September 29, 2009

Eat Your Heart Out Willie Wonka

The Chinese have had a mouth-watering idea for a tourist attraction – a chocolate theme park.

The World Chocolate Dream Park – reminiscent of Roald Dahl’s much-loved book Charlie And The Chocolate Factory – will feature a life-sized Terracotta Army, Great Wall of China and versions of famous paintings. All, presumably, will be carefully guarded to stop them being eaten.

The park, due to open in January next year, will be located in the Olympic Green in Beijing, which also includes the iconic Bird’s Nest stadium and the Water Cube aquatics centre used during the summer Games last year. There will be five pavilions and two outdoor sites.

Chocolate is not as popular in China as it is in Western countries, but the nation’s younger generation have increasingly acquired a taste for it.

Tina Cheng, general manager of the company that will operate the park, said some prestigious European chocolate makers – notably from Switzerland and Belgium – wanted to take part in the project. “Our chocolate wonderland will be beyond imagination,” she said.

by Andy Moreton

For those with great taste, Luxique offers the best in luxury hotels in Beijing, including the award-winning Peninsula Palace and Shangri-La Beijing.

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April 28, 2009

Wall Flowers

The most popular tourist attraction in China, the Great Wall, is even greater than previously thought. A two-year government mapping study has uncovered ‘new’ sections covering hundreds of miles.

Using infra-red range finders and GPS devices, experts discovered parts of the wall concealed by hills, trenches and rivers stretching from Hushan in Liaoning province in the north to Jiayu Pass in Gansu province in the west.

The official China Daily newspaper said the newly-mapped parts of the wall had been built during the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) to protect China against northern invaders and had been submerged over time by sandstorms that moved across the region.

Recent studies by Chinese archaeologists have shown that these sandstorms are reducing sections of the wall in Gansu to ‘mounds of dirt’ and that they may disappear entirely in 20 years. The studies mainly blame the erosion on destructive farming methods used in the 1950s that turned large areas of northern China into desert.

In recent years, China has begun restoring parts of the wall as well as trying to curb commercial development on or next to the ancient structure.

The Chinese say: ‘If you haven’t climbed the Great Wall, you haven’t been to China.’ The sections around the Chinese capital, restored since the Communist Party took power in 1949, draw hundreds of thousands of visitors each year.

But tourist encroachment has also been a problem, with state media saying that around Badaling, near Beijing, almost every brick on a popular section of the wall has been carved with people’s names or other graffiti.

by Andy Moreton

Luxique offers an unrivalled selection of luxury hotels in Beijing, boutique hotels Shanghai and other parts of China.

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July 7, 2008

Games Room

It’s reported that hotels in Beijing are doing much less business than they’d hoped and expected for the forthcoming Olympics.

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The city’s summer season is said to be slow, with hotels and travel agencies saying many would-be tourists have been put off by tight visa regulations, polluted air and less-than-welcoming officialdom. The number of foreign tourists visiting Beijing in May fell by 14 per cent.
China has spent a reported £20 billion ($40 billion) on new infrastructure and Olympic venues and has more than doubled its quota of 4- and 5-star hotels to 160 since Beijing was awarded the Games seven years ago. One report says 5-star hotels are at 77 per cent occupancy for the period of the Games and 4-star hotels at 44 per cent; hoteliers are looking for 90 per cent or above.
Travel business analysts had forecast that the Olympics would bring 500,000 foreign visitors and an extra £2.2 billion ($4.5 billion) in revenue this summer. But now, even though some five-star hotels are fully booked, many economists are beginning to doubt that the city will get the kind of economic windfall it was hoping for.

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Luxique has a selection of fabulous Beijing luxury hotels, including the world-class Peninsula Palace and Shangri-La Beijing.
by Andy Moreton

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