Tuesday, September 11, 2012

2013 Porsche Boxster Convertible


2013 Porsche Boxster Convertible 

Porsche's fully redesigned 2013 Boxster S is a little like agave nectar.
Agave nectar, to some ever-optimistic and relentlessly healthy people, is a substitute for sugar. A substitute. A gap filler. An imitation. But a viable alternative? Maybe. Maybe not.
The problem for Porsche and its Boxster is similar.
Genuine Article?
Placing the Boxster's engine between its wheels makes a statement. To those who consider such things carefully, it's the proper placement for leveraging physics for maximum performance. The Boxster's power output and position in the Porsche lineup, however, say something altogether different. More like, entry-level.
That the entry-level Porsche offers the most physically effective packaging seems at first like a mildly disguised blessing for enthusiasts. Problem is, Boxsters with even a few options are still far from cheap. Case in point: our test car and its $84,120 price tag. Nothing entry-level about that.
In fact, that sum will get you a freshly redesigned 2012 Porsche 911 Carrera. And even a stripper Carrera comes with 35 more horses and the status of being Porsche's premier sports car.
In fairness, this six-speed, 315-horsepower Boxster S is wildly over-optioned. Base price for the 2013 Porsche Boxster S is $61,850 including destination. Ours adds the $5,265 Premium package with adaptive sport seats, the $3,860 Infotainment package with Bose surround sound, plus 13 other wallet-hammering add-ons. Conspicuously absent, however, are the two most potent performance-enhancing options: the $7,400 Porsche Carbon Ceramic Brake package and the $3,200 dual-clutch PDK transmission.
Let that sink in. Meanwhile, let's talk about how it drives, shall we?
Drive It Hard
Release the Boxster's clutch for the first time and you'll immediately notice that its tall gearing demands deliberate inputs. Stop on a hill and — even with the hill-hold feature — you'll need a pedal full of revs to pull away confidently. This isn't a problem so much as it is a characteristic that defines the way this car — and all Porsches, for that matter — rewards a confident driver.
And reward it does. Once under way, there are few driving experiences as fully engrossing as the Boxster's. Even the new 911 struggles to provide this level of confidence, and we're not the first to observe that a Boxster or Cayman with equal power might prove to be a better overall package.
Drive the Boxster deep into a corner, release its brake at the last second and it ruthlessly follows steering inputs. Part of this is Porsche Torque Vectoring (PTV) selectively activating the brake on the inside rear to make the car's rotation precisely follow steering inputs. It's a little piece of magic that Porsche has tuned brilliantly to work with the mechanical limited-slip differential included in the PTV package.
But the simple confidence of mass centralization also does a large part of the work. Midengine cars, we're convinced, are a love-it-or-hate-it affair. You can either tolerate their immediate responses or you can't. You either like the microscopic adjustments they're capable of or you don't. Your hands are either fast enough or they're not.
If your hands happen to be fast enough, your confidence high enough and your foot heavy enough, the Boxster will eat up a technical road quicker than any car sold today. The steering response is mind-warpingly rapid, even though the electric assist robs some of the feel. Power, while not fear-producing, is substantial enough to land a novice in trouble. And even the standard steel brakes don't fade.
This, in other words, is very much a tool for serious drivers.
Striking the Right Balance
Here are two things you also might want to know about the new 2013 Porsche Boxster S. First, its lateral acceleration, at a nice even 1.0g, is better than the lightweight, wholly uncompromised, utterly focused, bikini-top-wearing
Second, its 72.8-mph slalom speed happens to be better than the last all-new  we tested. Clearly, this car is far from entry-level.
It also stops in 103 feet from 60 mph — within 1 foot of both the above-mentioned cars. That's not only a short stop, but the standard steel brakes hold up well even after repeated runs. Hard to imagine that the optional carbon brakes would be much better.
Potent Performer
It might be down 35 hp to the base 911 Carrera, but the Boxster is also marginally lighter than the 911. At 3,066 pounds, this test car was also 34 pounds lighter than the last  we tested — a sure sign of progress in the right direction.
