Antonio Ceniza, resident manager of the first class resort located in Barangay Bolod, Panglao said 80 new rooms were opened in March 2006 on top of the original 88 rooms to serve corporate clients that intend to hold outings, functions, conventions, seminars and conferences in an exclusive setting.
"Built within a 60-hectare enclave with 1.5 kilometers of white-powder sand beachfront, Bohol Beach Club is an ideal place to inspire team building," he said.
Ceniza said the same exclusive setting has attracted corporate clients like Globe, Smart, Wyeth, Chowking, Tupperware, and CDO-Foodsphere Inc.
Recently, it has hosted the 17th anniversary celebration of the Philippine Association of Meat Processors of the Philippines, Inc. (PAMPI), which groups the 35 largest meat processors in the country with combined revenues of P60 billion annually.
About 100 delegates from the meat processing industry attended a three-day convention at the Bohol Beach Club from March 30 to April 1, where they discussed the future of the local meat processing industry and inducted new officers, Ceniza said.
Felix Tiukinhoy Jr., president of PAMPI, said the group was impressed by the personalized service at the club. "We liked the place for being well-secured that allowed us to relax in an exclusive realm," he said.
Ceniza said the clubs conference facilities include different functions rooms, designed to seat from 40 to 200 individuals.
The club also has a business center, which offers secretarial services, photocopying, facsimile machine, computer scanning, Internet access, among others. Overhead projector, slide projector, white board, and other video equipment are available upon request, he added.
Corporate guests, he said, can relax at the clubs swimming pool and other recreational facilities such as outdoor Jacuzzi, tennis court, billiard hall, darts and chess. It is also just a few minutes away from the world-famous diving spot of Balicasag Island.
Ceniza said Bohol is now being considered the next prime tourist destination in the country, after the crowded Boracay.
A proof of this, he said, is when President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo tendered a state dinner for visiting New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark at the Bohol Beach Club on March 14, 2006.
President Arroyo also released P25 million to conduct a survey and partially acquire lands for the future Panglao International Airport.
Data from the Department of Tourism in Central Visayas showed that the number of foreign tourists who visited Bohol went up by more than 8,000 or 30 percent to 35,118 in 2005 from only 26,921 in 2004.
For more information about Bohol and Panglao Island, contact Virian Catacutan at (02) 522-2302 or (02) 522-2303. You can also email salesdirector@tambuli.com.