Regent Taipei

Regent Taipei (Chinese: 晶華酒店; pinyin: Jīnghuá Jiǔdiàn) is a luxury hotel[1] in Zhongshan District, Taipei, Taiwan. It opened in 1990 as the Regent Taipei, and later became the Grand Formosa Regent before reverting to its current name.[2] It is owned and operated under brand Regent Hotels & Resorts which jointly owned by IHG Hotels & Resorts and Silks Hotel Group.

Regent Taipei
台北晶華酒店
Former namesThe Grand Formosa Regent
General information
Location25.05413°N 121.52398°E / 25.05413; 121.52398
AddressNo 3, Lane 39, Section 2, ZhongShan N, Rd., Zhongshan, Taipei, Taiwan
Opened1990
Other information
Number of rooms538

History

Regent Taipei was conceptualised in 1973 by Formosa International Hotels founder, S.R. Pan, upon the need for a luxury hotel in Taipei. This was later realised in 1984 when Y.H. Chen of Tuntex Group cooperated with Pan to build this hotel. An agreement with Regent International Hotels was signed the same year to manage the hotel. The hotel opened in 1990 as The Regent Taipei. In 2011, the hotel name was reverted to Regent Taipei after being titled Grand Formosa Regent for 17 years.[2]

Restaurants and shops

The hotel is home to Azie Grand Cafe, one of the eight restaurants housed within Regent Taipei. The restaurant is known for its beef noodles which was claimed to be one of the best by the Taipei Beef Noodle Festival as well as CNN Travel in 2015.[3]

Regent Galleria

Regent Galleria occupies a two-story space that occupies the entirety of the hotel's basement. It features boutiques such as Chanel, Chopard, Harry Winston, Bulgari, Hermés, Bottega Veneta, Loro Piana, Louis Vuitton and Bang & Olufsen.

The hotel's lobby, entrance and its Presidential Suite were featured in 2014 film Lucy by Luc Besson.[4]

See also

References

  1. "Regent Taipei". The Michelin Guide. Retrieved 2023-09-19.
  2. "Regent Taipei" (PDF). Regent Hotels. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  3. Tacon, Dave. "Taipei's best beef noodles". CNN. Retrieved 2016-05-06.
  4. "'Lucy' shooting ends with praise - Taipei Times". www.taipeitimes.com. Retrieved 2016-05-06.
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