Another positive sign is this car's 4.9-second 0-60-mph time (4.7 seconds  as on a drag strip). The quarter-mile passes in 13.0 seconds at 108.7 mph — 0.4 second quicker than the last Boxster S we tested and only 0.3 second slower than the all-new seven-speed 2012 911 Carrera S, which has 400 hp.
In other words, there's not only dynamic progress in the Boxster line, there's also 911-threatening performance. But the beauty, in fact the true worth of this new Boxster, is its ability to be both potent performer and a legitimate daily driver.
Daily Ally
A large part of the new Boxster's appeal is its folding top which, using a console-mounted button, disappears behind the cockpit in less than 10 seconds even when the car is going as fast as 31 mph. It takes even less time to go back up which, by comparison, makes the old Boxster Spyder's do-it-yourself top look utterly laughable.
Porsche's Active Suspension Management (PASM) also goes a long way in yielding a more comfortable and more capable roadster. Freeway cruising and around-town driving are the realm of the default setting, while punching the dampers up to the Sport setting produces a car with truly world-class handling.
Also, there's more storage room in the Boxster than you'd expect. No, you won't stuff a golf bag in its trunk, but you also won't have any trouble loading it for a weekend trip and bringing home some additional goods. There's enough room in the front cargo area for a portly garden gnome and a bag of groceries, while the rear will easily accommodate one carry-on-size hard bag or multiple soft bags.
Also, the new start/stop feature works seamlessly, but in our hands it didn't produce impressive fuel economy. Over 791 miles of mixed driving we saw only 18.5 mpg.
Open-Top Claustrophobia
Calling the Boxster a roadster is true in the sense that its top can be lowered, but there's a distinct sense of enclosure when driving. Those with short torsos will find the top of the door sill above their shoulder level. This high waistline combined with a tall rear deck and roll bars surround both driver and passenger, unlike many drop tops.
BMW's Z4 allows a purer convertible experience, but isn't in the same league when it comes to rewarding the driver. The Boxster's rear-quarter visibility is poor with the top down and miserable with it up. The upshot of this design is that it's easy to enjoy open-top motoring when it's cold or, surprisingly, when it's miserably hot. We drove the Boxster with its top down, windows up and air-conditioning on in 100-degree heat. We were reasonably comfortable and positively dorky.
Fully appreciating the Boxster can't be done without a careful look around its cockpit. Porsche, to put it simply, does interiors right. All switchgear operates with the same degree of precision that's present in this car's steering and brake pedals. The center console and center stack follow the design of the 911, which follows the layout created for the . There are a large number of buttons, but they're grouped logically and most controls are intuitive.
The tachometer is centrally mounted in the instrument panel and flanked by the speedometer on the left and a configurable driver information center on the right, which can display the navigation map as well as vital fluid temperatures, a g-meter or shift indicator. The seats, while reasonably supportive, are very firm. We found ourselves squirming after only an hour behind the wheel, but given the variegated firmness and size of human backsides, we suspect your experience will vary.
The Final Tally
Porsche will have you believe that $84,120 is a perfectly acceptable price for a Boxster S, that its customers are willing and able to shovel out that much cash for this car. And perhaps they are, but that's a lot of money for an "entry-level" anything — even a Porsche.
What's more, you can option a Boxster up to $100,000 should you go absolutely insane with the option selection, but Porsche's à la carte approach does give buyers the rare opportunity to get only the features they want without adding those they don't.
Despite its cost and its nuances, we'll be the first to acknowledge that the new 2013 Porsche Boxster is a stunning automobile — both for the back-road banker and the average accountant. Its dynamic abilities are as remarkable as they should be, given its packaging. And despite being the starter Porsche, it's got enough grunt to satisfy all but the most demanding power brokers.

