Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - What is the name of the new eight-star hotel in Dubai?

What is the name of the new eight-star hotel in Dubai?

First of all, the hotel in Dubai is a 7-star hotel, not an 8-star hotel.

In the 1950s, it was a simple seaside town in the Arabian Gulf. , Dubai has undergone radical changes. Rows of skyscrapers miraculously rise on the banks of the Hall River, making people feel as if they are in New York. Like other Middle Eastern cities, Dubai is rich from oil. But for a new city with ambitions to show off its capabilities in the new century, oil is certainly not everything. It opened the door to vigorously develop tourism. Due to its high-quality environment and rich and colorful culture (because 80% of the population are foreigners), most tourists to Dubai are high-income groups such as models, artists, and businessmen. At the suggestion of the Crown Prince of Dubai, the well-known entrepreneur Al-Maktoum invested in the construction of the beautiful Burj Al-Arab Hotel.

The level of luxury of the hotel is breathtaking. Critics don't know how many stars to give it: five stars, six stars, or seven stars? The hotel is built on an artificial island on the seaside. It is a sail-shaped tower building with 56 floors per roof and 321 meters high. It was designed by British designer W.S. Atkins. It is opposite the Jumeirah Beach Hotel (considered the best hotel in the world). With 202 duplex rooms, a 200-meter-high restaurant overlooking the entire city of Dubai, and the world's highest atrium, it has become the latter's strongest rival. . Only after you have been here can you truly appreciate what splendor is. Its atrium is golden, and its most luxurious 780-square-meter presidential suite is also golden. Room sizes range from 170 square meters to 780 square meters, with the lowest room price at US$900 and the highest presidential suite at US$18,000. The presidential suite is on the 25th floor. The furniture is gold-plated. It has a cinema, two bedrooms, two living rooms, a dining room, and a dedicated elevator for access. The late top fashion designer Versace once praised it.

The splendid hotel suites will make you feel the luxury of the Arabian Oil King. All 202 rooms are two-story suites. The smallest room is 170 square meters, while the largest Royal Suite is 780 square meters. And all are floor-to-ceiling glass windows, so you can face the endless Arabian Sea at any time. The most surprising thing is that as soon as you enter the room, there is a butler waiting to explain to you how to use the various high-tech facilities in the room, because the hotel's luxurious and noble service tenet is to make guests feel like an Arabian oil king. Not only is this surprising, it also makes people sigh at the power of money. Taking the most ordinary luxury suite as an example, it also includes curtains and light switches. There is a Toshiba notebook computer on the desk, which can access the Internet at any time. The paintings hanging on the wall are all authentic