
#1 Beijing |
The Initiation
It wasn't until
Mechthild and I went to see Beijing in March 2002 until we caught the virus
by visiting our first cafe. It was the last evening of our nine-day trip and
our tourist guidebook contained a reference to the HRC in the Lufthansa
Friendship center. After long days stuffed with Chinese pagodas, temples,
palaces, music and food, we decided to do a “western” evening instead and go
to the cafe.
Since taxi drivers in
China are not (or at that time weren't) familiar with English, I asked the receptionist at our hotel
to write down the address to the back of the hotel's card in Chinese letters
so that I could show it to the driver. This worked like a charm and we were
quickly and safely transported to your destination.
The cafe itself was a
pretty new experience. Wide open with friendly staff and all those nice
memorabilia items. We were seated and ordered a classic menu, the HRC
Cheeseburger with soda. The food was very tasty and the atmosphere was
great. The music selection was quite pop-oriented and we'd have preferred a
slightly rougher selection. But it was still a great time.
The price was hefty,
though. For the two burgers and four glasses of Pepsi, we paid almost 40 US$
(back when the Dollar was valued considerably higher).
Anyway, there had to
be a shirt to go along with the experience and I chose the classic white
city tee. |
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#2 Berlin (the old one, closed) |
The Progression
Unfortunately, there
wasn't a HRC in Cape Town anymore, the destination of our next major
vacation in June 2002. The cafe had been closed about a year before.
It was more than a year
later that we had the next opportunity to go to a Hard Rock Cafe. Metallica had
just released “St. Anger” in June 2003 and they were playing their first
gigs in several years. Ever since seeing “S&M” and buying the complete back
catalog, we were determined to see them live upon the next opportunity.
There were two appearances scheduled at the large German festivals “Rock am
Ring” and “Rock im Park” and much to our delight, there was also a single
headliner concert in Berlin squeezed between both festivals on June 7, 2003.
We got us tickets,
booked flights and hotel and were looking forward to a great day. Sometime
in May I saw that there was a HRC in Berlin and also learned about their
loyalty program called All Access. I registered and hardly could wait for
the opportunity to collect points.
We arrived in Berlin
early on the day where the concert was taking place. The weather was lovely,
sunny and warm, simply perfect for an open-air concert. We planned to go to
the HRC for lunch so we had some time to spend and decided to see the local
zoo which was also great. It featured our (since the trip to South Africa in
the year before) favorite animals, suricates (also known as meerkats).
Then came time for
lunch. We quickly located the cafe, were greeted kindly and seated quickly.
The food was great again (not as pricey as in Beijing) and the music
selection was more appropriate for the “hard rock” name. One noteworthy
thing were the number of guests with black clothing and featuring heavy
metal band logos and imagery. It seemed like many concert visitors chose to
go to the HRC while in Berlin. And to make this a superb experience for this
occasion, there was also a guitar signed by Metallica featured as part of
the cafe's memorabilia selection.
In the merchandise
shop, there was of course another classic white city tee to be purchased and
the denim shirt with embroidered logo on the breast pocket was just too good
to be ignored. While using the 20$ credit on the All Access card there was
another nice surprise: HRC had added a bonus for additional 10$ due to my
upcoming birthday.
Overall, a simply
superb experience and great way to tune the mood for the great evening to
come. The concert at the Wulheide arena was nothing less but awesome! |
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#3 Cologne |
The Continuation
Having had two great
experiences, we were looking forward to visiting the recently opened cafe in
Cologne, pretty close to our home town. On August 17, we drove down there
and had just another great evening with superb food and nice music.
Of course, another
city tee had to go along with the occasion... ;-)
Interestingly, you
could purchase two versions of the city tee, one with the classic uppercase
