FlyZoo Hotel in Hangzhou, capital of east China's Zhejiang Province, where Alibaba has its headquarteres, is known as the company's first 'future hotel'.
Chinese
internet giant Alibaba
on Tuesday opened its first hi-tech
hotel in Hangzhou where guests can check-in by simply scanning
their faces, the state media reported.
FlyZoo
Hotel in Hangzhou, capital of east
China's Zhejiang Province, where Alibaba has its headquarteres,
is known as the company's first "future hotel".
Customers
can check into the hotel by simply scanning their faces. The facial
recognition system installed in the hotel also enables customers to
use their faces as key cards to open doors and access other hotel
services, Xinhua news agency reported.
Users
can also control the lights, television and curtains in the room via
Alibaba's voice-activated digital assistant, while robots are
deployed to serve dishes, cocktails and coffee.
Hotel
bookings and check-out can also be done with a few clicks on mobile
through an app.
"The
AI-based solution can help customers save time and relieve hotel
employees from repetitive work," said Wang Qun, CEO of FlyZoo
Hotel.
Wang
said the new AI system will help to improve the management efficiency
of the hotel, by reducing more than half of the labour force.
For
fiscal year ended March 2018, the company reported revenues of USD
39.9 billion.
The
hotel is the latest example of Chinese tech companies' foray into
traditional industries such as the hospitality sector, the report
said.
E-commerce
giant JD.com announced in October its strategy to put smart home and
electronic devices sold on its platform into hotels, in an effort to
boost online sales.
In
July, Baidu teamed up with Intercontinental Hotels Group in Beijing
to allow guests to use its voice-controlled assistant to adjust room
temperature and order room service at ease.
Before
that, social media giant Tencent introduced QQfamily, a similar tech
solution for hotel operators, in the southern city of Zhuhai last
year.
"We
want to install a 'smart brain' for hotels," said Wang. "In
the future, we will continue to make hotels smarter and more
automated, as well as create more customised experiences for
consumers," Wang added.
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