Posts Tagged ‘40’

From India to Aspen

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

By Charles Agar of the Aspen Times

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Three local women with spinal injuries are back from stem cell treatment in India and say they’re much improved.

Amanda Boxtel, Leah Roland and Kasie Burtard turned to valley residents in 2007 for the thousands of dollars needed for a treatment banned in the United States, and all three women said the controversial embryonic stem cell injections paid dividends.

They are holding an event Tuesday at the Aspen Club to say thank-you to the community and also raise more funds for ongoing treatment overseas.

The cost of an initial two-month treatment at the 20-room private clinic in New Delhi is about $40,000.

For Boxtel, who was paralyzed from the waist down in a ski accident almost 16 years ago, it was her third trip for a treatment by Dr. Geeta Shroff, who uses a groundbreaking embryonic stem cell therapy to treat people with incurable diseases, or people with injuries deemed irreversible.

Boxtel experienced surprising results from initial treatments a year ago, she said, including use of muscles long-dormant and regained bladder control.

Subsequent one-month visits to India over the past year have meant more subtle improvements, she said.

“It’s going to be a really long road for me,” Boxtel said.

Reversing some 16 years of muscle atrophy won’t be easy, she said, and she’s not sure she’ll be able to walk as a result of the treatment.

But Boxtel is grateful that she has improved muscle control, can now walk on her knees and can wiggle her toes.

And muscle aches from physical therapy are signs of healing, she said.

Burtard, who made her first trip to India this year and stayed two months, can now move her quadriceps muscles, can stand with the help of leg braces and took her first step without them during her time in India.

Since the treatment, Roland, who walks with a cane, is off medication, and can stand straight with her knees locked and has improved use of one hand affected by her injury.

The women said the treatment program in India was rigorous, with morning and afternoon physical therapy sessions as well “gait training.”

“You have to work hard and dig deep to make ‘em fire,” Roland said of atrophied muscles.

But it’s working, she added.

“We are improving,” Roland said.

But it wasn’t all about physical therapy and hospital rooms.

Burtard rode an elephant and went to the Taj Mahal, and Roland said she “went native,” shopping in markets and practicing yoga and meditation with locals.

All three said that time them made them grateful for clean air and drinking water in Aspen.

Doctors in the U.S. are “curious” about the results of stem cell therapy, Boxtel said, but don’t condone the treatment, which raises ethical issues for many and won’t pass a “conservative” Food and Drug Administration,.

Doctors at the Craig Hospital, however, are updating “unreliable and archaic” testing for spinal injury patients, Boxtel said, and in the future will be able to better measure improvements.

The fundraiser will be at the Aspen Club on Tuesday from 5 to 8 p.m. and is a chance to eat, drink, listen to live music and talk with the three women about their experience overseas.

“Come check out our new bodies,” Roland said with a laugh.

Aspen Club redevelopment receives preliminary approval

Thursday, July 17th, 2008

Carolyn Sackariason
The Aspen Times
ASPEN — Preliminary plans to redevelop the Aspen Club & Spa into a destination holistic health facility with 20 timeshare condos was approved by elected leaders Monday.

The Aspen City Council voted 4-1 to conceptually approve the development plan presented by one of the club’s owners, Michael Fox. But before it receives final approval, a host of concerns voiced by council members will have to be addressed, including an assurance that the facility will20permanently remain a health club.

Council members asked Fox several questions regarding the project’s financial model and the need for timeshares.

Fox responded that the sale of timeshares will pay for between $12 million and $16 million in club improvements, as well as 12 affordable housing units and energy-efficient building of the development.

The council focused on the project’s finances after Fox indicated that if he cannot redevelop the aging property, he may be forced to sell it off in separate real estate pieces that would be developed into free-market homes.

“That door has been opened, and that argument has been made,” said City Councilman J.E. DeVilbiss. “That justification is being argued here. That’s a thorny issue, and I don’t know how we are going to stay away from it.”

Fox said it’s getting more difficult to do business in Aspen as real estate prices continue to escalate. He added that operating a sustainable health club requires reinvestment.

However, council members are viewing the proposal as more of a real estate development than a transformation of the club into a healthy living retreat center.

Neighborhood impacts also are a concern, and a detailed traffic impact study will be required for approval.

The vision for the new facility, which would be called Aspen Club Living, is for families to come for an extended health retreat. When the timeshare units aren’t being used by owners they will be available for groups, families and single travelers who participate in special one- and two-week healthy lifestyle programs.