lettering of the English city name and one with the local name “Köln” in
mixed case and using the umlaut. I chose the international version, though. |
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#4 Lisbon |
The Culmination
The next opportunity
to visit a cafe was when we spent the 2004 Easter weekend in Lisbon,
Portugal. The HRC there was also recently opened and it was a treat!
The
cafe interior was lovely with the typical Portuguese tiles adapted to the
hard rock theme and the staff was sooo enthusiastic. Everyone was just
bouncing and singing along, being extremely welcoming and attentive. When
YMCA was playing on the video screens, the whole staff including the cooks
assembled downstairs and did a lively performance. This great experience has
not been topped to date.
Of course, yet another
city tee... |
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#5 Amsterdam |
The Completion I
In order to visit all
cafes within normal driving distance, we decided to also go to Amsterdam,
Netherlands on October 1, the last day of our late summer vacation that was
again spent in South Africa.
We did a classic canal
boat cruise in Amsterdam before going to the cafe for some later afternoon
lunch. The cafe is much smaller than the building suggests but it has a
lovely canal-side terrace and is nice and cozy.
The overall experience
wasn't as thrilling as Lisbon, but I guess that is hard to top for a long
time (if ever), but everything was perfect again. The music selection was
great and included one of our all-time-faves, Metallica's “Nothing Else Matters”.
And -yes- yet another
city tee. This time, there was also a nice and plain logo pin to go along
with it and Mechthild decided to get herself a backpack. |
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#6 Barcelona |
The Expansion
In 2005, the chosen
Easter destination was Barcelona, a city where lovely doesn't seem to even
come close in describing the style, class and atmosphere. This must be a
great place to live.
The HRC is located
right at a large public place so it is fairly easy to find. Unlike the other
cafes that we have visited so far, you could walk right in without asking a
waitress or waiter to seat you. This meant that the place is permanently
crowded and noisy because of all those tourists that walk around, watch the
memorabilia and are taking pictures of themselves with certain pieces of
memorabilia.
The personnel was
quite quick in asking people to leave if they sat at an empty table without
being seated by the staff. This cafe was also the first one to date where
there were waiting lines. This was a perfect opportunity to use the All
Access membership for more than just accumulating reward points but also to
use it for first available seating. Apparently, there were some more All
Access members waiting before us, but the card still reduced our waiting time from
30 minutes to 15 minutes. Not too bad.
The cafe experience
was good and at the –now– expected level.
In the cafe, we
noticed ads for the newly introduced limited edition Signature Series shirt
inspired by Bruce Springsteen and supporting the World Hunger Year charity.
Since The Boss is hardly an artist to be ashamed of and also because of the
good cause, this shirt had to go along with the classic white tee. Mechthild
still wasn't interested in the shirts, so it was just a keychain for her.
Unfortunately, no plain logo pins or denim shirts in Barcelona.
During our stay, we
decided to spend another evening there (the first time to visit a cafe more
than once) and it was just as nice. |
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The Return(s)
Back home, I surfed
to hardrock.com and noticed the previous Signature Series shirt by Eric
Clapton. I ordered it along with two cool beach towels for our next
vacation.
Mechthild and I were
wondering about whether they had denim shirts in Cologne and were both
craving for a nice weekend evening, so we jumped into the car and drove down
there.
Again, Cologne
featured attentive and welcoming staff, great food and cool music. We tried
the chicken salad and finished with the classic Hot Fudge Brownie - a
terrific sweet dessert that could well serve as a main course. Try it if you
haven't yet!
Sadly, denim clothing
seems to be gone for good. But they had logo pins in Cologne and Mechthild
got herself an Eric Clapton shirt where there is apparently some old
stock remaining.
A week later, we were
