九州瑾程酒店 JiuZhou JinCheng Hotel
全螢幕瀏覽
檢視所有相片(5)5
已經預訂這家飯店了嗎?
請告知我們以協助您規劃。
平均每晚 HK$553,12/2 - 12/3
HK$584
每晚
HK$553
每晚
HK$521
每晚
12月
1月
12月2日
今天
12月4日
12月6日
12月8日
12月10日
12月12日
12月14日
12月16日
12月18日
12月20日
12月22日
12月24日
12月26日
12月28日
12月30日
1月1日
依照我們合作夥伴報告的最新平均每晚價格顯示,且可能不包含預估的稅金或費用。結帳時價格可能不同。
價格較低
一般
價格較高
詳情
位置
518067 廣東 深圳 南山區工業二路 中海油石油大廈B座
以當地語言顯示的名稱/地址
交通方式
適合步行者
住宿地點將獲評為 0 至 100 分。 分數越高,旅客就越容易在步行距離內找到餐廳和景點活動。
評分: 89/100
89
1評論0問與答0客房秘訣
評論
旅客評分
- 0
- 1
- 0
- 0
- 0
一年中的時間
旅客類型
語言
已選篩選條件
- 篩選條件
Recently completed a seven night government-assigned quarantine stay at this hotel. This was the higher-end assignment, with all rooms 600+/night (with one meal set included, additional sets 100/person). Clearly over the last closing in on three years, the entire quarantine model and profit-making has ramped up….unlike past experiences, upon arrival with the government bus our family and the ~10 others assigned to this place were sat in the lobby for an intro talk. The intro talk was focused on the various room types and rates we were allowed to select, as well as advertising their extra-cost services like meal ordering from the hotel, upgraded meal sets, and rental exercise equipment (treadmills, stationery bikes, weights). It’s
In the room itself - we selected a B tower upgraded room of supposedly ~45 sqm. It did have a large main room w/ a chaise as well as a table, as well as sizeable hallways. These hallways under normal use would be a complete waste, but under quarantine circumstances were good as an office (hotel sent a simple desk and chair for free) and a workout space. Room itself was clean and modern - from past quarantine experiences I had brought my own sheets, but no need here. Bathroom quite large too, although the toilet had a bit of an odor. Small fridge in the minibar also useful.
Some complaints though beyond that…
- Rental rates for exercise equipment or a baby crib were a bit absurd…for the treadmill or bike, rental rate for a week (or 10 day stay if required) was ~70% of the items cost. The equipment seemed pretty banged up too - we originally ordered a bike, but its rusted condition and lack of advertised interactive features led us to decide to return it immediately. For a baby crib they wanted 280/RMB a night, so would have been ~2000 RMB for the week. We instead just ordered our own.
- Food could have been worse…but also could have been better. Lunch and dinner each consisted of a tray of 1-2 meats, 1-2 vegetables with separate containers of soups and rice. A bit greasy, but they did seem to at least try with variety. We didn’t order any of the extra-cost meals - in hindsight the 240 RMB Western Set of Borscht, Mango Salad, Angus Steak, and Tiramisu might have been worth it for the laughs alone…
- Like most quarantine hotels these days, Jiuzhou does not officially permit Waimai hotel food delivery, but was fine with grocery packaged food orders. It turned out with some experimentation - this obviously unclear line wasn’t really enforced. I started by mixing some hot deli food items into Walmart/Ole/Hema orders, and then progressed all the way to ordering Western sandwiches and breads from some of the bakeries and delis in Shekou. We didn’t push it to any sort of Chinese dishes, so perhaps as long as what we ordered wasn’t recognized as a meal by a middle-age Chinese bao’an security guard we were fine? I was however defeated in my last night attempt to circumvent the no-alcohol rules by ordering a cider (conveniently not labeled as liquor in Chinese), but props to them as they did realize it was alcohol and withhold it from me.
Anyway, it’s quarantine. This is a bit of a premium option, and really says something about the economy that a hotel in this sort of location right next to Seaworld finds doing quarantine the best business…but if you have to, it could be a lot worse. I guess if I do quarantine again (I really hope not!) I would try and come back here…not that you really can choose anyway…
In the room itself - we selected a B tower upgraded room of supposedly ~45 sqm. It did have a large main room w/ a chaise as well as a table, as well as sizeable hallways. These hallways under normal use would be a complete waste, but under quarantine circumstances were good as an office (hotel sent a simple desk and chair for free) and a workout space. Room itself was clean and modern - from past quarantine experiences I had brought my own sheets, but no need here. Bathroom quite large too, although the toilet had a bit of an odor. Small fridge in the minibar also useful.
Some complaints though beyond that…
- Rental rates for exercise equipment or a baby crib were a bit absurd…for the treadmill or bike, rental rate for a week (or 10 day stay if required) was ~70% of the items cost. The equipment seemed pretty banged up too - we originally ordered a bike, but its rusted condition and lack of advertised interactive features led us to decide to return it immediately. For a baby crib they wanted 280/RMB a night, so would have been ~2000 RMB for the week. We instead just ordered our own.
- Food could have been worse…but also could have been better. Lunch and dinner each consisted of a tray of 1-2 meats, 1-2 vegetables with separate containers of soups and rice. A bit greasy, but they did seem to at least try with variety. We didn’t order any of the extra-cost meals - in hindsight the 240 RMB Western Set of Borscht, Mango Salad, Angus Steak, and Tiramisu might have been worth it for the laughs alone…
- Like most quarantine hotels these days, Jiuzhou does not officially permit Waimai hotel food delivery, but was fine with grocery packaged food orders. It turned out with some experimentation - this obviously unclear line wasn’t really enforced. I started by mixing some hot deli food items into Walmart/Ole/Hema orders, and then progressed all the way to ordering Western sandwiches and breads from some of the bakeries and delis in Shekou. We didn’t push it to any sort of Chinese dishes, so perhaps as long as what we ordered wasn’t recognized as a meal by a middle-age Chinese bao’an security guard we were fine? I was however defeated in my last night attempt to circumvent the no-alcohol rules by ordering a cider (conveniently not labeled as liquor in Chinese), but props to them as they did realize it was alcohol and withhold it from me.
Anyway, it’s quarantine. This is a bit of a premium option, and really says something about the economy that a hotel in this sort of location right next to Seaworld finds doing quarantine the best business…but if you have to, it could be a lot worse. I guess if I do quarantine again (I really hope not!) I would try and come back here…not that you really can choose anyway…
閱讀全文
住宿日期:2022年10月旅程類型:家庭旅行
這則評論是 Tripadvisor 會員的主觀意見,而非 Tripadvisor LLC。 Tripadvisor 會檢查評論。
找不到搜尋結果 • 請嘗試變更或清除您的搜尋以閱讀問與答。
價位
HK$584 - HK$669 (根據標準客房的平均房價)
位置
中國廣東深圳
價格是由合作夥伴提供的平均每晚價格,且不含任何稅金和費用。 顯示的稅金及費用皆僅為約略金額。 如需更多詳細資料,請瀏覽我們合作夥伴的網站。
這是您的 Tripadvisor 企業詳情嗎?
此物業由您擁有或管理嗎? 免費認領您的企業詳情,即可回應評論、更新檔案和進行更多操作。
認領您的企業詳情