robothotel
Latest
Japan's ridiculous robot hotel is actually serious business
"My name is Yoshiyuki Kawazoe. This is my hotel." The University of Tokyo's associate professor of architecture gestures behind himself to a flat, two-story building that doesn't really look like a hotel. "Two-hundred people were involved in making this happen," he says. "Experts in environmental design, engineering, architecture, robotics and construction ... it's their hotel." The "Hen-na Hotel" will go down in tourist guides as the robot hotel, but there's more being invested in here than just talking robots: The minds behind it hope the facility will change the world of low-cost hotels -- and save the world. (Well, at least a little.)
A very surreal check-in at Japan's robot hotel
#fivemin-widget-blogsmith-image-173137{display:none;} .cke_show_borders #fivemin-widget-blogsmith-image-173137, #postcontentcontainer #fivemin-widget-blogsmith-image-173137{width:570px;display:block;} try{document.getElementById("fivemin-widget-blogsmith-image-173137").style.display="none";}catch(e){}Welcome to Henn-na Hotel. Here's what happens when you try to check into a hotel that's (mostly) run by robots.
Meet the faces of Japan's first robot-staffed hotel
Japan's first robot-staffed hotel opens this week and we just got the full tour. While the main attraction may be the bordering-on-human receptionist (left) and the English-speaking dinosaur (er, right), the hotel has a whole family of robots performing varying degrees of useful work. Think: room service and a luggage porter, with one familiar face taking up duties as a bilingual concierge. A deeper dive of the hotel is coming; the robots aren't the only curiosity found inside this hotel. For now, let's meet the bots.