seeing friends in Cologne and were walking around at the Rhine river and in
the old city. It so happened that we were walking along the HRC so we had to
slip in again, but this time not for food. Mechthild was giving in to the
temptation and got herself a Springsteen shirt as well.
It seems like we will
be going to Cologne every now and then in the future. This is really our
kind of restaurant and is so much more than your average McDonald's or
Burger King. HRC is very dedicated to their primary business, one thing that
the merchandise business tends to hide to the occasional passer-by.
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#7 Munich |
The Completion II
On the weekend of June
11/12, we made a trip to Munich to go to the last German cafe missing from
our list. So we did it, the first country is completed. Ok, let's ignore
just for
a second or two the fact that Amsterdam and Lisbon are both the one and only cafe in their
respective countries...
The property, previously
owned by the copycat company by the name of Planet Hollywood, is located directly
opposite of one of Munich's top tourist attractions - the Hofbräuhaus.
We intentionally bypassed it and went straight ahead to the cafe in order to
enjoy some great food (Twisted Mac and Open Faced Sirloin, both superb!) and music,
the latter of which was a bit less poppy but rather harder this time. Cool!
The staff was
attentive and kind, as usual. In the merchandise department, Mechthild finally got the umbrella that we
first saw in Berlin
but for some strange reason didn't get at that time. This was really the first time
since then that a cafe offered it. And - of course the classic white city tee, a logo pin and
some Pilsner glasses for home use.
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#8 Paris |
The Elegance
On the weekend
of July 29-31, we used a special bonus miles discount offer from
Lufthansa to spend some days in Paris. We had originally planned to go to
London that weekend but the Lufthansa deal came around just one day before
the first terrorist attacks in London so we postponed the UK trip to some later
date. As if the attacks were not bad enough, the London cafe was struck by a
fire on Saturday the 9th and subsequently closed for renovation. We will
definitely come to see where it all started, but for the time being fate
decided otherwise...
I've never been to
Paris before (except for a Microsoft developer conference in the Disneyland
Resort), but Mechthild loves it deeply after having been there a couple of
times. Now, having been there myself, I can understand her affection for the
city. Wherever you look, there's great classical architecture. The Eiffel
tower's elegant, fragile looking yet robust steel construction is simply
stunning once you're standing next to its huge feet. The prominent churches
such as Sacre Coeur and Notre Dame are impressive as much as the Champs
Elysses along with its three arcs are still having an aura of the pride and
grandness that this former colonial power once had. Paris continues to be a
city with character that's not plagued with face- and characterless modern
building facades.
The Paris cafe is one
of the older ones but it's absolutely fantastic with two large stories and
lots of nice memorabilia. Just like Cologne, there's another Clapton guitar
in this cafe. The guitarist that started the memorabilia collection of HRC
apparently donated a few of his instruments...
The music was great,
the waiters were very attentive and kind. We were witnesses of yet another
YMCA performance which mostly took place in between two busloads of guests
on the upper level.
On the merchandise
side of things, it seems like we are spending more and more each time we are
visiting a Hard Rock Cafe... a classic white (o'course) and Dragon Slate
shirt for me, an Ultra Suede tee for Mechthild. Another survey voucher got
us a pin with the Arc de Triomphe on a Flying V guitar and due to some other
coupon that we were given by the waiter, we received a gift due to
purchasing merchandise for at least $20 - a nice shot glass. On the second
evening of our stay we went to the cafe again, this time getting another
umbrella from Mechthild's favorite city which was mostly covered by another
roll-over of the All Access card. So now the Munich umbrella is mine... ;-)
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#9 Gran Canaria (closed) |
The "Unfinished"
In September 2005, we
