The Borneo Post

High-end hotels seen booming in Tokyo to attract tourists

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TOKYO: Luxury hotels are set to open in Tokyo with the aim of attracting an increasing number of tourists visiting Japan and affluent people such as corporate managers who visit the metropolis on business.

Last Wednesday, Nagano Prefecture-based Hoshino Resorts opened Hoshinoya Tokyo in the Otemachi business district, where many companies including financial institutio­ns are headquarte­red.

Many of the hotels in the nearby areas feature a Western ambience, but the new 18- storey, 84-guestroom tower was entirely designed as a Japanese- style inn.

Guests take off their shoes at the entrance, and walk through a tatami-mat corridor to the checkin counter. There are open- air hot spring baths on an upper floor. Room rates start at 78,000 yen (about RM2,800) including tax and service charge.

In Tokyo’s Akasaka area, Prince Hotels will open The Prince Gallery Tokyo Kioicho with 250 guest rooms next Wednesday.

The new hotel occupies the top seven floors - 30th to 36th - of a skyscraper located at the former site of the Grand Prince Hotel Akasaka. The guest room windows are wide so people staying there can enjoy the scenic views.

The highest accommodat­ion fee is 590,000 yen (excluding tax and service charge) for one of the suites.

Other hotels are also to open in Tokyo in preparatio­n for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and Paralympic­s and in response to the increased number of visitors to Japan.

In Otemachi, Canada’s Four Seasons Hotels Ltd. will open a hotel in spring 2020.

In the Toranomon district, the rebuilding work for Hotel Okura Tokyo is under way, with its opening scheduled for 2019.

Mori Building Co. and Mori Trust Co. also plan to open new hotels in the area. — WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? Hoshinoya Tokyo, which opened this week in Tokyo’s Otemachi business district as a Japanese-style inn; high-end hotels are seeing a constructi­on boom in Tokyo. — WPBloomber­g photo
Hoshinoya Tokyo, which opened this week in Tokyo’s Otemachi business district as a Japanese-style inn; high-end hotels are seeing a constructi­on boom in Tokyo. — WPBloomber­g photo

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