Councilman Steve Skadron said he wants Fox to guarantee that the new facility is accessible to the public, even though Fox is proposing to allow several groups, including nonprofits and kids organizations, to use the facility at no cost.

But it appears the biggest hurdle Fox will have to overcome is agreeing to legally bind himself to operating the facility for years to come, as well as proving there is enough community benefit to get approval.

Dozens of people attended Monday night’s meeting to speak in support of the project, including professional athletes, members, employees and physicians who use the club. Two neighbors of the Aspen Club spoke in opposition during the four-hour review.

City Councilman Jack Johnson, the lone dissenter on approving the conceptual plan, said it failed to meet the needed criteria. He also said he doesn’t trust Fox’s word that it will remain a health club facility.

“There is no guarantee that the use will remain or the investment will happen,” Johnson said. “No one is questioning the value of the Aspen Club, its employees or Michael’s effort; that is not what this is about.”

Mayor Mick Ireland said Fox’s representation that the club is a locally owned business isn’t completely accurate because 65 percent of the company is ow ned by outside investors. Fox owns 35 percent of the company. In addition, Ireland said he thinks the free market doesn’t help address the public’s needs.

The proposal is similar to the one that Fox submitted and subsequently withdrew in 2006 because of a lack of support from the City Council and the club’s neighbors.

The latest proposal includes expanding the club to 72,409 square feet, as well as 20 timeshare units, 12 affordable housing units available for rent for club employees and 133 parking spaces, which is a net increase of 42 spaces. An underground parking lot would be accessible from Ute Avenue.

From the Aspen Times 

Spa Specials

Friday, June 27th, 2008

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For the remainder of the month of June we will be offering the following services at $50 off the normal price.

Massages- 50 or 80 minutes

Body treatments-80 minute services only

Teeth Whitening-20 or 40 minute session

Facials-50 minute facials and the oxygen treatment

Please visit our website for a full menu and description of services.

*some restrictions may apply

Cafe Specials

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008
1450 Ute Avenue – Aspen, Colorado 81611 970.925.8900
 
Dear Casey, I would like to welcome Alyson Flemming our new pastry chef. Alyson was most recently working in Boulder making goat cheese for Haystack Mountain Goat Dairy. Before that she was the pastry chef at the Snowmass Club. We will be featuring pastries and desserts every day. Please stop in and say hello to Alyson and try some of her desserts and pastries.
Alyson Flemming
This week at Garnish Cafe we will be featuring a few different lunch specials which are listed below.
Carrot Ginger Soup

Soup of the Week

Carrot Ginger

Pork Medallions

Special:


Apricot and Ginger Pork Medallions, Basmati rice and coconut curry sauce

 
Petite Pot de creme

Dessert Specials:

Petite Pot de creme
cream Chantilly & orange – chocolate chip biscotti

Cooking Class

Fish Cooking Class


Thursday May 22nd and Friday May 23rd, 2008 4:00 PM – 7:00 PM

Garnish Café at The Aspen Club and Spa

$120 per person – limited to ten people

Presented by

Clark Church of Garnish Café and Catering

The Aspen Club and Spa

Cost includes cooking instruction, recipes, information on the importance of fish for your health and a sampling of all the delicious dishes prepared.

Please register by calling Clark at the cafe or email him.

More information is available at:

www.garnishsnowmass.com

We are open from 7am – 2pm located in the Aspen Club and Spa. You do not have to be a member to enjoy Garnish Cafe. We also do take out and catering for your events. I look forward to seeing you this week.Sincerely,


Chef Church
Garnish Cafe @ The Aspen Club & Spa
970.925.8900

Free Gas to Aspen

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

Aspen’s got FREE Gas, FREE Wheels & Carbon Offseting

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Aspen's Got Free Gas and Deals on Wheels

–> What could be better than FREE gas and FREE wheels and helping the environment while you are in Aspen? Guests who book between May 15th and October 15th at a participating property through Stay Aspen Snowmass will receive:

  • Voucher for up to $50 free gas
  • Two FREE bicycle rentals for a day
  • Two FREE bus passes for the Maroon Bell’s Tour
  • Measurable and verifiable local Carbon Offset *

* Subject to availability, not applicable to existing reservations, not applicable for group reservations.
* A “Canary Tag” certificate, confirming that $20 has been invested in a third-party, verified energy efficiency and renewable energy project through the City of Aspen. Note: $20 offsets the carbon footprint for one round-trip auto from Denver – Aspen plus a hotel stay for two nights or 1 ton of carbon dioxide equivalent.