were
vacationing on Gran Canaria, one of the Spanish islands near the African
continent. As it happens to be, there was be a new HRC supposed to open in
July, slipping to August and finally to September.
Much to our dismay, the Cafe was still not
finished and opened while we were there. On the upside, we were given a tour
through the impressive dual-level location with two bars and about 500 in-
and outdoor seats. The memorabilia selection is impressive, including items
from Annie Lennox, AC/DC, Bon Jovi and Jimi Hendrix.
It will surely be a superb cafe once it
opens its doors to the public.
Mechthild's mom visited the island a few
months later and got us the merchandise items to complement our "visit":
white city tees for both of us plus a city logo pin and lovely lava coast
pin, depicting one of the vantage points along the coast road where we stood
and took some photos. |
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#10 London
#10.1 London Casino (no longer Hard Rock
branded)
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The Original
On the final
pre-Christmas weekend in December 2005 we've done the postponed (see the
Paris entry above) short trip to London to see the original cafe that was
established waaay back in 1971.
The cafe was surprisingly small with a crowd
waiting to be allowed in. The All Access card helped shorten the wait (at
the bar) to about 25 minutes. The lovely decorated property was awesome,
just like the very first memorabilia items from 1979 -the guitars from Eric
Clapton and Pete Townshend- hanging right above the bar.
The staff was fantastic and so was the
food. We truly enjoyed our time there.
The shop is located in a separate property
right on the opposite side of the street. As expected, it was a bit larger
than those that we've seen before and was offering some unique items.
We settled for a classic white tee, two
shirts with a small logo on the chest and a large image of the cafe on the
back, a shot glass with the cafe picture and two nice pins. After shopping,
we went downstairs to see some particular highlights (e.g. a Flying V guitar from
Jimi Hendrix) in the lower floor, the Vault.
Of course, a visit of London wouldn't have
been complete without also seeing the local Hard Rock Casino. It wasn't open
at the early time of day, but we could get two logo shirts, a pin and two
pens in the shop. If it weren't for the other sightseeing highlights and feeding the
cute squirrels in
Kensington Gardens, we surely would have come back at a later time to see
the casino in action. |
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#11 Rome |
The "Classic" One
One of Europe's most
impressive cities with regard to archeological remains must be Rome. Wherever
you walk something old shows up. The Colosseum, the Forum Romanum, the
Trevi Fountain, the Vatican's stunning grandeur... you're breathing history
virtually everywhere.
It sure was a place to
go. And the Hard Rock Cafe is very cool, too. Very friendly staff, a very
fitting design with angels playing guitars in a dome-like room. Cool!
On the merchandise
side of things we chose a classic white city tee and a Dragon Slate besides
a logo pin, a guitar with the Colosseum as its body and a shot glass. |
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#12 Madrid |
Craziness!
Our 2006 Easter
vacation took us to Madrid, completing Spain on the HRC map.
This city is just
awesome - fantastic old and magnificent buildings, wide avenues with wide
sidewalks and lots of green in between. Then there is the fabulous Parque
del Retiro, a green oasis right in the hectic around it. A superb place for
a Hard Rock Cafe. And what a cafe this is. Loud, busy and big. When you
first enter, you don't realize its size in various levels. Make sure that
you at least have a look at the Skyline Room with NYC hanging upside down
from the ceiling (see picture to the left). Incredible!
And the memorabilia
isn't bad, either. Original framed prints from the animation sequences of
Pink Floyd's "The Wall" movie, guitars from B.B.King, Matchbox Twenty and
The Scorpions - just to name a small selection.
Food and staff was
impeccable as usual. Merchandise this time: white city tee and black
distorted logo tee for me, a burgundy "Live-Love-Rock" tee for Mechthild.
And, of course, a city logo pin. |
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#13 Toronto
#14 Hard Rock Cafe Niagara Falls USA

