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Category: Ningbo News
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Published: Friday, 13 January 2012 13:47
The Park Hyatt Ningbo Resort and Spa is set to open in the eastern coastal city of Ningbo. The hotel is the first Park Hyatt-branded resort in China, offering luxury services tailored to leisure travelers and high end meeting groups.
The property offers 236 contemporary guestrooms, including 17 suites and 10 free-standing villas ranging from 45 to 237 square meters (484 to 2,551 sq ft). The guestrooms feature a double daybed situated by large picture windows for in-room pampering and relaxation. The bathroom features a bathtub, vanity area, rain shower and dressing area.
Park Hyatt Ningbo Resort and Spa has been created in the style of a traditional Chinese water village to blend discreetly into the surrounding vista. The complex of low-level, standalone villas with simply plastered exteriors and tiled, gabled roofs resembles a hamlet that has developed organically over time. Multiple open courtyards and sky wells, punctuated with ponds and gentle landscaping, echo Chinese architectural principles. The interconnecting structures create a layered effect and an experience of gradual discovery for guests, unveiling new spaces at every turn.
Read more: Park Hyatt opens in Ningbo
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Category: Ningbo News
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Published: Monday, 09 January 2012 15:24
click on picture for full size please
On January 17, 2012 7Pm, German writer Stefan Schomann will give a lecture from his book „Letzte Zuflucht Schanghai“ (Last Refuge in Shanghai). It tells the true and highly unusual love story between Robert Sokal, a poor refugee from Vienna, and Chenchu Yang, a young lady from a well-to-do family from Ningbo. They met during World War II in Shanghai and, despite of all opposition and the dramatic circumstances in this “age of extremes”, they became a couple.
The lecture will be in English, with some samples in German and Chinese. It will start at 7 p.m.
On this occasion, Mr. Schomann will also give an introduction to his exhibition “Lost China”, which features historic photographs taken by Eugen Flegler, a German professor at Tongji University in the 1930s. The exhibition will be shown at the Ningbo Museum, opening on January 18 at 4 p.m.
Please see the announcement for the location of the reading/ lecture
Please register below
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