The Eastern & Oriental Express is heading back to the tracks.
Services for the train service are restarting in February 2024, according to an announcement today by the train’s owner, the luxury travel company Belmond.
The passenger train, long considered one of the most luxurious rail rides in Asia, started operating in 1993, connecting Bangkok to Singapore. It stopped running in 2020 at the outset of the pandemic.
The Eastern & Oriental is returning with 15 carriages, including two restaurant cars, one piano bar car and an open-air observation car. It’s eight sleeping cars will have three cabin categories — Pullman, State and Presidential — all with air-conditioning and private bathrooms.
Bookings for 2024 opened today with rates from $3,410 per person for a three-day journey, which includes all meals, beverages and scheduled activities.
Two journeys
The new service is set to run two seasonal journeys, both departing from Singapore and traveling to Malaysia.
The “Essence of Malaysia,” will run from November to February. It will pass through Kuala Lumpur, with views of the Petronas Twin Towers — once the tallest buildings in the world — before departing for the popular islands of Langkawi and Penang along western Malaysia.
Guests can snorkel in Palau Payar Marine Park, take a Peranakan cooking class and experience the “UNESCO World Heritage sites, lively street art, and a thrilling food scene” in the city of George Town, according to the announcement.
From March to October, passengers can embark on the train’s “Wild Malaysia” route. It stops along the eastern side of Malaysia to explore the rainforests of the Taman Negara National Park, before venturing to Penang.
Trains of similar names
The Eastern & Oriental Express has been colloquially referred to as Southeast Asia’s “Orient Express,” harkening to the historic train that linked Paris and Istanbul beginning in the late 19th century.
However, other train services use the moniker, including one run by Belmond.
That train — the “Venice Simplon-Orient-Express” — operates under a one-off licensing deal and has been running since 1982.
The French hospitality company Accor has broader rights to the name through a deal inked with the French rail company SNCF in 2017. The company is set to launch a luxury passenger service in 2025, according to its website.
Accor is also preparing to launch six “Orient Express La Dolce Vita” trains in 2024 that will run across Italy, with trips to Paris, Istanbul and Split, Croatia, according to its website.
Pre-booking for that service opened in December 2022, with prices starting from 2,000 euros ($2,192) per person per night, according to Accor.
Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2023/07/11/best-luxury-train-rides-in-asia-eastern-oriental-express-.html