Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - Service facilities of Hong Kong Harbor View International Hotel
Service facilities of Hong Kong Harbor View International Hotel
Catering facilities: heating and air conditioning, remote control color TV, cable TV
Catering services: Bay View Hall: The Bay View Hall offers a variety of dining options with stunning views of Victoria Harbor. Options such as buffet breakfast, lunch, dinner, and casual meal options at various times. The hotel restaurant regularly launches hotel buffets with various flavors or themes from various countries during dinner. The delicious dishes from all over the world selected by the chef will definitely bring a new dining experience to the taste buds of the guests; MezzFloor: The atmosphere is relaxed, the decoration is fashionable, and it is a good place to eat. An ideal restaurant for enjoying light snacks and having fun together at noon.
Services: Provide shuttle buses and limousines between the airport and the hotel (bus costs HK$140 per person per way)
Hotel services: safe, luggage storage, 24 Hourly reservations, restaurants, travel consultation, Internet access in the room, air conditioning in the room
- Related articles
- "go on road trip" recommended where to go during the May Day holiday, and collected 8 of the most classic go on road trip routes in China.
- How about Anping serviced apartment? OK? Is it worth buying?
- Hotels around Shenzhen Citizen Center
- Is Super 8 Hotel Hefei Tianshui Road Rong Feng Garden worth staying in?
- How to get from Shenyang North Railway Station to Auspicious Hyatt Theme Wedding Hotel (Pangjiang Street Branch)
- Which countries did Zheng He sail to for the first time?
- Does Shanwei Yuexing Hotel have supporting facilities?
- Night flowers are full of fragrance, jade people stop embroidery, flowers are all embroidered skillfully, and Yuanyang embroidery is unsuccessful. what's the meaning
- Kunshan Katie used to be a crematorium? Today, I heard that everyone in old Kunshan knows that locals don't buy that neighborhood?
- Four-character idiom of Fujian-Taiwan Museum