Two Innkeepers Give First-hand Accounts of What Visitors Can
Expect as the City Gears-up for post-Ka
BnBFinder.com recently spoke with two Bed and Breakfast owners
in New Orleans about their experiences and impressions of their
city in the aftermath of September's hurricane disaster. Hopes
are high and nearly all city-center businesses are up and
running. In fact, all but two of the 15 New Orleans Bed and
Breakfast Inns listed on BnBFinder.com are open for business.
According to Innkeeper Al Hyman, the city's bittersweet Jazz
Funeral tradition epitomizes local sentiment best of all. * * *
Guy Fournier and his wife Nancy, only recently purchased and
took-over operations at the Sully Mansion in the Garden district
near to St. Charles Avenue, the French Quarter and Magazine
Street. They are long-time New Orleans enthusiasts, deeply
involved in the city's fascinating particularities from Creole
food to jazz. They had already been considering buying a Bed and
Breakfast in New Orleans as their semi-retirement business for
several years when Katrina hit. They had narrowed their search
down to three existing licensed Inns and just after the
hurricane; their estate agent urged them to consider purchasing
Sully Mansion. After many sleepless nights in deliberation, the
couple decided to invest in the city they love and become an
active part of the reconstruction process. Now, just a month
into full operation, they couldn't be happier with their
decision.
Guy immediately dispelled all the concerns about visiting New
Orleans. Downtown businesses, restaurants and shops are in full
operation. The airport and roads are open. Gas and groceries are
plentiful. There is plenty of fresh water, the electricity is
on, and there are no foul odors or epidemic illnesses
whatsoever. So long as you stay in the oldest, well-known
tourist areas of the city, you would not even be aware that a
disaster of the magnitude of Katrina struck less than six months
ago. Some areas such as boutique-and-gallery-lined Magazine
Street are more lively and pristine than ever. The Sully Mansion
is already fully booked for Mardi Gras (end of February) and
looks forward to receiving first-time visitors and long-time New
Orleans lovers for all occasions for years and years to come.
Al Hyman of Hotel St. Pierre in the French Quarter put the
present situation in a poignant, historical context. The oldest
parts of the city (founded in 1718 by French settlers) were
built on the natural levees along the banks of the Mississippi.
Because they are elevated the damage was of the 3 or 4 grade
hurricane variety, but nothing close to the decimation by the
floods in the outlying suburbs. The general look of these
renowned neighborhoods is about the same as pre-Katrina except
for a few restaurants yet to open, and parts of the streetcar
route along St. Charles Avenue still closed for wire and road
repairs. At last count there were about 150,000 of the original
500,000 residents back in the crescent shaped downtown, which
includes the Central Business District, French Quarter, Uptown
and Garden District. Al likened the more intimate feeling to
that of the mid 1800's when the population was about the same as
it is today. He added that restaurants, bars and coffee houses
are not only open but truly bustling with business. Reservations
are required further in advance than before and lines in caf