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From celeb trainer workouts to cruises, ‘wellness travel’ is booming – and bringing in big money

  • Howard University, May 12. "I don't know what your future...

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    Howard University, May 12. "I don't know what your future is. But if you are willing to take the harder way, the more complicated one, the one with more failures at first than successes — the one that has ultimately proven to have more meaning, more victory, more glory — then you will not regret it. Now, this is your time. The light of new realization shines on you today. Howard's legacy is not wrapped up in the money that you will make but the challenges that you choose to confront. As you commence to your paths, press on with pride, and press on with purpose."

  • Garden by the Bay South is a nature park near...

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    Garden by the Bay South is a nature park near the Bayfront Mass Rapid Transit station in Singapore. A number of conservatories are here, minimizing the city's environmental footprint and demonstrating sustainable building technologies. Visitors can take in the Flower Dome, Cloud Mountain (a structure made of plants) and Supertree Grove (vertical, treelike gardens with unique plants and photovoltaic cells that capture solar energy for use elsewhere in the park).

  • This building has photovoltaic solar panels that sit atop the...

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    This building has photovoltaic solar panels that sit atop the structure's roof, supplying over 10 percent of the building's energy, while inside, all furniture, doors and floors are made from bamboo. The complex also boasts public gardens and a microclimate created by rectangular cooling lakes fed by a grey-water system.

  • The City of Melbourne's new offices are housed in what...

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    The City of Melbourne's new offices are housed in what claims to be Australia's greenest and healthiest office building. It features a substantial rooftop garden area. High-rise horticulture, like that atop Melbourne's Council House 2, helps cool urban heat-islands.

  • The twin towers of the Bahrain World Trade Center in...

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    The twin towers of the Bahrain World Trade Center in the Persian Gulf make up an eco-friendly office building with wind turbines sandwiched between two "sail" shaped towers, generating clean energy for the building.

  • New York University, May 16. "As you go forward from...

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    New York University, May 16. "As you go forward from this place, I would like you to make a point of reaching out to people whose beliefs and values differ from your own. I would like you to listen to them — truly listen — and try to understand them and find that common ground." "You have a world of opportunity at your fingertips, but as you go forward from here, understand that just around the corner a whole different order of learning awaits in which your teachers will come from every station in life, every education level, every belief system, every lifestyle. And I hope you will embrace that."

  • Yale University, May 20. "I believe healing our country is...

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    Yale University, May 20. "I believe healing our country is going to take what I call radical empathy. As hard as it is, this is a moment to reach across divides of race, class and politics. To try to see the world through the eyes of people very different from ourselves, and to return to rational debate. To find a way to disagree without being disagreeable. To try to recapture a sense of community and common humanity." "When we think about politics and judge our leaders, we can't just ask, 'Am I better off than I was two years or four years ago?' We have to ask, 'Are we all better off? Are we as a country better, stronger and fairer?' "

  • Participants work out on paddle boards during Wanderlust Squaw Valley...

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    Participants work out on paddle boards during Wanderlust Squaw Valley 2017, in North Lake Tahoe, Calif.

  • The ParkRoyal Hotel in the financial hub of Singapore has...

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    The ParkRoyal Hotel in the financial hub of Singapore has a unique hotel-in-a-garden design. It was named hotel of the year by World Architecture News in 2013.

  • The 623-meter Shanghai Tower is the tallest building in China...

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    The 623-meter Shanghai Tower is the tallest building in China and the second tallest building in the world. It was built with a large percentage of recycled material and is partially powered by wind turbines. One third of the interior is public green space.

  • The West Building of the Vancouver Convention Centre features a...

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    The West Building of the Vancouver Convention Centre features a 6-acre "living roof" and is certified LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Platinum.

  • University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism,...

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    University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, May 11. "Vote, vote, vote. Pay attention to what the people who claim to represent you are doing and saying in your name and on your behalf. They represent you, and if they have not done right by you, if their policies are at odds with your core beliefs, then you have a responsibility to send them packing." "If they go low — thank you Michelle Obama — if they go low, we go to the polls. People died for that right. They died for that right. I think about it every time I cast a vote, so don't let their sacrifice be in vain."

  • Brown University, May 27.  "The whole world looks to you...

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    Brown University, May 27.  "The whole world looks to you for leadership. When that leadership is found wanting, the whole world suffers. I'm optimistic this morning because I've taken part in this joyous celebration of diversity. The future is yours, and I'm much more optimistic today than I was yesterday. So thank you for that."

  • Clemson University, May 10. "Beware of social media. It's almost...

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    Clemson University, May 10. "Beware of social media. It's almost as if it was invented to destroy gratitude. Everyone presents their most carefully edited lives on Twitter or Instagram. We all do it, right? Posting the best pictures of the most exciting places we go and the most interesting things we see." "But our social media lives aren't the real world. Real life is usually messier. And whether we mean to do it or not, the fake lives we live on social media can evoke a kind of envy that is a lack of gratitude, that is very damaging."