Click here to go to SAS and book this 

Off Season Spa Special

Monday, April 14th, 2008

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Specials in the Cafe this week

Monday, April 7th, 2008
This week at Garnish Cafe we will be featuring a few different lunch specials which are listed below.

Tortilla Soup

Soup of the Week

Tortilla

Lime Creme

Beet Salad

Special:


Butter n Beets Salad

Butter Lettuce, Baby Beets, Walnut crusted goat cheese,

Blood Orange Vinaigrette

 
Mahi Mahi

Special:

 Blackened Mahi Mahi

Basmati Stir Fry

Seared Sea Scallops

Special:

 

Seared Sea Scallops

Roasted Wild Mushrooms and English Peas

Lemon Beurre Blanc

Vegetarian Cooking Class

 

Thursday April 10, 2008 4:00 PM – 7:00 PM

Garnish Café at The Aspen Club and Spa

$120 per person – limited to ten people

 

Presented by

Clark Church of Garnish Café and Catering

and Dawn Shepard

The Aspen Club and Spa

Cost includes cooking instruction, recipes, information on the importance of a

vegetarian diet for your health and a sampling of all the delicious dishes prepared.

Menu

Vegetable Bolognese with Creamy Polenta

Grilled Portobello Mushrooms with Spinach, Sun-dried Tomatoes,

Feta and Pine Nuts

Fava Beans, Fresh Herb and Macarone Raviolis with Wild Mushrooms

Roasted Tomtao Coulis

Lemon and Thyme Tofu, Steamed Jumbo Asparagus and Oven

Roasted Tomato

 

Please register by calling Dawn Shepard at 970-948-2596.

More information is available at:

www.garnishsnowmass.com or www.activechoicefitness.com

We are open from 7am – 2pm located in the Aspen Club and Spa. You do not have to be a member to enjoy Garnish Cafe. We also do take out and catering for your events. I look forward to seeing you this week.

Sincerely,


Chef Church
Garnish Cafe @ The Aspen Club & Spa
970.925.8900

The Association

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

In Aspen, it always pays to be connected. We were recently invited to The Aspen Chamber Resort Association’s,(ACRA) quarterly networking event. Nobody can out network Aspen Spin, so we made the scene. Who knew that a business-to business mixer could be so much fun? Apparently, ACRA did. Click ACRA to see their website, it’s one of the most informative sites in Aspen.1637062-1404563-thumbnail.jpg

The “apres work” event took place at the Isberian Rug Company. The spacious “magic carpet” store proved to be an awesome spot for a party. Super-tasty finger foods were served by Back Door Catering and paired with drinks compliments of Names and Numbers . It made for a festive affair. Stephan Isberian created a rug-related, wall-to-wall scavenger hunt that had all the ACRA members aggressively searching the stacks of carpets for the correct clues. Kim Moore from The Aspen Club won the grand prize, a beautiful rug worth several thousands of dollars.

The food was magnificent (especially the meatballs), the setting unmatched, the company was stellar and we almost, —almost, splurged for a beautiful floor tapestry. We can’t wait to see what ACRA comes up with for next quarter’s event.

Click here to see THE ASSOCIATION pix.

Blog and photos provided by Aspen Spin

Initial Acupuncture Treatment

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

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$50 Acupuncture Treatment (value of $125)

Call 925.8940 to book this limited time offer

Click here to learn more about Aspen Acupuncture

Aspen Club expansion gets scrutiny from public, P&Z

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

by Brent Gardner-Smith, Aspen Daily News Staff Writer

The city of Aspen will have some weighty factors to sift through with the proposed Aspen Club residential expansion project.

The owners of the Aspen Club and Spa, located east of downtown Aspen, are proposing to build 19 condominiums through a building expansion and on what is now the club’s tennis courts.

In a concept called Aspen Club Living, owners of the units would buy two weeks each year to come for a healthy retreat, taking advantage of Aspen’s amenities and expanded wellness programs at the club.

The proceeds from the sales of the 304 timeshare interests, which if sold at $2,000 per square foot would top $94 million in sales, would finance a renovation of existing club facilities, including a new outdoor pool and new locker rooms. The timeshare owners would not have access to their units in the shoulder seasons, when the club would offer weeklong wellness retreats to the general public.

