Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - Star hotel star

Star hotel star

The commonly used stars in the world are five stars, the lowest is one star, and the highest is five stars. Star rating is usually based on the hotel's architecture, decoration, facilities, management and service level. The higher the star rating, the larger the hotel scale, the more luxurious the equipment and the better the service, which means the more expensive the price. Some hotels don't have any stars, usually because they may not even reach the one-star standard. Some countries and regions set up platinum five stars, six stars or even seven stars above the five stars. Although some organizations have tried to establish a set of world-wide star standards, due to different national conditions and technical difficulties, star standards are still based on the different situations of countries in the 2 1 century, and countries have formulated their own standards. Some countries don't even have recognized and consistent standards, which also leads to the same international star rating. Because there are more and more five-star hotels, and some newly-built luxury hotels are obviously higher in quality than traditional five-star hotels, they have a rating of six or even seven stars. This rating may not have a recognized standard, and it is often just a trick of advertising or a rhetoric of the media. However, this exaggeration is sometimes a folk evaluation based on certain facts. Hotels that claim to be six or seven stars with their own goodwill usually have certain strength. 2 1 century, there are four seven-star hotels in the world:

Burj Khalifa in Dubai (commonly known as the Sailing Hotel).

Grand Lisboa Macau

Guangdong Obis Resort Hotel

Centaurus Hotel in Marbad, the Pakistani capital, is expected to open on 20 10.