The Roygem Hotel, under the Huiyou Hotel Group, is a high-end business hotel that integrates traditional Chinese culture with modern, creating a unique "garden lifestyle" for business travelers. By using modern Chinese trends to refresh traditional culture, the hotel crafts scenes full of traditional charm, tradition with modernity. The design conceals trendy minimalism and refined simplicity, leading the trend of Eastern aesthetics. The hotel incorporates pavilions, corridors buildings, towers, walls, halls, chambers, houses, main gates, beams, courtyards, green plants, mountains, and flowing water to create scenes of traditional charm. It offers a journey through a garden, creating memories of traditional culture; transforming dreams into a search, people wander through the garden; here you feel the freedom of music, chess, calligraphy, painting, poetry, wine, and tea.
"The hotel is located in what feels like an older part of town, yet it's only a short drive to the Sky Theater. The room was spacious, and the shower featured a rain shower head. The bathroom fixtures and hardware were American standard – not overtly luxurious, but definitely feeling high-quality. The Seven Plus toiletries were a pleasant surprise, offering great value for this price point.
The hotel provides complimentary afternoon tea with a decent selection, including grape juice and machine-brewed espresso (though no lattes). We unfortunately had to skip the business meal because we were rushing to see the fireworks and couldn't wait until after 5 PM; the front desk had described it as merely two boxed meals anyway. The breakfast offerings were plentiful, and the noodles were particularly tasty.
A delightful surprise was finding a beautiful small outdoor swimming pool. Upon check-out, we were given a thoughtful parting gift: homemade puffed rice, a small snack from Cha Yan Yue Se, and a compact mirror. This level of genuine thoughtfulness is truly rare and much appreciated.
The only minor drawback was parking during a fireworks weekend. Spaces were quite limited, with the underground lot already full when we arrived in the afternoon. At night, we could distinctly hear sounds from the more remote village road behind the hotel."