#15 Hard Rock Cafe Niagara Falls Canada

#16 Hard Rock Cafe Ottawa

#17 Hard Rock Cafe Montreal (closed)

#18 Hard Rock Cafe Toronto Skydome (closed)
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The "Hard Rocks of Canada" Tour
Our main vacation in 2006 took us to Eastern
Canada, making an 18-day-trip through parts of Ontario and Quebec, starting
out in Toronto, passing Niagara, Ottawa, Tremblant, Québec, Tadussac,
Pasbébiac, Rivière-du-Loup, Rimouski, Percé, Montréal and other nice towns
along the way.
Canada is a lovely country with
tremendous nature and extremely kind people. We enjoyed our trip thoroughly.
Being in a remote place without cell phone coverage, seeing stunning
landscape and enjoying the silence was an outstanding way to celebrate my
40th birthday.
Fortunately but still coincidental, our
travel itinerary allowed us to visit all five Canadian Hard Rock Cafes and
to take advantage of the opportunity to quickly jump the border into the USA
to check out the other Niagara Falls property as well.
On the first evening of our vacation we
just had to walk from our hotel down the road a few blocks to have dinner in
the downtown Toronto cafe. This was particularly cool because it is actually
the second property opened after the London cafe had been in operation for 8
years.
The cafe is styled in a quite modern
theme, has indoor and outdoor seating areas and has the familiar kind staff
and good food.
Merchandise taken home included a logo
pin, an "Ambassador of Rock" keychain and two cool Lyric Sand shirts. City
tees were unfortunately currently not available as they were awaiting
delivery of shirts featuring the new logo.
On the second day, we drove down to
Niagara Falls to see one of the world's most impressive nature highlights.
Our expectations were fulfilled and exceeded. The sheer force of the water,
the deafening sound and the permanent spray of water were stunning. We also
took a fascinating scenic view from above the Skylon Tower.
Then we went to the Canadian cafe. We
got ourselves a nice Maple Leaf guitar pin, an interesting pin depicting the
falls comprising part of a puzzle to be combined with the respective
counterpart from the USA cafe.
Sadly, there were no logo pins
available, breaking the string of logo pins that my collection completed via
eBay featured. We took a city tee (with a Maple Leaf between the words
Niagara and Falls) and a special shirt with the cafe logo on a prominent
Maple Leaf.
Then we left for the border...
The USA cafe is virtually within waving
distance, just about 600 Meters. The Rainbow Bridge spanning the river
allows for easy border crossing (50 Cent bridge fee applies, payable with
both US and Canadian coins).
We decided to leave our car parked on
Canadian soil and just cross with a backpack. After the few usual questions
being asked by the border officials and paying US$ 6 border fees per person
(credit card works, so no need to change currencies) we were setting our
feet onto the United States of America.
The falls may seem more impressive from
the Canadian side with all falls in one panoramic view. But the falls also
have a serious appeal from the US side where you get very close to the point
of the water falling down.
Instead of a lunch we just sat for
desserts and fetched the obligatory merchandise before returning to Canada.
We brought home a logo pin, the other part of the puzzle pin set and two
city tees.
The next stop on our journey after
spending a second night in Toronto was Ottawa. We took some walks and resting
in the Parliament Hill area and the nearby Mayor's Park. At dinner time, we
had an obvious place to go.
The cafe has a pretty large patio dining
area and the pretty weather allowed for a nice time. Instead of two full
meals, we shared the Jumbo Combo which is perfectly sized for two hungry
adults.
We got ourselves another logo pin, a
city tee and two ballpoint pens there.
After passing through Tremblant, Québec,
Tadoussac, Rimouski, Pasbébiac, Perce and Rivière-du-Loup, we arrived in
Montréal on day 16 of the trip. The cafe in this strongly Europe-influenced
town is very classic in terms of being close to the style of the London
cafe. The waiters, merchandise staff and shift manager all were very open
and kind. This made us return for another dinner on our second day in the
city.
We got ourselves a logo pin, a 2005 AIDS
Day ribbon guitar pin, a Maple Leaf guitar pin, a city tee and a
Live-Love-Rock shirt there.
With leaving Montréal it was time for
returning to Toronto in order to wrap up our trip and return home. Upon
arriving in Toronto after a lengthy 600 kilometer leg we headed towards the
CN Tower and Skydome for dinner in the second HRC in town. This property is
quite unique since it is located right within the Skydome stadium (now named
the Rogers Centre) with one of the walls being replaced with windows,
allowing to see right down onto the playing field.
Of course, we didn't leave the final
cafe of our tour without getting some more memorable merchandise. We were
quite surprised to see that most items didn't have property specific naming
on them, but rather only a generic "Toronto". This, however, allowed for
getting the city tee that was not available in the downtown cafe two weeks
earlier. Mechthild even got herself one old stock shirt with the old logo
and the property name "Skydome, Toronto" on it.
Unfortunately, there was no logo pin
with the Skydome name. So we chose a 17th anniversary pin depicting the
stadium as the guitar body.
This was a trip that will long be
remembered by us, not only because of the series of cafes. Canada is a super
lovely country that seems to be a great place to live and work in... |
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#19 Hard Rock Cafe San Francisco

