Cottages opening at Dunes
Marisa O’Neil
New beachfront cottages at the Newport Dunes Waterfront Resort are
luring more visitors to its sandy shores along the Back Bay.
After last year’s installation of 12 cottages at the resort proved
successful, management decided to double the number available,
general manager Andrew Theodorou said. Another dozen of the studio
and one-bedroom cottages have been gradually opening since May, he
said.
The cottages augment the resort’s upscale recreational vehicle
accommodations.
“Ideally, the cottages are for family and friends of our RV guests
who don’t have an RV but want to stay here,” Theodorou said.
Each unit is about 400 square feet an can accommodate up to 10 or
12 people, he said.
Studio cottages have a small kitchen and bathroom. The one-bedroom
units, some with lofts, have a stove, microwave and fully-equipped
kitchen, he said.
Most are on the bank of the still-water lagoon.
High-end hotels in Newport Beach and weekly rentals on the Balboa
Peninsula are still popular with visitors, said Marta Hayden,
executive director for the Newport Beach Conference and Visitors’
Bureau. But options like the Dunes’ cottages draw a different breed
of traveler.
“This is that niche that was maybe going to the national parks,”
she said. “But instead of a tree environment, they get the beach
environment.”
With the economy improving, the city is seeing more visitors,
particularly international visitors, she said. Tourists from Germany,
England and Scandinavian countries like to rent recreational vehicles
or stay in more rustic surroundings, Theodorou said.
He expects the cottages, priced from $85 to $295 a night, to also
be popular for families, reunions, youth groups, wedding
accommodations and children’s parties.
“The response has been phenomenal,” he said. “We expect a very
high occupancy rate.”
Defend the Bay Founding Director Bob Caustin said he would like to
see more affordable access to the public beach. The more people who
see the bay and are aware of its ecosystem, he said, the better.
“Anything to get the property available to the public to come down
and enjoy the bay, I support,” he said. “Opening it to people who
don’t own RVs is a nice twist for a little beach that just happens to
be a public beach.”
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