Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - The apron of Burj Khalifa Hotel-a symbol of luxury

The apron of Burj Khalifa Hotel-a symbol of luxury

Dubai is the second largest city in the United Arab Emirates. In the 1950s, it was a simple seaside town in the Arabian Gulf. After the 1990s, Dubai experienced a complete transformation. Rows of skyscrapers magically stand on the banks of the Hall River. Like other cities in the Middle East, Dubai is rich in oil. However, for an ambitious new city, oil is certainly not the only thing to show its talents in the new century, and Dubai is also vigorously developing tourism. Due to its high-quality environment and colorful culture (80% of the population are foreigners), most tourists to Dubai are high-income classes such as models, artists and businessmen. Arab Tower Hotel apron

At the suggestion of the Crown Prince of Dubai, the famous entrepreneur Al-Maktoum invested in the beautiful burjAl-Arab Hotel. The luxury of Burj Khalifa Hotel is amazing. Critics don't know how many stars to give it: five, six or seven. Built on an artificial island by the sea, the hotel is a sailboat-shaped tower building with a total of 56 floors and a height of 32 1 m, designed by British designer W.S.Atkins

Burj Khalifa is facing Jumeirah Beach Hotel (considered the best hotel in the world). Burj Dubai has become the strongest rival of Jumeirah Beach Hotel, with 202 duplex rooms, a 200-meter-high restaurant overlooking Dubai and the highest atrium in the world.

After you have been to Burj Khalifa, you can truly appreciate the meaning of "resplendent". Its atrium is golden, and so is the most luxurious 780-square-meter presidential suite. The room area ranges from 170 square meters to 780 square meters, with the lowest room price of $900 and the highest presidential suite of 18000. The presidential suite is on the 25th floor, with gold-plated furniture, a cinema, two rooms, two halls and one dining room, and a dedicated elevator. Versace, the late top fashion designer, once praised it.

Burj Khalifa is a symbol of Arab luxury and a new symbol of Dubai. Walking into the tallest hotel in the world is like walking into Aladdin's cave. The evidence of luxury is beyond words, from the small submarine that takes you into the seafood restaurant, to the 17 telephone booth in each room, to the eight Rolls Royce used as the airport bus. Guests living in Burj Khalifa can even ask for a helicopter to take them to and from the airport. In the 15-minute flight, they took the lead in having a bird's eye view of Dubai from high altitude, enjoying the magnificent scenery, and then landed on the helipad on the 28th floor.

There are restaurants on the sea and in the air. Guests only need to take the express elevator to reach the Al-Mahara restaurant, which stands 200 meters above the Arabian Gulf, in 33 seconds, and enter the space-designed restaurant. Because the super luxury hotel Burj Khalifa is so special, many foreign tourists just want to visit it (for most people, they can only feast their eyes), but when they enter this hotel, they need to pay a visit fee, which is 100 dirhams (about 225 RMB) on weekdays and 200 dirhams (about 450 RMB) on holidays, but they can be used as restaurants.

Venue: Dubai, United Arab Emirates