Hospitality reigns at resort
- Share via
Alicia Robinson
Maybe it’s the cookies that guests find on their pillows.
Just a year after opening to the public, the Balboa Bay Club and
Resort is being honored with one of the travel industry’s top awards
for its hospitality.
Balboa Bay Club President Henry Schielein, who has been with the
club for 10 years, will accept the International Star Diamond Award
today from the American Academy of Hospitality Sciences. Academy
President Joseph Cinque is flying in from New York City to present
the award at the Balboa Bay Club.
“We’re trying very hard to have a quality establishment with
superior service,” Schielein said. “It’s very rewarding to see that
somebody recognizes the quality of service and everything that goes
with it that we try to provide.”
The club began as a private facility in 1948, and the 160-room
public resort opened in May 2003.
The award recognizes the resort for its high level of hospitality
and the fine food at the First Cabin restaurant, which serves
California cuisine with continental touches.
“Mr. Cinque feels that this establishment represents excellence in
hospitality, gastronomy, ambience and service, and he feels very
strongly about the leadership that Henry provides to the
establishment,” said Karen Dixon of the American Academy of
Hospitality Sciences.
The Balboa Bay Club’s award is one of 14 Star Diamond Awards to be
given in the greater Los Angeles area this year and one of only two
that Cinque will present in person, Dixon said.
Hotels and resorts must be five-star establishments to be
considered, but it’s the little things that earn the academy’s award.
Among its various amenities, the Balboa Bay Club turns down guests’
beds every night and serves them fresh-baked cookies. It offers
cruises from its dock, and it has a well-appointed spa for guests to
use.
The most important thing in creating a top-quality experience for
guests, Schielein said, is to have is a good team of employees. Some
of the club’s staff members have worked there for 50 years, he said.
After starting as a bus boy in his native Germany, Schielein rose
through the hospitality ranks, eventually becoming general manager at
the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Laguna Niguel. He left for a brief stint at
a Hawaiian resort and then returned to take the job at the Balboa Bay
Club.
“I’ve been in this business a long time, and my goals have always
been the same -- to operate a first-class hotel with great food and
beverages, great accommodations and great services, where people can
enjoy themselves,” Schielein said. “That’s what hospitality is all
about.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.