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    HomeTravelTrain review: What it’s like to ride the Venice Simplon-Orient-Express

    Train review: What it’s like to ride the Venice Simplon-Orient-Express


    I’m standing in one of the “most expensive hotel rooms” in the world.

    Per square meter, that is.

    That’s according to Matthieu Ollier, manager of the Venice Simplon-Orient-Express, who said the train’s Grand Suites cost 24,000 euros ($25,850) for a one-night trip from Venice to London.

    That’s $2,000 per meter — if you can secure a spot. Bookings in the Grand Suites often start a year in advance.

    Thanks to a last-minute cancellation, I won the freelance journalist’s equivalent of Willy Wonka’s golden ticket — a call from Belmond, the luxury company that owns the train.

    A train steward on the Venice Simplon-Orient-Express.

    Source: Chris Dwyer

    Could I join? Unsurprisingly, I squeezed it into my schedule.

    But at a time when the 31-hour trip for a couple costs more than low-wage workers in the United States make in a year, could the one night experience possibly be worth it?

    The train

    The Budapest Suite

    Cocktails and cuisine

    One iron-clad guarantee on board the train: You will never go hungry.

    The Venice Simplon-Orient-Express’ partnership with Chef Jean Imbert from the one-Michelin-starred Jean Imbert au Plaza Athénée in Paris has ensured that the cuisine is genuinely stellar, at every service.

    From the Champagne breakfast — served in-suite — to the afternoon teas and four-course dinner, this is a journey to forget about calories.

    Breakfast in the Budapest Suite.

    Source: Chris Dwyer

    It’s puzzling how plates of such artistry and finesse are produced in such a tiny kitchen. A quick look shows it’s six meters long and one meter wide — with five chefs inside.

    Guests don tuxedos and glamorous evening dresses for dinner, which starts with cocktails in the Bar Car. Aa a pianist serenaded us, the feeling was one of being transported back in time.

    Bumps in the road

    Is it worth it?

    It’s also worth remembering that train travel is more sustainable than most modes of transport, especially private aviation. 

    Data shows many travelers aren’t cutting back on travel, despite the global cost-of-living crisis, but this trip is out of reach for pretty much anyone bar the 0.1%.

    If you’re lucky enough to have pockets this deep, there are few travel experiences to match it.



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