What if you could check into a hotel, have your luggage carried to your
room and order a coffee — all with help from a team of robots? Will you stay in such hotel?
A new hotel at a theme park in Nagasaki, Japan, hopes to make that dream
a reality. The Henn-na Hotel (whose name means "strange hotel") will be
partially staffed by androids that work as reception attendants, robot waiters, cleaning staff and a cloakroom attendant, The Telegraph reported. Developed by Japan's Osaka University and manufactured by the Japanese
robotics company Kokoro, many of the "Actroid" robots resemble a young
Japanese woman. The bots will be able to speak Japanese, Chinese, Korean
and English, make hand gestures, and pull off the somewhat creepy feat
of mimicking eye movements, according to The Telegraph.
The android-staffed hotel will be part of a theme park called Huis Ten
Bosch, which is modeled after a typical Dutch town. Hotel guests will be
able to access their rooms using facial recognition software instead of keys, if they choose.
"We'd like to draw visitors to this setting surrounded by nature by
establishing a smart hotel, which could be something we could spread
through Japan and the world, a spokeswoman for Huis Ten Bosch told The
Telegraph.
If the robot hotel is a success, another one may be opened in 2016, the spokeswoman added.
Room rates at the Henn-na Hotel will start at about $60 U.S.
(current dollar rate N12K plus ), but will likely remain well below the rates for the park's
other hotels, which start at around $170 to $255 (N35,000 to N52,000).
The use of robots and renewable energy will help the hotel keep its
operating costs down, The Telegraph reported.
For those Luddites who prefer a human touch, the hotel will also employ 10 human staff members.

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