2013 Bentley Continental GT Coupe


2013 Bentley Continental GT Coupe

It was bound to happen sooner or later. I've been wasting plankton and wearing top hats for about 30 spins around the sun now, but it wasn't until piloting the 2013 Bentley Continental GT V8 down Santa Monica Boulevard that I was finally called a fat cat.
The epithet, hurled from behind the cowering mustache of a fixie-riding hipster weaving through the stopped traffic with a carelessness we'd avoid on a vehicle without brakes, stung.
This is, after all, the V8 version of the Continental GT, a car that gives up 2 liters, four cylinders and 67 horsepower to the W12 that's long been the darling of the 1 percent. The V8 Continental is lighter, cheaper and returns 40 percent better fuel economy.
Fat cat? In the meager, 18-mpg combined, $176,725 V8? The injustice couldn't stand. When the light went green, the pedal went down; hipster-cyclist was in for the lecturing of his life.
Addition by Subtraction
It's here, at wide-open throttle, that the 2013 Bentley Continental GT V8 and its 500-horsepower, twin-turbo, 4.0-liter separates itself from the 6.0-liter W12 living under the hood of every other Continental on the road today. Crack the throttle open and the GT V8 responds with a low, burbling growl and a tremendous leap forward. That said, nobody will confuse this Audi-derived (it makes 512 hp in the  V8 for any of the free-revving, racecar-derived engines used in so many of the Continental's competitors.
Thankfully, what the V8 lacks in character, the eight-speed ZF-built automatic makes up for in performance. In Sport mode, a quick kick of the accelerator sends the transmission into full-on attack mode, downshifting up to five gears with a wicked quickness. From there, upshifts are dual-clutch fast, but with that pleasant kick and shove that accompanies a torque-converted shift. Track testing only confirmed what our butts have been telling us for days: despite a 67-hp deficit, the 500-hp V8 is faster than the W12.
Getting the 5,107-pound coupe out of the hole couldn't be easier. With the transmission in Sport mode, you simply power brake it to get the engine spinning and then let it fly. Sixty mph comes up in 4.2 seconds (4.0 seconds with 1 foot of rollout  en route to a quarter-mile time of 12.4 seconds at 113.2 mph.
The last Continental we tested, a 2012 W12 weighing only 59 pounds more, took 4.7 seconds to hit 60 (4.4 with rollout) and lugged itself across the quarter-mile line in 12.9 seconds at 109.8 mph.
Mystery Math
Open the hood of a 2013 Bentley Continental GT and the first thing anyone with a passing knowledge of vehicle dynamics will notice is that the engine is nearly entirely ahead of the front axle line. And the first thing anyone with a passing knowledge of vehicle dynamics will feel about that is disappointment. With fewer cylinders and less weight up front, however, this new V8 GT teased us with potential never to be fully realized.
Like the W12, the nose-heavy V8 Continental bends to the whim of momentum and defaults to understeer. Drive it too hard and you'll soon find yourself piloting the world's most well-appointed lawn dart. Making matters worse, our car was fitted with the Mulliner Driving Specification Package. This $12,230 option adds goofy 21-by-9.5-inch rims with 275/35ZR21 Pirelli P Zero tires that fill out the wheel wells, but offer all of the compliance of steel-soled shoes. The package also includes alloy sport pedals and an insanely heavy, jeweled fuel filler cap.
All of the excitement of the acceleration testing was scrubbed off in the slalom and skid pad where we managed a best speed of 66.4 mph — 1.1 mph slower than the heavier, less-well-balanced W12 — and circled the pad at 0.84g. It redeemed itself slightly in the braking tests where it turned in a short, precise stop of just 111 feet, although with its optional carbon-ceramic rotors and 8-piston front calipers we expected slightly better numbers there, too.
Thanks to full-time all-wheel drive, automatic transmissions, sticky tires and preposterous weights, Continentals have always been easy to drive up to their limits. The V8 is no different in that regard, but with lower limits and higher expectations, we left the handling portion of our testing wanting more.
Priorities Intact
Try as we might, the 2013 Bentley Continental GT can't be explained or rationalized on paper or with any battery of testing. Trying to do such things would force us to rationalize how a less powerful, lighter car could be faster in a straight line, but handle worse. Or to acknowledge that the shifter gate is just a duded-up version of the one found in the  and that the infotainment system would be laughed out of any Audi dealer. And then we'd have to justify that after a few hundred miles of truly mixed driving, both casual and spirited, we averaged only 14.4 mpg.
Things only get worse if you try to rationalize the window sticker: $13,600 for carbon-ceramic brakes; $3,810 for adaptive cruise control, $3,675 for an extended center console that further delineates the rear seats, eliminating one of the few visual differences on the interior between the 8 and the 12; $1,865 for the contrasting stitching; $640 for a space saver spare; $470 for a heated steering wheel plus $180 for more contrast stitching on said wheel. Oh, and don't forget that $12,230 Muliner Driving Specification package we mentioned earlier.
Do the math that no Continental GT buyer will have to do to make this decision and you're looking at a base model car loaded up to $214,025.
Fat Cats Rejoice 
None of that matters when you're sitting in the amazingly well-appointed, hand-stitched interior with leather seats so supple you'd swear the cow was still wearing it. The engine is devilishly smooth and the Continental deceptively fast and even with the performance-robbing 21-inch wheels, the GT V8 rides like a hovercraft over the most abused pavement.
Even the ultra-light steering seems designed from the get-go to coddle the driver and to isolate rather than inform. At a 70-mph sustained cruise, the Continental registered just 61.6 decibels inside the cabin; at 120 mph our meter shot up to all of 62.5 dBs. We've measured cars that were louder at idle.
The 2013 Bentley Continental GT V8 may be the cheapest car in the Bentley lineup, but nobody will notice. Not your accountant. Not the guy at the gas station and certainly not bike-riding hipsters.

Monday, September 10, 2012

New Plans Announced for Puerto Rico's New Hyatt Place



Hyatt-Place-Manati.jpg
Hyatt Place Manati
Hyatt recently announced plans to have Hyatt Place Manatí open in early 2014, representing the company's second Hyatt-branded select service hotel in Puerto Rico. The new hotel, currently under construction, will join Hyatt Place Bayamón Hotel & El Tropical Casino when it opens.

