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Excellence is rare enough.
Excellence that is also original and forward thinking is very rare. Thanks to
the vision and persistence of one man and the gifted designers, engineers,
biologists, hoteliers and business people he inspired, Mayakoba falls into the
very rare category.
Mayakoba began with a few unlikely
twists of fate. OHL acquired its first piece of land on the Riviera Maya in the
late 1980s. At the time, OHL was purely a construction company, and the
coastline south of Cancun was undeveloped.
During the 90s, OHL began diversifying its operations just as the sleepy fishing
village of Playa del Carmen and the area around it came alive as a tourist
destination. Still, OHL was not interested in developing their land. In 1995,
they ordered Salvador Linares, their General Manager, New Developments, “Go to
the site, and find a buyer.” To his surprise, Linares took one look at the blue of the sky
and the sea and the green depths of the mangrove forest, and fell in love.
“I can make something sensational and singular here,” he insisted to OHL’s
president. He must have been persuasive, because the president gave him one year
and one-and-a-half million dollars to demonstrate what that might
be.
What could be done with 240 square
hectares of mangrove forest and jungle that had a relatively short coastline of
1.6 kilometers? Because he admired his resorts and hotels on the Pacific coast,
Linares hired
the Mexican architect Mario Lazo to design the Master Plan of the site. With
about a dozen members, including engineers, architects, biologists, hydrologists
and tourism marketing experts, the design team camped out on the land for two
weeks, walking, getting acquainted with the flora and fauna, thinking of
possibilities. To complicate things further, the Mexican government
imposed an increasingly heavy list
of restrictions when it came to mangrove
preservation.
The old way, as seen at Cancun, would have been to build a wall of 22-storey
hotels on the beach. That was impossible, both because of government controls
and the team’s “green” design philosophy: “Let the site be what it wants. Nature
knows, and you can’t negotiate with that.” Instead of struggling with Nature,
they redefined the space as well as the definition of a Caribbean resort. Rather than a thin strip of intensive
development on the beach, they would introduce a number of hotel lots of 10 to
15 hectares each throughout the site. They would open up the jungle to let the
Caribbean breeze waft through the land, and
thread through it a golf course that would exploit the various landscapes of
forest, jungle and beach. Each hotel’s connection to the sea would be through a
beach club. It was a brilliant solution that used the whole space rather than a
tiny fraction, enlivened and animated the usually “dead” zone behind the beach,
and preserved the dunes, the mangroves and the coral reefs for future
generations.
The designers’ redefinition of the
resort raised another problem. How would visitors make their way through this
rich and constantly changing landscape? The answer, again, came from Nature. The
Yucatan has no
surface rivers, but a vast network of pure, underground water lies close to its
limestone surface. Using that water and sculpting a series of lagoons and canals
through the site would enable visitors to travel from golf course to spa to
hotel to beach via a fleet of small electric boats, or lanchas. “Liberating” the
Yucatan’s
waters and bringing them to the surface was an original idea that would give
visitors an even fuller experience of Nature. As well, for visitors who want to
walk, bicycle or drive golf carts, there would be quiet, narrow trails that
sacrificed a minimum of trees.
The ideas were aggressive and
revolutionary, but Linares immediately recognized the sense behind
them. At the year deadline, the Master Plan was presented and won the
Authorities approval four days after. Not everyone had the imagination to
understand his vision, and Linares loves to tell
the story of the potential backers who told him he was “a dreamer” to build a
system of waterways for a Caribbean resort that
wasn’t completely on the beach. One told him, “When you’re finished building
Disneyland, call
me!”
The design team had crafted a
resort that offered much more diversity than usual, and Linares added to that with
his novel idea of a “community of luxury brands” – the fact that six subtly
different, high-end hotels share the space and multiply the visitor’s options.
At Mayakoba, it’s possible to select treatments from six spas, to bar-hop before
choosing from more than a dozen dinner possibilities, to compare beach
clubs.These days, with Mayakoba’s opening
not far in the future, the dreamers and visionaries who saw its unusual
potential are more than content. Everyone is justifiably proud of the way
Mayakoba respects and guards its dunes, jungle and mangroves. Because they
listened to Nature, they have made a rare and diverse experience for visitors.
Linares, who
fell in love with the space many years ago and never budged from his conviction
that it could be something “sensational and singular,” has proved his
point.
The Fairmont Hotel opened last year
and The Suites at Rosewood Mayakoba will open late this year. El Camaelon, the
Greg Norman championship designed 18 hole golf course was host to Mexico’s first
ever PGA and is on the tour for the next 4 years.
Melissa Correa is a Mayakoba
aficionado and is currently representing the Real Estate offerings at Rosewood
Mayakoba.
For more information send an email
to
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or call our office in Mexico
52 984 873 2203
Toll Free from the US
1-866-519-8769
Mayakoba Presentation
Map of Mayakoba
www.ownrosewoodmayakoba.com
Or visit our Discovery Center, Calle Corazon and 5th
Avenue upstairs above Diamond’s International.
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