Tablet

Hotel G

7A Gongtixilu, Chao Yang District, Beijing, China

China | Beijing Hotels

Add to Favorites Favorites Email Print

Reserve Online

Lowest price over the last 30 days: RMB 848.64 (approx. GB£ 85)

Best rate guaranteed. Need to book a group?

Tablet Plus Privileges

Tablet Plus: every stay includes select privileges and/or amenities. View privileges

Tablet Plus privileges for Hotel G include:

Join Tablet Plus Learn More

Close

  1. At a Glance
  2. Reviews
  3. Amenities
  4. Map & Guide
  5. Plus Privileges
  • 18.5 Feedback Score
    out of 20

    Details Hide details

    • Rooms

      19.0

    • Service

      18.0

    • Public Spaces

      18.0

    • Overall

      18.5

  • 53 Verified
    Guest Reviews

    View

What recent guests liked:

  • rodney

    “ambiance”

  • morgan

    “Great room! Cool guests from all over the world. … ”

  • Chris

    “Very stylish, spacious rooms. Good location for nearby … ”

  • Mims

    “Beds are so comfortable, great, fun restaurant (Scarlett), … ”

Hotel G

7A Gongtixilu, Chao Yang District

Beijing, China

Style: Cutting-Edge

Atmosphere: Happening

110 Rooms

TabletPlus Budget

If you accept the premise that this is China’s century (and we’re all just living in it) then logically one inescapable conclusion follows: they’re going to need a lot more boutique hotels. This, obviously, is what the Hotel G is for: a new 110-room boutique in the hip-yet-luxurious mode, located in the nightlife and entertainment district of Sanlitun, with three restaurants and a lobby café of its own — just the sort of hotel-as-social-center that every cosmopolitan city needs.

This being Beijing, it’s a new build, albeit one with a groovy Sixties-luxe theme in its interiors, alongside some contemporary loft style and some pronounced Chinese details. Forget clichéd red silk though; here the colors are cool and muted, in greys, blues and browns. Plasma TVs are standard, as are iPod docks, both more or less necessities in the increasingly tech-driven boutique hotel world.

Restaurants include the Scarlett and the North-African/Mediterranean Gilt, both worthy culinary options and lively nightspots to boot. And for winding down there’s a sixth-floor “urban retreat” — not quite a spa, but a lounge at least, with a garden, Jacuzzis, and a gym. Expect to see more like this in Beijing in the coming years.

Back to top