to Las Ramblas and hearing birds singing and church bells,' says Maite Domingo Alegre, who lives in Barcelona. 'I'd never realized the bells tolled. But I never get to hear them anymore. Tourism has brought so much noise it's unbelievable.' An English teacher and associate professor at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Domingo Alegre lives in the city's historic center near the cathedral and works near Las Ramblas. She says her city has changed beyond recognition. 'We've always had tourism, and mass tourism, but over the last 10 to 15 years this has changed dramatically,' she says. 'It's not seasonal anymore, it's 365 days a year. And the visitors are much more than the number of inhabitants.' Crowded streets are one thing; the knock-on effects, she says, are worse. 'Most of the shops — even food shops, clothes shops, restaurants, everything in the center — is basically addressed to tourists,' she says. 'Prices have gone up. Airbnb basically evicted many locals. Most of my friends have fled the neighborhood because they can't afford to live there anymore.' The pandemic, she adds, intensified the problem, attracting remote workers from across Europe. 'They don't really mingle with the locals. They're not interested in Catalan or even Spanish culture. They think it's cheaper, and they have nice food and cheap drinks, so most bars and restaurants are also thought of for them.' Venice musician Ornello's latest video shows him as an astronaut, walking through the busy streets which have become alien to him. Courtesy Ornello In Venice, it's the same story. The local pop musician Ornello's latest video shows him dressed as an astronaut, wading through the summer crowds. In his real-life identity, Alessio Centenaro, he feels equally out of place in his hometown. 'I'm a cyclist and on Sundays I take my bike from Piazzale Roma (Venice's road terminus). I'm going out and I'm going against all the tourists arriving on the island and I feel like I'm a salmon going against the flow. Sometimes when you're surrounded by tourists, with hundreds all around you, you feel like you're the foreigner.' Venice has always been a city of tourists, he adds, but it also once had a sizable resident population. 'There are 48,000 people officially, but nobody says what's the percentage of old people. I'd say it's perhaps 70% over 70. If they will live another 15 years, what will happen then?' The number of residents in Venice has plummeted as visitor numbers to the city continue to rise. MARCO BERTORELLO/AFP/AFP via Getty Images From 'secret' to swamped For the past five decades, Josephides has watched destinations go from charming to overcrowded. The trajectory, he says, is nearly always the same. First a boutique tour operator like Sunvil identifies a little-visited destination that seems perfect for its clients — people in search of a vacation where they won't be surrounded by other vacationers. It'll add that destination to its books, usually chartering a weekly flight to get clients there initially. And so the first few seasons will be a halcyon period of relatively few visitors. They enjoy the peace and quiet; the residents enjoy the money they inject into the local economy. But then word will spread. A budget airline — because it's low-cost carriers, not legacy ones, who invest in lesser-known places — will start operating to the destination. The following year, its rivals follow suit, eager not to miss out. What if Jet2 knows something we don't? Suddenly, there's a surfeit of planes going to the destination, and to fill them airlines slash fares, meaning that the budget market becomes the 'volume market,' as Josephides puts it. Accommodation strains to keep pace with the growing number of visitors, prompting locals to invest in short-term rentals. Soon, that 'secret' destination is swamped — not just by the early, more affluent pioneers, but by that volume market, who fly in on the budget airlines, stay in an Airbnb and generally spend less locally. So the first wave moves on to a new place, and the cycle begins again. Josephides earmarks the Greek island of Samos as one of the next destinations to go through this cycle. This year there is one direct weekly flight from the UK, he says. 'Next year TUI (a German travel company) have Thursday and Sunday. Jet2 have put on four flights: two Manchester, one Birmingham and one Stansted. So wait to see Ryanair and easyJet pile in.' The mass market players, he says, 'move in like a vacuum cleaner. The nature of the island will change but local governments do not understand what will happen until it is too late.' Even established hot spots can be victims of their own popularity. Airports on the Greek islands of Corfu and Crete, Josephides notes, are inundated with flights. 'The volume market won't go to destinations that aren't known, so you get this bottleneck of cheap flights fueling the likes of Airbnb. The local population are quite right — it's out of control.' An Airbnb spokesperson said in a statement: 'Airbnb offers a different way to travel that better spreads guests and benefits to more communities. The fact is that overtourism is getting worse in cities where Airbnb is heavily restricted: in Amsterdam or Barcelona, the introduction of stringent restrictions on short term rentals have coincided with a steep increase in guest nights driven by hotels, and a surge in accommodation prices for travelers. Cities that want to have a significant impact on overtourism should embrace tourism that supports families and communities.' They added that 59% of 'guest nights' sold in the EU on Airbnb in 2024 are in destinations outside cities, while their research published in June shows that the majority of tourists still choose hotels. VRBO, another major short-term rental provider, did not respond to a request for comment. Palma's tourist board is taking steps to center the industry around residents, not visitors.A blitz on overtourism Pedro Homar knows this pressure well. As tourism director for Visit Palma, he's caught between visitors behaving badly in the Spanish city, and residents demanding action. 'We need to ensure that tourism is a sustainable industry, not just from an environmental point of view but also from a social and economic point of view,' he says. 