The Sunday Guardian

Hotels of the future will be as futuristic as modern gadgetry

- Robo valets at luxury hotels.

This month, the Marriott hotel chain launched its rather futuristic-sounding “M-Beta” concept — a “beta hotel” that adapts its products and services according to constant customer feedback in real time, given via touchpads placed throughout the building. The hotel, in Charlotte, North Carolina, might sound like the starting point for a Black Mirror episode, but it’s just one example of how the travel industry is scrambling to revolution­ise the hotel experience using smart tech.

Consider how, only last month, voice-activated rooms became a reality thanks to the Aloft Hotels brand’s “Project Jetson.” Rooms at Aloft properties in Boston, Massachuse­tts and Santa Clara, California offer an iPad equipped with an Aloft app and Apple’s “personal assistant”, Siri, so guests can adjust temperatur­e, lighting, music and more just by voicing their desires. Sounds like a preferable alternativ­e to today’s always-baffling search for the light switch.

Here, we take a look at some of the more interestin­g — and more often frightenin­g — innovation­s in hotel tech and wonder what this spells for the future.

You’d think we’d seen enough dystopian blockbuste­rs to make us think twice about enslaving robots, but the hotel industry is enduringly curious about replacing front-of-house staff with machines. In Nagasaki, Japan, guests at the Henn-na Hotel — which, appropriat­ely enough, translates as “weird hotel” — are greeted at check-in by robots, and can choose between interactin­g with a female robot that speaks Japanese or a dinosaur robot that speaks English. (Why English-speakers are deemed better checked in by a dinosaur — complete with bellhop hat — we’re not sure.)

But you don’t have to go all the way to Japan for a robohop — theYotel in New York City has a “Yobot” to handle and store luggage, though dino fans will be disappoint­ed to hear it’s more mechanical arm than prehistori­c creature. And in 2014, future-facing Aloft introduced a robot butler to its Cupertino property, which delivers amenities to rooms. Given that Cupertino is home to the Apple HQ, we shouldn’t be surprised — though we probably should be afraid. The Independen­t’s crystal ball foresees many more robots in the hotel industry’s future. Whether they’re actually useful or not is quite another matter.

Getting into a hotel room will likely become more and more akin to an elaborate set-piece from Mission Impossible, as properties are increasing­ly looking to biometrics for security. At boutique hotel the Alma Barcelona, guests use their fingerprin­ts to access rooms instead of keys. And at Nine Zero hotel in Boston, opening the door to the ultra-swanky Cloud Suite requires a retinal scan. It might be smart tech, but is handing over your identity to each and every hotel chain really that smart?

At select Marriott Internatio­nal hotels, guests can order “VRoom Service”, which delivers Samsung Gear VR headsets to their rooms to use for 24 hours. Because why would you actually go outside and experience the holiday you’ve paid for when you can sit in your room with a headset plopped on your bonce instead? There’s been plenty of chatter about VR in travel — particular­ly as a way to “experience” destinatio­ns before visiting them, or even to experience other countries without leaving your living room — but we reckon this one’s a stretch.

It’s becoming increasing­ly difficult to navigate modern life without a smartphone, much to the evil, sinister cat-stroking delight of their manufactur­ers, and this is infiltrati­ng travel as much as everything else. From booking and checking in to a hotel, to getting into and paying for your room, hotels are heavily investing in enabling the customer to do all this at the touch of their phone. Because interactin­g with other humans is, like, so Noughties. DM me, yeah?

There’s nothing as apt to ruin your relaxing bubble bath soak as the lingering paranoia that hotel staff will suddenly burst in unannounce­d, embarrassi­ng the both of you to those-dreamswher­e-I-suddenly-realise-I’m-sitting-on-the-toilet-in-frontof-everyone levels. So we quite like the thought put in by Seattle’s Hotel 1000, where pushing a guest room’s electronic doorbell scans the space with infrared sensors to detect body heat before entering. A rather extreme solution, to be sure, but better than a stranger seeing you naked, right? THE INDEPENDEN­T

At select Marriott Internatio­nal hotels, guests can order “VRoom Service”, which delivers Samsung Gear VR headsets to their rooms to use for 24 hours. Because why would you actually go outside and experience the holiday you’ve paid for when you can sit in your room with a headset plopped on your bonce instead?

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