Tel. +44 (0)1273 600030 (UK)

Bintan luxury resort and spa in Indonesia, Banyan Tree Bintan

COUNTRY:
Indonesia
LOCATION:
Bintan Island
PRICE:
From US $2,135 - US $2,450 plus tax per room per week based on 2 people sharing with breakfast, excluding flights. Price does not include Christmas period
Convert prices to approx. UK Sterling Convert prices to approx. US Dollars Convert prices to approx. Euros
MORE INFO:
Hotel bookable on a per night basis
We can book flights from the UK
Further price information
VOUCHERS:
Gift vouchers can be used with this holiday
Bintan luxury resort and spa in Indonesia, Banyan Tree Bintan

Bintan luxury resort and spa in Indonesia, Banyan Tree Bintan

How this holiday makes a difference

As a socially responsible business, Banyan Tree was founded with the core value of driving sustainable development. With the call to arms of embracing the environment and empowering the people, we seek to continue being an agent of social and economic development through responsible tourism. Our triple bottom line (economy, society and environment) help direct our sustainable development by inspiring associates, guests, and partners to take a wider consideration encompassing a long term view when making business decisions.

Environment:
Since its founding, Banyan Tree has sought to protect the natural environment. The importance of safeguarding the environment is central within our goal of sharing the original beauty of any location with guests and friends. This includes ensuring each resort fits into the local setting in a sensitive, meaningful manner.

Opened in 1995, Banyan Tree Bintan comprises 64 villas nestled underneath a canopy of trees in a coastal hillside forest along the northern coast of Bintan. Housed among rare Crinum Lilies and Malayan Ferns with the pristine beach a walk away, Banyan Tree Bintan bears testament to the idea that building with sensitivity to our environment is infinitely rewarding.

To build Banyan Tree Bintan, architects spent days on site, hand-pegging the location of every structure to avoid sacrificing trees. They modified the design of individual buildings so that the villas’ decks, pools and restaurants could be constructed around mature trees, leaving these towering ancients untouched. The architects designed the villas to be built on platforms and supported by columns to avoid cutting into the steep hill slopes thereby minimizing the risk of soil erosion, and left boulders in their place to preserve the dramatic terrain. In fact, one swimming pool was completely carved out of rock.

Banyan Tree and Angsana Bintan resorts provide their recyclables at a very minimal sum to a local village entrepreneur who then takes those items to the recycling centre, earning a significant profit. Any funds the resort collects through this are earnmarked to invest back into that very same community for various health, education, and capacity building efforts.

In 2007, Banyan Tree launched a group wide effort to monitor and systematically reduce the carbon emissions from its resorts. While much of this effort was more internally focused to fine tune and enhance the overall environmental management strategy, this effort has lead to a programme launching in 2008 to reduce energy and water consumption by each resort while enhancing waste management practices at each location. The overall goal is to reduce consumption and carbon emissions by 10% every year from 2006 levels between 2008 and 2010.

Formalised in the last part of 2007, the group environmental management strategy requires each resort to have environmental management officers specifically to monitor power consumption, water consumption and waste production and reduce consumption by at least 10% every year.

Banyan Tree increased its commitment to tackle the issues of climate change by launching Greening Communities in 2007. Banyan Tree’s group wide environmental initiative targeting climate change, Greening Communities challenges our resorts to plant 2,000 new trees per year for the next 10 years. While the initiative will offset a small amount of the globally produced atmospheric carbon dioxide, the main goal is to drive greater awareness of climate change among our communities, associates, and guests.

We started with 7 initial locations in Thailand (Phuket and Bangkok), Indonesia (Bintan), Maldives, Seychelles, China (Lijiang), and Australia (Cairns) in 2007 and will continue ramping up in the coming years. Resorts were tasked to plant non invasive species on protected locations such as schools or parks where any newly planted trees have a significantly high likelihood of long term longevity. At Bintan we planted a mixture of 2000 Sea Almond, Durian, Cashew, Rambutan, Mahoni, Mango, Eugenia Rolyana, and Angsana trees in local schools and villages between April and December 2007.

Community:
With the mandate of empowering people, Banyan Tree is quick to recognise the necessity of building community capacity, in every location that we are in. As an agent of social and economic development, we realise the potential of tourism to hire from the local workforce, giving training and marketable skills to raise the overall level of community prosperity.

Sustaining village development, preserving and promoting traditional cultures and crafts are part of Banyan Tree Gallery’s business ethos as a socially responsible tourism retailer. Committed to showcasing and supporting community-friendly and eco-friendly products and projects, we have cultivated a wide network of over 40 village producers and project partners around the region.

Check out similar holiday ideas

How we choose providers

Bintan luxury resort and spa in Indonesia, Banyan Tree Bintan

Day tour/Attraction Reviews

We invite every traveller who books a holiday via us to send in a review. Because we don't run the holidays they're completely independent and unedited... remember to read between the lines though, as two people on the same holiday can have different views!

Read our review policy

Convert currencies