Steve Case’s Top Travel Bets: Costa Rica, Luxury Rentals, and Real Communities
Photo Credit: Steve Case at Punta Cacique during construction Revolution Places
Skift Take
AOL co-founder Steve Case says his new Waldorf Astoria resort reflects more than just a real estate play. His hope is that the future of high-end tourism lies in community connections rather than resorts that are literally walled gardens.
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Be part of the most powerful room in global travel on Sept. 16-18 in New York City.Steve Case's latest hospitality project debuted in April on a Costa Rican peninsula that his investment firm has owned for nearly two decades. The Waldorf Astoria Costa Rica at Punta Cacique represents more than just another luxury resort.
The AOL co-founder purchased the 600-acre Punta Cacique in 2006 through Revolution Places, his hospitality investment arm. After weathering the 2008 financial crisis and years of planning, Case has opened a resort that he hopes encourages guests to venture beyond its borders into local Costa Rican communities.
It's part of Case's broader vision for travel as the executive chairman of Exclusive Resorts and the owner of several hotels worldwide. "When I first visited Costa Rica, which is over 20 years ago, it kind of felt like Hawaii when I was growing up 50 or 60 years ago," Case said. "It was just pivoting from farming to tourism."
Hear Steve Case, head of Revolution Places and chairman of Exclusive Resorts, speak on