Guest User
September 24, 2022
It's been a while since I posted. My friends, their parents and their children, and my wife and I went to Nagasaki to see the Blue Impulse when the Kitakyushu Shinkansen opened on September 23rd. The city is buzzing with excitement due to its first big event in a while. It was difficult to get a reservation, but I finally managed to secure a garden suite on September 22nd. The hotel... has the subtlety of a designer hotel... Kengo Kuma's early hotels, Beijing's Opposite House and Commune, are delicate and less bold, but are they typical of the commercial archetypes that use Kengo Kuma? I feel like that. One of Kengo Kuma's early works is the bathhouse of Horai, which is now known as Kai. At that time, the annex Villa del Sol was a designer hotel. The service is there. The hospitality and consideration... The most important things, such as the nice hard sofa that someone wrote about, are missing. I wanted to see the Blue Impulse from the hotel on the 23rd if possible, but I couldn't get any answers even after consulting with them (there was a wedding going on, etc.) and I didn't feel comfortable, so I had to take a sightseeing taxi by myself. So I went to Glover Garden on the opposite bank in the rain. (By the way, I was able to see practice at the same location the day before under clear skies!) For reference. I visited the wine bar at 20:00, but was told it was closed. So, I ordered sparkling wine from room service while watching the night view in my room. The staff courteously brought wine and glasses, but there was no wine cooler...I think this says it all. Also, we couldn't go up to the top floor because we didn't know about it beforehand because there was a charge. Lack of public space? He's polite, but doesn't he smile a lot? It may be a stylish and smart hotel for young people, but I miss the three-star hotels in Europe and other places where even the inconveniences are provided with hospitality.
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