Hotusa Group

The Hotusa Group is an organization with its headquarters in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, comprising several companies connected with diverse spheres of activity in the tourist sector. It originated from the chain of independent establishments, Hotusa Hotels, founded in 1977.

Hotusa Group
Private
Founded1977
HeadquartersBarcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Key people
Amancio López-Seijas
ParentHotusa
WebsiteHotusa

The Hotusa Group, at present, encompasses two chains of independent hotels: Hotusa Hotels and Elysées West Hotels; the hotel representatives, Keytel; the central bookings office, Restel; the technology firm IGM Web; the portal for data management and on-line bookings Hotelius.com; the Eurostars Hotels chain which operates a total of 200 establishments, as well as an additional number of 35 directly operated hotels. (April 2008 data).

The various companies and business areas integrated in the Hotusa Group registered a turnover in 2018 of over 1.200 Million Euros.

In 2008, the Group was awarded the Business Excellence Prince Felipe Prize, granted by the Ministry of Industry, Tourism and Trade of Spain as recognition for its contribution towards increase of the competitiveness of the Spanish tourism industry, in addition to consolidating its position on the international tourist marketplace.

The chairman of the organization is Amancio López Seijas (Camporramiro-Chantada, Lugo, Spain, 1955).

Companies belonging to the Hotusa Group

Tourist Division

  • Hotusa Hotels
  • Keytel, SA
  • Prestige Hotels of the World
  • Restel
  • Hotelius
  • Hotusa Operator

Hotel Division

  • Acqualis Hotels
  • Domus Selecta
  • Eurostars Hotels
  • Elysées West Hotels
  • Exe Hotels
  • Prestige Hotels
  • Style Hotels
  • Ikonik Hotels

Other Businesses

  • IGM Web

Partnerships

In March 2020 Travala.com partners with Hotusa Group [1]

gollark: It has some very nice things for the cloud-thing/CLI tool/server usecase; the runtime is pretty good and for all garbage collection's flaws manual memory management is annoying, and the standard library is pretty extensive.
gollark: I'm not entirely sure what the aim is - maybe they originally wanted to go for highly concurrent systems or something, but nowadays it seems to mostly be used in trendy cloudy things, servers, command line utilities, that sort of thing.
gollark: I think my use cases are nice usecases, and I think it has flaws even in the domains it seems to be targeted at.
gollark: I think it should at least not, essentially, deliberately cripple itself at some classes of thing.
gollark: I'm not sure exactly what they're targeting - maybe trendy cloud™-type tools, simple webservers, etc - but even *in* that domain it just seems bad to me.

References

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