The Grand Hyatt Taipei has completed work on the
first phase of a landmark renovation, unveiling 853 new rooms and
suites in a design that pays homage to Eastern and Western
cultural influences.
After a re-imagination of space that stripped
the hotel to its concrete bones, the hotel redeveloped 14
categories of rooms and suites in its most significant overhaul
since the hotel opened in 1990.
Beyond this first phase, the hotel will embark
on a complete reconstruction of four of its nine restaurants, its
grand club facilities, the outdoor approach, as well as
behind-the-scenes infrastructural systems from air-conditioning to
electrical.
The final touches will be put upon the hotel in
the spring of 2015, leading up to the Grand Hyatt Taipei’s 25th
Anniversary.
“This reservation is tantamount to a ground-up
rebuild,” said Kai Speth, the hotel’s general manager. “Once the
work is done, the hotel will have the unique distinction of
becoming the oldest and the newest luxury hotel in Taipei.”
The Taipei renovation is concurrent with a rising
interest in the destination around the world as the travel
industry and major media turn to Taiwan as one of Asia’s most
exquisite gems. Indeed, the New York Times recently hailed Taiwan
as one of the top destinations in the world for travel in 2014,
citing its “bounty of natural and man-made wonders” and noting
Taipei’s robust art scene and selection as a World Design Capital
for 2016.
That the world is taking note of Taipei
at last has not been lost on the world’s major hotel brands, some
of whom are planning grand openings in the capital this year.
The Hyatt’s new rooms showcase a marriage of Western
and Chinese styles in the use of light-colored timber interiors
and marble bathrooms with walk-in showers or tubs.
Guest rooms range in size from 33 and 40 square meters at the
grand and deluxe levels to more than 83 square meters in an
executive suite. The new presidential suite commands more
than 221 square meters and offers up storybook views of the iconic
Taipei 101 Tower.
“When this hotel opened in
1990, we sparked development all over the Xinyi District,” Kai
Speth
said. “Today, as we steer toward a grand re-opening, our ambitions
are no less lofty for Taipei, and all of Taiwan.”
Hyatt,
Grand Hyatt,
Taipei
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