Hyatt Place Manatí will have 104 guest rooms in a five-story building, with an adjoining 11,500 square foot casino, and a free-standing casual dining restaurant.

According to Hyatt Hotels Corporation, a Hyatt affiliate entered into the latest Hyatt Place hotel agreement with Island Hospitality Partners, LLC, a joint venture of PRISA Group and McConnell Valdes Consulting.  Island Hospitality is also the owner of Hyatt Place Bayamón Hotel & El Tropical Casino, which is currently under construction and is expected to open in 2014.

"We are glad to work with Island Hospitality on a second Hyatt Place hotel project in Puerto Rico," said Pat McCudden, senior vice president, real estate and development Hyatt Hotels & Resorts. "We believe that the Hyatt Place brand and the location of the hotel in Manatí will have strong appeal to business and leisure travelers visiting the region."

The municipality of Manatí, located less than 40 miles west of San Juan, is headquarters to a host of multinational corporations and pharmaceutical companies, as well as the Manatí Medical Center and Doctors' Center Manatí, two of Puerto Rico's most prestigious hospitals.

"We believe in the Hyatt Place brand and think the hotels will have strong appeal in both Bayamon and Manatí," said Federico Stubbe, Jr., president of PRISA Group. "Hyatt Place Manatí & Casino and Hyatt Place Bayamón & El Tropical Casino will bring Hyatt's world-class hospitality to Puerto Rico."

Currently, there are more than 165 Hyatt Place hotels in operation in the United States, with more than 35 Hyatt Place hotels under development throughout the U.S., Europe, the Caribbean, China, Latin America, Southwest Asia, and the Middle East. The first two Hyatt Place hotels outside the United States are expected to open later this fall: Hyatt Place San Jose Pinares in San Jose, Costa Rica and Hyatt Place Hampi in Hampi, India.

Island Hospitality Partners is a joint venture of PRISA Group and McConnell Valdes Consulting.  PRISA and McVC have combined their expertise and resources in the planning, development, construction and operation of hospitality, residential and mixed used projects to form Island Hospitality Partners, LLC, creating a strong team capable of executing all necessary tasks for the successful development projects from conception to operation.

PRISA Group is a family-owned developer and builder of green residential communities and resort hospitality projects in Puerto Rico and Florida with over 6,000 units in planning and construction, representing a value of over $3 billion.  The firm has delivered over 3,000 units in the last 20 years and is currently developing projects in Dorado, Vega Alta, Gurabo, San Lorenzo, and Humacao, Puerto Rico, as well as in Tampa, Fla.

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Reliance Industries Developing 4 Million Feet of Retail Projects in India


Mumbai-India-2.jpg Already the largest private sector conglomerate in India, Reliance Industries Ltd. (RIL) is developing four million square feet of retail space in North India, plans a 720,000-square-foot, $55 million commercial complex at Alaknanda, is building a mall in South Delhi and has 20 other sites lined up for additional shopping centers in Delhi.

RIL is the flagship company of the Reliance Group, India's largest private sector enterprise with businesses in the energy and materials value chain. Reliance Group's annual revenues are over $66 billion, according to the company. Reliance Industries Ltd. is a Fortune Global 500 company.

Although RIL's core business is petrochemical, refining and oil and gas, the company says it wants to become one of the largest real estate organizations in India as well. Its subsidiary companies cater to textile, retail business, special economic zone (SEZ Development) and telecom/broadband segments.

According to The Ground Report of India, RIL plans to make its real estate business complimentary to its retail segment that will enable it to gain ground in both arenas.

"The company's foray into the real estate will further enable it to tap a new market and enable it to support its retail business," states The Ground Report.

According to a company official, RIL will use the land Mukesh Ambani won in a Delhi Development Authority bid for around Rs.400 crore in 2007 to construct its five-story Alaknanda complex. This project is tentatively scheduled for completion by 2014.

 It will use two-fifths of the retailing space to house brands owned by Reliance Retail (a subsidiary arm of RIL). The complex will have ground level space and three basement levels, along with parking space for more than 1000 cars and 700 two-wheelers.

While it is waiting for a go-ahead from the Delhi Pollution Control Committee, RIL says it already has the green light from the Union environment and forest ministry for this project.

According to The Ground Report of India, RIL was on a buying spree several years ago when it procured shopping complexes and mall sites in and around 150 cities in India.

 Its real estate projects include Reliance Corporate Park in Navi Mumbai that serves also as a convention center and a world-class hospital in Mumbai.