#20 Hard Rock Cafe Las Vegas
#20.1 Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Las Vegas

#21 Hard Rock Cafe San Diego
#21.1 Hard Rock Hotel San Diego

#22 Hard Rock Cafe La Jolla (closed)

#23 Hard Rock Cafe Hollywood (Los Angeles) |
The "Hard Rocks of The West Coast" Tour
Our main vacation in 2008 was originally
planned for visiting three of the Hawaiian islands but for some reasons
ended up taking us through the continental USAs West Coast region in the
first half of April. The fantastic tour took us to San Francisco, Yosemite,
Death Valley, Las Vegas, Grand Canyon, Palm Springs, San Diego, Los Angeles
and Monterey.
It's pretty stunning to see so
dramatically different cities and natural surroundings in such a brief time.
We were lucky to have five cafes, two hotels and one casino along this trip.
Since the tour came as a tour operator organized package, we didn't stay at
the Hard Rock Hotels. I am sparing you the detailed list of memorabilia
purchased on this tour, but it was a quite long list...
The San Francisco cafe was moved to the
popular tourist attraction Pier 39 a few years ago and despite the
artificial themepark-like surrounding it was still a neat property with a
great shop where we were greeted with a large variety of new merchandise.
San Francisco is a lovely and pretty
unique city with its roads going up- and downhill, historic cable and street
cars and its mixture of old and new buildings. Putting our feet on so many
historic landmarks so commonly seen in movies and on TV was quite strange.
Walking the Golden Gate Bridge alone is quite an experience.
After seeing a pretty different kind of
untouched nature in the Yosemite and Death Valley national parks, Las Vegas
was the exact opposite. It felt like a huge kind of Disney theme park with
everything having a dramatically artificial flavor. But being there on an
often-seen location was again some kind of experience. We also still liked
some things such as the Bellagio's awesome musical fountain where we stayed
to watch six shows.
One night of our stay was of course
committed to the local cafe and hotel/casino. Apparently, the Hard Rock Cafe
is going to be relocated from its remote location right to the Las Vegas
Strip later this year. The new property will be multi-level and several
times the size of the current cafe which we liked much because of its
unanticipated small size. After dinner we went to take a look at the local
Hard Rock Hotel/Casino as well. Unfortunately, they didn't have any nice
casino branded merchandise for sale.
Having a second night in Las Vegas gave
us the opportunity to go to the House of Blues in Sin City, another
restaurant venture of HRC co-founder Isaac Tigrett along with Dan "Elwood"
Aykroyd that's not available internationally. The southern-inspired cuisine
was awesome as well and well worth a visit.
After the artificial environment of Las
Vegas, the next stop was another dramatic change - the breath-taking Grand
Canyon. We're admittedly rather not mountain-type folks, but that stunning
view from above compares to nothing else.
Then, we headed for California's
coastline again, stopping over in Palm Springs for one night before hitting
beautiful San Diego. San Diego is our favorite city of the tour and will
pretty certainly see us again. The Gaslamp District in downtown is a nicely
restored area of historic buildings, mixing nicely with a great skyscraper
skyline.
After getting a late breakfast in the
downtown cafe, we walked downtown to the recently opened Hard Rock Hotel
(man, what a place to be!) and then headed for the Ocean Beach and La Jolla
communities, the latter of which hosts the original San Diego HRC.
La Jolla well deserves its Spanish name,
labelling it as "the jewel". It's one of the most beautiful seaside areas
that we've seen so far. The cafe is showing its age, but still is a neat
property. We were saddened to learn that it is about to be closed at the end
of 2008. Due to this fact, there was no location-specific merchandise (all
stuff was carrying the San Diego branding) available except for some
left-over glassware.
