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 16 March 2009
Hotel Review: The Opposite House in Beijing | nytimes.com

Starting with the Forbidden City, Beijing has always had a love affair with bigness, one that in recent years has gotten supersized — not just in terms of the modern metropolis’s gazillion-lane thoroughfares and mega-jumbo-developments, but also its towering hotels. Thankfully, the Opposite House promises some relief. Built during the capital’s rush toward last year’s Olympics, this 99-room boutique property is the first from Swire Hotels, a new Hong Kong-based group with international ambitions. And at a boxy six stories, clad in screen-printed glass in pixilated shades of green, it’s a Kengo Kuma-designed stunner that has the city’s chattering classes exclaiming over its generous rooms and dramatic, moodily lit atrium — all offering an aura of quiet and intimacy.
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hotels, new hong kong-based group, year’s, intimacy, recent years, screen-printed glass in pixilated shades
nytimes.com

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