Cavernous hotel takes root in Shanghai  
An underground hotel slated to become the world's "lowest" is to be  built in 
this city's suburbs. 
The project, to be developed by the Shimao Group, has passed its  
environmental evaluation and is expected to be completed by the end of  2010. 
The five-star hotel, which will require an investment of about 600  million 
yuan (US$79 million), will be built in a cave by Tianma Hill, in  the Sheshan 
national resort area. It will be part of the "Shimao New  Experience", a 
massive real estate project. 
The project will occupy some 428,300 sq m and will include a theme  park, a 
nature resort and a shopping center. 
The cave was formerly a stone pit with a lake at the bottom. 
The hotel will have 480 rooms, 400 of them underground, Li Xuyang, a  senior 
manager of the Shimao Group's architecture design department,  said. 
"Two stories will be built underwater, 17 will be within the cave and  two 
more will be above ground," Li said. The roof of the hotel will only  be 15 m 
above the cave. 
"The idea was to take advantage of this unique land form and to create  a 
garden growing in the air," Li said. 
The design will make full use of the rock walls, following the natural  
curves of the cave. 
"We won't consider expanding the cave, but we will make the best out of  the 
present situation," Li said. 
According to the artists' impressions of the hotel on the Shimao Group  
website, the design will accommodate facilities for extreme sports and  certain 
aquatic activities like climbing and swimming in the underground  lake. 
Hot springs will be available 16 stories below the ground, and a dining  hall 
and cafe will be built underwater on the 17th floor, near a  100-m-high 
waterfall. 
Although the developer's PR department declined to provide any further  
specific information about the project, an unidentified source with the  
company 
said an inauguration ceremony would be held next week. 
Meanwhile, the project seems to have won support from the  community. 
"Our company intends to tap the tourism potential of Tianma hill," Qian  Wei, 
the PR representative of the Shimao Group, told China Daily. "And the  
Songjiang District supports the idea." 
The hotel will also include underground presidential suites that will  have 
the best views of the cave. Some of the underwater rooms will feature  aquarium 
views, where guests can enjoy the exotic feeling of living under  the ocean. 
"It's hard to imagine how it feels to live 50 m or even 70 m below the  
ground, but it must be a wonderful experience," Li said. 
(China Daily October 24, 2007) 
_http://www.china.org.cn/english/China/229450.htm_ 
(http://www.china.org.cn/english/China/229450.htm) 




************************************** See what's new at http://www.aol.com

Reply via email to