After San Diego, the route went to Los
Angeles. We intended to dine at the local cafe and then hit one of the
beaches, but the insanely crowded highways just had us go to the cafe and
head back to the hotel to relax for the next day's long ride.
The Los Angeles cafe is named Hollywood,
likely a distinction leftover from the time when there were two cafes
operating in the city. The remaining property is located right within the
Universal Studios Citywalk, the theme-park entry area. If we had had more time
in LA, we probably would have visited the Universal Studios - for example,
seeing Wisteria Lane from ABC's Desperate Housewives would have been quite
cool - but that lost opportunity wasn't too dramatic.
From Los Angeles we drove the coastal
California Highway 1 all the way up to Montery, witnessing some lovely views
of the Pacific Ocean and spending a very beautiful beach sunset on the final
evening of this tour. We enjoyed the trip very much and look forward to
exploring other areas of the USA in the future. |
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#24 Hard Rock Cafe Dublin |
Yay, Another European One!
It's been quite some time now since adding the
last European HRC to our list (Madrid - over three years ago, whew...), so
it was about time to take another short trip in June 2009.
Initially we had planned to go to
Copenhagen, but unfortunately there were only business class seats available
for frequent flier miles. After some decision making and recommendations
from friends we finally settled for Dublin. Both Mechthild and I have never
before been to Ireland, so why not go see its capital.
It's indeed a lovely city, both nicely
aged and modern with friendly people. We strongly recommend visiting it.
The Hard Rock Cafe is fairly large on
two levels, dominated by its U2 cool memorabilia (love the colorful Trabi
over the stairs) and happens to be pretty packed at times. So remember to
take your All Access card!
This franchise operated HRC still
offered the old menu, so we make use of the great opportunity to have some
classic favorites such as the Cesar Salad and the Tom Perry Quesadilla.
Merchandise-wise it was a success,
too... two city tees, two Pilsner glasses (easier to take home when you only
have carry-on baggage), a logo pin and a fridge magnet will make us memorize
this great trip for a long time. |
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#2.1 Hard Rock Cafe Berlin (the new one) |
Revisited
Well, purely by coincidence there was another
Wuhlheide concert worth visiting from several hundred kilometers away and
the new Berlin cafe just having openined its doors after moving from the
original location. Basically, it has just moved up from within the side
street right to the front of the Kurfürstendamm.
Unfortunately, though, the property's
interior follows the new "lounge style" used in all newer cafes, meaning
almost no memorabila and cool, modern type of furniture. I don't
particularly like that because it takes away the fascination of unique
pieces owned by popular artists hanging right above your head.
Apart from that the dual-level property
is nice and now in a prime location that should ensure a steady inflow of
customers.
The food and service was impeccable,
memorabilia was skipped due to already having Berlin stuff. |
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#25 Hard Rock Cafe Mallorca |
Southbound Our very first trip to the -for German vacationers- massively popular
Spanish island of Mallorca coincided with the fact that a new cafe has been
opened at the end of 2008.
The island itself is really lovely, as
long as you make sure to avoid the major tourist traps
hotspots like S'Arenal.
The cafe is located in the island's
capital, Palma de Mallorca, facing the marina not far from the cathedral. It
is fortunately one of those old style properties stuffed with memorabilia.
Although the shop offers only a somewhat
limited selection, we left with shirts, a pin and 40th anniversary souvenir
glasses. |
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#26 Hard Rock Cafe Baltimore

#27 Hard Rock Cafe Washington D.C.