The project would also include 12 affordable housing units that would house about 27 employees. All this is proposed to be built to LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) standards, and would include an array of solar panels and a ground-source heat-pump system.

In a two-hour meeting with Aspen’s Planning and Zoning Commission on Tuesday, a wide range of issues were touched upon, but no vote was taken. The P&Z must recommend approval or denial to Aspen City Council.

Town staff supports the concept of a wellness-themed timeshare development, but has issues with its design, architecture and mass, and how it relates to the nearby Roaring Fork River. The design of the residential buildings, particularly one long building that will house seven of the 19 units, cuts off the view from the entrance of the club to the nearby riparian area, city planner Jessica Garrow told the commissioners. The planning office would like to see the structure more broken up, Garrow said, and finds the architecture itself uninspiring.

“I don’t think the architecture represents the mission that has been stated,” Garrow said.

An architect from Poss Architecture and Planning, which designed the units, said perhaps the planning office had not been able to “pull out of the drawings” the project’s unique features. The architect cautioned that pulling the mass of the building apart would create dark, U-shaped dead spaces between the buildings.

Some of the club’s 200 employees showed up to praise their workplace, saying the club’s expansion would further professional opportunities for its personal trainers, massage therapists and physical therapists. The club was presented as an organization that does right by its community through its existing wellness programs and the dozens of local nonprofits it supports.

“This is exactly what you would want to see for the next level for the club,” said Mindy Nagle, a local physician who said the club is a major source of referrals to her office.

“We could all grow in a direction that we wouldn’t normally be able to do,” said Morgan Walsh, a massage therapist at the club.

The most clear opposition came from a lawyer representing neighbors, who said it’s “just another real estate development” with questionable benefits to the community.

Rick Nieley pointed out that for Aspen Club owner Michael Fox to get approval to build a timeshare lodge, he must be approved under a provision of the land-use code known as a specially planned area, or SPA. According to the code language, an SPA is reserved for areas where because of the “unique historic, natural, physical or locational characteristics of the site” the public interest would be better served if different zoning was granted.

Nieley argued that the Aspen Club Living project meets none of these criteria.

Happiness with the way club is run is not reason enough to approve essentially a hotel surrounded by residential zoning, Nieley said, adding that Fox would have to demonstrate the new growth would add something more to the community than continuing existing services.

Time constraints prevented Fox from being able to respond to Neiley’s statement. But prior to Tuesday’s meeting, Fox denied that Aspen Club Living is another real estate development; rather, it’s a unique opportunity to create a sustainable, holistic amenity that will secure the Aspen Club’s future for generations.

“If it’s done right, the Aspen Club could be an icon throughout the world,” Fox said.

The traffic debate

Opponents of the project say that club-generated traffic on Ute Avenue is already bad enough, and that this project would make it worse. But Fox said steps can be taken to reduce traffic currently generated by the club’s 1,900 members (up from 400 just five years ago).

Club representatives presented traffic estimates that concluded the residential expansion would increase traffic volume on Ute Avenue by 15 percent. Fox said that can be mitigated by instituting paid parking for members and guests, doubling or tripling the level of its shuttle service to and from the club, and providing a fleet of electric cars for guests and affordable-housing residents to use.

Sunny Vann, the club’s planning consultant, said that the real issue is traffic capacity on Ute Avenue, which he said isn’t close to being full. Opposition to more traffic isn’t sufficient reason to deny the project when the road has more capacity, Vann said.

But the city, and neighbors to the project, are demanding more specifics on what measures the club would take to reduce traffic and how much traffic, specifically, the club thinks its mitigation measures will take off the road.

“I don’t think anyone has focused on what really will work,” said Gary Rappaport, a part-time homeowner on Ute Avenue.

Other members of the community expressed fear that if the club is not allowed redevelopment, its owners would sell to someone who would raze the community institution to build second homes.

Aspenite Steve Marolt, who acknowledged that his reputation of late has been against development, said the city must consider the alternative if the timeshare project isn’t built.

The city “wouldn’t have to give the world” to Fox to make the project work, but Fox could easily sell to another owner who wouldn’t think twice about tearing down the club and replacing it with 5,000-square-foot trophy homes, Marolt said. He termed Fox’s proposal the best alternative.

curtis@aspendailynews.com