  • Participants work out during Wanderlust Stratton 2017, in Bondville, VT.

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    Participants work out during Wanderlust Stratton 2017, in Bondville, VT.

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It’s one thing when hotels open fitness centers, but quite another when fitness centers open hotels.

Luxe gym Equinox is opening a hotel in New York’s new Hudson Yards neighborhood next year in a move that embodies the evolution of wellness travel.

Most hotels have beefed up fitness options — you can book rooms with stationary bikes and rent workout clothes — but wellness travel has become much more than just keeping fit while on the road. Increasingly it’s become the point of the journey. And it’s bringing in big dollars.

Whether it’s foraging for your own medicinal herbs in Peru, cycling across the California coastline or spending several thousand dollars to workout alongside celeb trainer Tracy Anderson in Aspen, Colorado, wellness tourists made 691 million trips in 2015, according to the Global Wellness Institute.

In the past, wellness vacations straddled between starvation-style bootcamps or relaxing spa weekends to detox from an unhealthy lifestyle. But as self-care has evolved into a daily goal, it’s found an obvious match in travel. International and domestic wellness tourism brought in $563 billion in 2015, up from $489 billion in 2013, according to the Global Wellness Institute. Wellness travel is expected to grow to $808 billion by 2020.

The travel trend has mirrored the shift in retail. Gone are the days when shoppers head to a brick-and-mortar store to buy shoes that they could buy online. Instead, they’re being lured to stores by experiences.

Similarly, vacationers are less excited about lying on the beach with umbrella drinks. They too want a more immersive experience, like a yoga meditation retreat or surf camp, to connect with others and revitalize themselves, experts say.

“(Fitness has) gone from being an activity to now it’s a destination. It’s a purpose,” said Marshal Cohen, an analyst for the trend group NPD. “That’s a huge shift in spending. We’re not building wardrobes anymore. We’re building memories and the photos we’re clicking on our phones and posting on social media are the fruits of our labor.”

The Curtain Bluff resort in Antigua launched a new wellness concierge where guests can meet with the team at no extra charge to design their own fitness program including everything from zumba to pilates. Amanpuri’s resort in Phuket, Thailand, created four wellness immersions, where guests can focus on fitness, weight loss, digestive cleanses or mental awareness during a three- to 14-night vacation. Offerings include reiki, an alternative stress-reduction therapy, and life-coaching.

The trend is even spilling over to cruises, once stereotyped as weight-gaining vacations with bottomless buffets. Now, wellness can be the point of the cruise. Holland America Line, in partnership with O, The Oprah Magazine, has programs for meditation and healthy living.

Cruise passengers can also combine wellness with sightseeing in ports of call. Take a shore excursion on a Regents Seven Seas cruise, for example, and you might end up doing yoga on a coconut plantation in Ko Samui, Thailand, or outdoor tai chi in Marseille, France, with a view of the sea on one side and a palace on the other.

Participants work out during Wanderlust Stratton 2017, in Bondville, VT.
Participants work out during Wanderlust Stratton 2017, in Bondville, VT.

“We are seeing (cruise) lines of every ilk and size embrace healthy eating, fitness, all sorts of positive, new kinds of approaches to yoga and that kind of thing,” said CruiseCritic editor at large Carolyn Spencer Brown.

Savvy athleisure retailers are also seizing on it. Lululemon and Free People, a bohemian line popular with yogis, have both branched into wellness tourism. Free People’s retreats started a few years ago where participants can exercise and try journaling or tarot card workshop in spots like Glacier National Park.

Zen travelers are shelling out thousands to follow celebrity trainers to exotic destinations. Tracy Anderson, who is Gwyneth Paltrow’s business partner and the trainer who shapes Jennifer Lopez’s famous booty, hosts a handful of intimate weekends each year with less than 40 guests. Participants sweat alongside the fitness guru and get to know her during fireside-style chats in cities including Miami and Aspen. The weekends, priced at several thousand dollars, always sell out.

Shakira’s trainer Anna Kaiser leads a few trips a year, including recent stints in Ojai and Austin. And retreats for the hot workout du jour The Class by Taryn Toomey have all sold out, often within one hour. Toomey’s guests pay between $2,000 and $6,000 for her cathartic workouts with options for beachside massages and picturesque hikes in spots like Mustique and Mexico.

Roughly 100,000 wellness lovers attended uber-popular Wanderlust festivals across North America last year, partaking in everything from yoga and meditation to stand-up paddleboarding and spinning in spots like Oahu, Hawaii, and Squaw Valley, California.

Meghan Aftosmis loved Wanderlust’s Vermont event so much last year that she’s heading back in a few weeks.

The 39-year-old public relations exec from Delaware says she was eager to take yoga classes with one of the celebrity teachers. She also took a poetry session with a teacher she’d been following online.

“It comes down to having an experience and especially in the summer I look for new adventures,” she said.

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