#28 Hard Rock Cafe Atlantic City

#29 Hard Rock Cafe Philadelphia

#30 Hard Rock Cafe New York

#31 Hard Rock Cafe Yankee Stadium (New
York)

#32 Hard Rock Cafe Foxwoods

#33 Hard Rock Cafe Boston |
The "Hard Rocks of The East Coast" Tour
Our big vacation in 2011 ended up as a trip
through four major cities of the US East Coast along with a total of eight
HRCs in no less than 10 days. We started in Washington D.C., going to
Philadelphia and New York on our way towards Boston. More or less along the
route lay Baltimore and Atlantic City.
When our first day in Washington D.C.
turned out to be pretty wet, we decided to make a short excursion to
Baltimore where we visited our first cafe on this trip. The cafe is located
in the rejuvenated harbor district inside a former plant building. The
conversion was beautifully done and the whole cafe is a very nice property.
The folks at the HRC were also extremely kind an the food was impeccable as
usual.
Washington's own cafe was therefore
pushed back to the second night of the tour. This dual-level property
reminded us of some of the particularly nice cafes like Montreal. We spent a
great time there.
Next up on the list was Atlantic City on
the way to Philadelphia. Not having liked Las Vegas much, our expectations
for Atlantic City itself weren't too high. Indeed, the city looks a bit
dated. As long as you don't ever leave the casinos, you may not even notice
the wear and tear. The cafe is located within the Trump Taj Mahal, a pompous
and -in our opinion- tastelessly designed Casino resort building. It has an
entry from and patio on the famous boardwalk, but the view is not the
nicest. The cafe is nice in the sense that it has lots of memorabilia, but
is otherwise no property to get too excited over.
The next day in Philly was "soaking wet"
rainy. We barely made it to some of the noteworthy sights before being wet
down to our bones. Therefore, we decided to call it a day after going to the
Rock Shop and dine in the hotel while we tried to dry our clothes with the
help of the air condition (providing a room temperature of about 28° C). The
cafe looked like a nother very nive one. Too bad that it rained cats and
dogs all day and we couldn't risk to get more clothes completely wet.
After Philly, our tour continued in New
York City. This is some truly remarkable city and the three days that we had
this time are definitely not sufficient to explore it fully. We'll sure come
back sooner or later. The moved cafe is now in a former movie theater which
was turned into a cafe in an awesome manner. It's very busy, but still has
some quieter corners. If anywhere, don't ever forget to bring your All
Access card to this cafe if you wish to dine. The waiting lines are
otherwise insane! Great food, nice people.
Not too long ago, New York got a second
cafe in the New York Yankees stadium. It's more like a sports bar rather a
normal HRC and sadly it doesn't offer playing field view like the Toronto
Skydome cafe. But during games it sure is a cool place to be - assuming you
like baseball... ;-)
More or less on the way from NYC to our
final city, Boston, is the Hard Rock Cafe in the Foxwoods casino resort. As
mentioned before, we don't really care much for gambling. But the cafe here
is well worth a visit as it was built with some true love. The walls are
packed with memorqabilia and the high hall is quite unique. Well worth a
short trip if you're nearby.
And finally, we made it to Boston. This
cafe is somewhat shocking from the outside. It actually resides in the
basement of a parking lot near the popular Faneuil Hall. However, once you
enter the cafe, you'll notice a nice property with a beautiful bar backed
with a wall consisting of hundreds of cymbals.
Maybe it should be noted that we spent a
lot of time on sightseeing. This trip wasn't just about only visiting HRCs.
But as I'm writing this about 30 hours after waking up last (in Boston), I'd
rather keep it short for now. This was a very nice and interesting vacation
which coincidentally happened to feature so many cafes along the way.
Since our collection of shirts has
already grown quite big over the past years, we settled for only one tee
each and one pin per cafe to add to our collection. |
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