Showing posts with label reopens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reopens. Show all posts

Saturday, January 3, 2015

Bob Marley Museum reopens


File – Bob Marley

The Bob Marley Group of Companies has announce that the reopening of the Bob Marley Museum, located at 56 Hope Road, St Andrew, will be on December 29, 2014.

After standing strong for 33 years, the legendary tourist attraction and home of reggae legend the Honorable Robert Nesta Marley, OM, was temporarily closed to facilitate a renovation project that started on October 16, 2014.

Over the years, the museum has seen thousands of visitors from all over the world, including government officials, dignitaries, celebrities and world figures who have all attested to the tour’s provision of an almost front-seat experience into the life of the world’s greatest reggae artiste.

The Bob Marley Museum is confident that with the renovations and enhancements added to the tour, patrons who visit the premises after December 29, will have a new experience.

“We are very happy to re-open the gates to the Bob Marley Museum, after the renovation project that allowed for an enhanced tour experience. This will no doubt provide even more opportunities for insight into the life of the Honorable Robert Nesta Marley and an all-new excursion for our visitors,” stated tour and operations manager at the museum, Anthony Henry.

same hours

Henry also added that the museum’s operational hours will remain the same: Mondays to Saturdays from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. He also reminded that the final tours for 2014 at both Bob Marley Museum and Tuff Gong International will begin at noon and that both properties will be closed to tours on January 1, 2015.

The operators of the museum have issued a thank you to the public for the patience extended through the renovation period and also for partaking of the Making of the Music Tour at Tuff Gong International that continues Mondays to Saturdays. They are also encouraging visitors to ask about their combo tour package for both properties.


View the original article here



Bob Marley Museum reopens

Bob Marley Museum reopens


File – Bob Marley

The Bob Marley Group of Companies has announce that the reopening of the Bob Marley Museum, located at 56 Hope Road, St Andrew, will be on December 29, 2014.

After standing strong for 33 years, the legendary tourist attraction and home of reggae legend the Honorable Robert Nesta Marley, OM, was temporarily closed to facilitate a renovation project that started on October 16, 2014.

Over the years, the museum has seen thousands of visitors from all over the world, including government officials, dignitaries, celebrities and world figures who have all attested to the tour’s provision of an almost front-seat experience into the life of the world’s greatest reggae artiste.

The Bob Marley Museum is confident that with the renovations and enhancements added to the tour, patrons who visit the premises after December 29, will have a new experience.

“We are very happy to re-open the gates to the Bob Marley Museum, after the renovation project that allowed for an enhanced tour experience. This will no doubt provide even more opportunities for insight into the life of the Honorable Robert Nesta Marley and an all-new excursion for our visitors,” stated tour and operations manager at the museum, Anthony Henry.

same hours

Henry also added that the museum’s operational hours will remain the same: Mondays to Saturdays from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. He also reminded that the final tours for 2014 at both Bob Marley Museum and Tuff Gong International will begin at noon and that both properties will be closed to tours on January 1, 2015.

The operators of the museum have issued a thank you to the public for the patience extended through the renovation period and also for partaking of the Making of the Music Tour at Tuff Gong International that continues Mondays to Saturdays. They are also encouraging visitors to ask about their combo tour package for both properties.


View the original article here



Bob Marley Museum reopens

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Ochi’s Little Pub reopens

BY STEVEN JACKSON Business reporter jacksons@jamaicaobserver.com

Wednesday, September 24, 2014    

RESILIENT St Ann businessman Keith Foote recently reopened The Little Pub in Ocho Rios which suffered from the 1990s financial sector meltdown and a fire in 2002.

Foote is mum on the size of the investment. However, the reopening of the pub in a new venue — Island Village complex in Ocho Rios — has revived his dream of operating his own business and healed the scars of the Financial Sector Adjustment Company (Finsac) era.

The famous bar and restaurant, which opened last month, will seek to attract locals and cruise ship passengers.

“We have been searching for a suitable venue and one was not found until recently,” said Keith Foote’s relative, Brett Foote, who is the marketing manager.

After the fire, the Little Pub was closed and a plaza was built in its place on Main Street. Keith Foote continues to own the pub, but it is being managed by the Foote family.

“The Little Pub is taken over by the new generation of the Foote family. So it aims to be better than before but not taking away from the history,” said Brett Foote about the modern yet ‘reggae-roots’ motif.

The pub occupies two contiguous shops in Island Village, which stretches from the central stage to the pond. It’s a space that can accommodate 1,000 persons, Foote estimated.

“We don’t just focus on the tourists only. We plan to hold parties, weddings, corporate receptions and [cater] to general passersbys in Ocho Rios,” he said.

The Little Pub will also cater to the entire family rather than adults only, thus avoiding direct competition with Margaritaville, which also sits in the Island Village complex.

“Margaritaville doesn’t have Karaoke night or jazz and blues or Sunday brunches. Margaritaville is seen as a club, but the Little Pub is broader. The teenagers can come, the mothers and fathers can come,” he said.

Over the past 12 years Keith Foote managed the shops at the Little Pub Plaza. But it was always “a passion” of his to reopen a bar. In 2011, Keith Foote told the Commission of Enquiry into the financial sector meltdown that he borrowed $5 million from National Commercial Bank to effect repairs to Little Pub after Hurricane Gilbert damaged the property extensively in 1988.

He indicated that spiralling interest rates in the 1990s pushed that $5-million loan to $33 million, eventually leading to the loss of his home in 2002.

Foote was one of many aggrieved entreprenVeurs who testified at the enquiry. In June 2002, an earlymorning fire destroyed the Little Pub, and spread to an adjoining 20-bedroom hotel and the studios and offices of Reggae Sun Television.

At the time, Keith Foote reportedly broke down in tears as the fire coincided with news of the violent death of his son in New York, USA on the same weekend.

Foote, now in his mid-60s, operated the business for more than three decades, with the venue earning a sterling reputation for staging some of Ocho Rios’ most glittering and entertaining cabaret shows.


View the original article here



Ochi’s Little
Pub reopens