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In the post-recession era, the hot new business term may be "bleisure travel."
So what's the best "bleisure" trip you've ever taken?
Bleisure Bleisure describes the blurring of business and leisure.
Inspired by early 20th century Vienna's mix of business and leisure, the house invented the word "Bleisure" for the collection it says combines formality with comfort.
"Homeindulging" is socializing at home because money is tight, while "bleisure" describes the blurring of work and home time, Zimmer explained, noting some terms were invented by The Future Laboratory: www.thefuturelaboratory.com/.
The 192 guest rooms will, no doubt, be snapped up by tourists and scenesters keen to take pole position in this world-class film, theatre and music hub in a "bleisure"-geared property that aims to soothe by day, and stimulate by night.
It has been misappropriated in Britain to describe a holiday in the UK, and the PR industry has dreamed up equally crass terms such as "greycation" (a holiday for older people) and "bizcation" or "bleisure" (a business trip with a couple of free days tacked on at the end).