'Our economy depends on tourism, so we either make sure we're physically sustainable or we will not have a future.' Since the pandemic, Palma has stopped promoting itself outright. Instead, it runs 'image campaigns' to shape perceptions — even running ads to call out antisocial behavior in certain resorts. In 2022, the city capped cruise ship arrivals at three a day, even though the port can handle six (Barcelona has followed suit, announcing in July that it will close two of its seven cruise terminals from 2026). It banned short-term rental apartments and Airbnbs in city-center residential buildings and has set a cap of 12,000 hotel beds: for a new hotel to open, another must close. Palma has also built up a 50-million-euro ($58 million) fund to buy and remove outdated hotels from circulation — typically cheaper properties that tend to attract budget tourists. 'It's a way of taking out of the market all these obsolete and old hotels that are no longer competitive and not the kind of product that we want for the destination,' Homar says. 'We don't need you' Palma's approach raises a question: Who has the 'right' to travel? Some destinations have long used high costs to deter mass tourism. Bhutan charges a $100-a-day 'sustainable development fund' fee. A gorilla-trekking permit in Rwanda costs $1,500 per person. Even Venice's 10-euro day-tripper fee has drawn criticism from locals for selling the city to the wealthy. Homar argues that destinations should have the right to choose their visitors, likening it to deciding whom to invite to dinner. 'I really do believe that as mature destinations, we have the right to choose the tourists that we want, and don't want,' he says. 'We want tourists that respect our personality, our way of living, our traditions. 'If you are thinking of coming over without a respectful point of view, we say, respectfully, we don't need you.' Josephides is blunter. 'They don't want the rabble anymore,' he says. 'It sounds awful to say so, and everyone's entitled to a holiday, but the numbers just keep growing. The whole thing is out of control. I can understand the democratization but it's up to the destination if they want clients without any money,' he adds. 'I'd like to drive a Ferrari, but I can't afford it.' For now, he says, most European destinations seem focused on capping numbers rather than pricing out budget travelers entirely. In Rome, visiting the Trevi Fountain has become an ordeal. Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto/Getty Images Winning back the locals Restoring the goodwill of residents is just as important as tackling the crowds. 'A city where residents are not satisfied is a city that doesn't work,' says Ruben Santopietro, CEO of Visit Italy, a marketing company for various destinations across the country. 'It loses its identity completely. Residents feel excluded and neighborhoods become touristic.' Born in Naples, which saw protests over lack of housing and growing short-term rental numbers in March, Santopietro has watched his hometown surge in popularity — and housing prices — over the past decade. He warns that if growth continues unchecked, 'in five years, 50% of the città d'arte (Italian cities of culture) will become inaccessible.' Rome, Florence and Naples, he says, are already 'suffocated by tourism' almost to the point of no return. Visitors, he adds, actually want locals around. 'Venice belongs to the Venetians. If locals aren't there, they won't go. Putting residents at the center of tourism models is the only way to preserve our cities from becoming open-air museums.' Homar agrees, echoing the same phrase — 'putting residents at the center of the tourist strategy' — when talking about Palma's new five-year plan, adopted in 2023. Some hotels the city buys will be replaced with green spaces or converted to housing. In November, Palma will launch free cultural activities for locals — organ recitals, children's days in the old atelier of artist Joan Miró, theater concerts organized by Spanish national radio stations, guided architectural walks around the city — to 'uplift the sense of belonging and the pride of being a citizen.' 'All these initiatives will be in spaces that residents for some reason believe are just for tourists,' he says. 'We're seeing that the sense of belonging that residents used to have about being in Palma, they were slowly losing that and we need to change that dynamic.' The scourge of social media Redistributing visitors can also help. The problem in Italy, Santopietro says, isn't that the country can't handle the numbers — it's that everyone goes to the same places. This summer, his agency launched a campaign, 'The 99% of Italy,' encouraging travelers to visit lesser-known destinations from Genoa to Tropea (some of which were their clients, but not all). 'We used social media platforms as they have created these imbalances,' he says, adding that they expect tangible results in the long term, as regional marketing campaigns take longer to take effect. Santopietro says that even in the busiest destinations, steps can be taken to disperse visitors. He suggests incentives — for example, discounted tickets to Rome's Colosseum for those who've already visited the ancient coastal town of Ostia Antica. In Naples, residents protested about the housing crisis in March, citing short-term rentals as one of the takes time In the short term, protests are likely to spread, says Estrella Diaz Sanchez, associate professor of marketing at Spain's University of Castilla-La Mancha. 'Some locals are frustrated about the number of tourists they receive, but I think the main factor is skyrocketing rents, driven by short-term holiday lets, pushing locals out of the housing markets,' she says. 'The solution isn't to reject tourism; it's to make it more inclusive and respectful.' Even Josephides, the tourism industry doomsayer, thinks recovery is possible. He points to Estoril, on the Lisbon coast, which in the 1970s was a mass-market destination. Authorities decided to push it upmarket, and succeeded. 'You can recover, but it takes time,' he says. 'It's much easier for a destination to control its growth rather than repair it afterwards.' Sign up for Unlocking the World, CNN Travel's weekly newsletter. Get news about destinations, plus the latest in aviation, food and drink, and where to stay.

