The Indonesian island is seeing a surge in beach club developments, but can it maintain its momentum to become the Ibiza of South-east Asia?
In the year 2000, a triumvirate of investors from Australia, Indonesia, and the UK opened Ku De Ta, a Mediterranean-style beach club, in Seminyak, then a cluster of rice paddies and hamlets on Bali’s west coast.
“Back in those days, all the action was in Kuta in the south, and whenever someone said let’s go to Ku De Ta, people would say, ‘That’s miles away, you have to go down dirt roads and through rice fields’,” says operations manager Justin Smyth. “But the owners’ vision of a little slice of heaven at the end of the rainbow struck a chord with the Euro-centric crowd who wanted to get away from the craziness of Kuta.”
Fast forward 19 years. Rapid urbanization in Bali has seen the rice fields of Seminyak replaced with a slew of holiday villas, restaurants, boutiques, and hotels. Yet Ku De Ta remains a crowd favorite in Bali, especially at dusk when the island’s famous bloodred sunsets light up the sky in a panoramic fresco of colors.
But Ku De Ta is no longer the only place that tourists in Bali can visit to enjoy upmarket beach food in the comfort of a daybed, or to sip a tropical cocktail at the edge of an oceanfront pool. From Tropicola, a new beach and pool club where everything from the canary yellow parasols to the tutti frutti cocktails hark back to Miami Beach in the ’80s, to Sundara, a Hemingwayesque bar and restaurant with a 57m-long beachfront infinity pool at the Four Seasons Jimbaran Bay, and an upcoming chapter of Ibiza’s famous Cafe Del Mar franchise that will rent out VIP cabanas for $10,000, there are now 31 beach clubs in operation or under construction in Bali – nearly twice as many as two years ago.
この記事は The PEAK Singapore の May 2019 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です ? サインイン
この記事は The PEAK Singapore の May 2019 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です? サインイン
From Screen to Store
Heini Zachariassen, founder of global wine rating app Vivino on how its first retail store in the world brings data-driven curation to wine lovers.
In the Dining Spotlight
Renowned Dutch chef Sergio Herman, whose name has been associated with the Michelin Guide in the Netherlands and Belgium, is expanding his Asian footprint with his Singapore outpost, Le Pristine in Grand Hyatt Singapore.
All for One
How would you navigate a corner if you were hearing-impaired or enjoy school if you were on the spectrum? These architects posit that inclusive design must be part of mainstream standards to improve overall living environments.
Pods and Swirling Staircases
This quirky and playful home designed by Park Associates is shaped after its owners, a young family with three children.
Stories Behind the Kebava
Sufiyanto A. S., one half of the duo behind the Kebaya.Societe Instagram account, has had enough of seeing Malay identity erased and forgotten.
Good to Go
Driving classic Jaguars on the legendary Goodwood Motor Circuit is all the magic a motorhead needs.
Seasons of the Snake
Japanese architect Tadao Ando once again works his magic for Bvlgari, with the Serpenti Tubogas as an artistic canvas for nature's cyclical transformation.
Phoenix Rising
One gutsy retired pharmaceutical executive rescued two-century-old Swiss watchmaker Bovet, and today, its presence is stronger than ever in Southeast Asia.
Con Amore, Leggiero, Presto!
Chan Weitian injects new insights into Presto Drycleaners, blending operational innovation with time-honoured values.
Preserving Paradise
Gaya Island Resort takes eco-tourism beyond the expected, blending conservation efforts with authentic luxury.