
Work up a sweat with a heavenly view in your own room as you soak up San Diego. (Photo by Harrison Shiels)
San Diego is swarming with Midwesterners who’ve decided to move to “America’s Finest City” including James Tate, a native Ohioan who is sales and marketing director at the Westin in Gaslamp Quarter – a hotel that makes visitors feel at home.
Westin’s $17-million-dollar refresh has yielded a new version of their famed “Heavenly Beds,” personal Pelotons in WestinWORKOUT guestrooms, and even high-top tables in the rooms for more versatile work and social situations. Such a table is better for meeting a professional colleague for a glass of wine while looking over a spreadsheet instead of a sitting on a couch…or heaven forbid, the edge of a bed, as tempting as Westin makes them.
“Our Westin ‘Heavenly Bed’ was an industry game-changer when it was introduced and we now offer the 2.0 version with cooling technology for an even better sleep,” Tate told me as we talked in the bright, open Lobby Bar, soon to become the craft-led Bronze Bird Restaurant near the hotel’s on-the-go Ingredients Café. I explained to him that the in-room Peloton bike beckoned me, even for short bursts while taking a call or watching television, as an active alternative to the bed. “Westin wants you to ‘feel well’ the way you want to feel even if it’s from the comfort of your room.”
Yet another of Michigan’s favorite sons, Dick Enberg, moved to San Diego and, after his network sportscasting career, stayed home and called the Padre baseball games on television. The Detroit Tigers beat the Padres in the 1984 World Series. Enberg also called a number of Wolverine Rose Bowls on NBC, but it was in San Diego’s 1984 Holiday Bowl that BYU beat Michigan to win the national title. Enberg wasn’t the only Michigan broadcaster to relocate to San Diego: the morning radio team of “Jeff & Jer” went west from Detroit in 1987 and made it all the way to the National Radio Hall of Fame. “Those guys are legends here in San Diego,” said Tate. “Personalities like that help shape the city. It’s a warm, inviting place and we have a sunny disposition.”