Saudi Arabia's Go-to Spots for Egyptian Cuisine
Saudi Arabia's Go-to Spots for Egyptian Cuisine

CairoScene

time5 days ago

  • CairoScene

Saudi Arabia's Go-to Spots for Egyptian Cuisine

For a falafel breakfast or a mahshi fix, these Egyptian franchises are the go-to spots for Egyptian food lovers in the Kingdom. Aug 14, 2025 For a falafel breakfast or a mahshi fix, these Egyptian franchises are the go-to spots for Egyptian food lovers (and Egyptians) in the Kingdom. Gad – Al Olaya, Riyadh The generational favourite, Gad is a classic Egyptian household name dating back to the 1940s, now an iconic Middle Eastern food chain with an extensive menu featuring everything from ful in shami bread to feteer, hawawshi, and more. Sobhy Kaber – Al Mathar Ash Shamali, Riyadh Egypt's grill master, Sobhy Kaber, has long packed the streets of Shubra, Cairo, with crowds drawn to his unrivalled oriental flavours and famed name. The Grill Giant's Saudi branch is just as big on both flavour and portion. Om Ali – As Sulimaniyah, Riyadh Serving homely, casserole-cradled recipes from molokhya to moussaka, Om Ali—true to its name—also serves the classic Egyptian dessert to round out its hearty menu. Hara Masria – Al Safa, Riyadh Perfecting the recipe for the Egyptian dining experience, Hara Masria greets you with oriental charm in its setting and lighting, as much as in its menu. A Kingdom-born restaurant wrapping the true Egyptian spirit into its mahshi. Qasr Elnil – As Sulimaniyah, Riyadh Named after the iconic Cairo bridge, Nile Palace serves Egyptian and Levantine favourites as monumental as its namesake: from potatoes with meat to fatteh, shish tawook kebabs, and more. Al Dawar Al Masrey – Al Andalus, Jeddah With a name from the Egyptian countryside and an interior inspired by traditional domes, Jeddah's Al Dawar Al Masrey feels like an Egyptian home. Cairo Eats – Al Olaya, Riyadh Cairo Eats serves up Egyptian fast food in Riyadh's Al Olaya neighbourhood, with an outdoor seating area perfect for tucking into your kofta or liver sandwiches. Felfela – Manfuhah, Riyadh Felfela is your casual corner stop in Manfuhah for grabbing a hot falafel sandwich for breakfast or sitting down to a plate of mixed appetisers and tahinah in the afternoon.

AD: Ladurée Arabia Launches New Savoury Menu Across Saudi Locations
AD: Ladurée Arabia Launches New Savoury Menu Across Saudi Locations

CairoScene

time7 days ago

  • CairoScene

AD: Ladurée Arabia Launches New Savoury Menu Across Saudi Locations

From truffled burgers to caviar-topped blinis, Ladurée Arabia's new savoury menu adds a seasonal, all-day dining experience across its locations in Riyadh and Jeddah. Ladurée Arabia, the French patisserie known globally for its pastel-coloured macarons, is expanding its culinary offering in Saudi Arabia with the launch of an all-new savoury menu. Now available across all Ladurée Arabia branches in the Kingdom, the new additions bring a refined touch to breakfast, lunch, and dinner service. The breakfast section balances French technique with regional flair. Guests can choose from Eggs Florentine with Cheddar béchamel and smoked paprika, a citrus-topped Omelette Royale with salmon roe and dill, or a Middle Eastern Omelette layered with garlicky yogurt and chilli sauce. For starters, the menu leans fresh and indulgent in equal measure. Shrimp Rolls 'Terre et Mer' feature sesame-spiced beef and shrimp wrapped in crisp filo pastry, while the Crab Salad blends grapefruit, avocado, and coriander. The Cucumber Avocado Gazpacho offers a cooling, herbaceous option, and blinis arrive topped with smoked salmon or Oscietra caviar. Signature mains include a lobster roll with lemon confit and lemongrass, a gourmet burger made with confit beef cheeks and truffle mayo, and two takes on the classic Croque Monsieur: traditional with Emmental cheese, or vegetarian with tomato pesto. Ladurée's signature dessert flair is reinterpreted through its new milkshake collection - rose, vanilla, pistachio and chocolate - topped with Chantilly cream and macaron shells. Guests can also enjoy new plated desserts like pistachio crème brûlée or a fragrant brioche-based Um Ali with orange blossom. The new savoury menu is now served across all Ladurée Arabia locations in the Kingdom, namely Laysen Valley (Riyadh), Riyadh Park (Riyadh), Solitaire Mall (Riyadh), Roshn Front (Riyadh), Kingdom Mall (Riyadh) and Fayfa (Jeddah).

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