Hotel JAL City Nagasaki
Seeking “community symbiosis” precisely because of our location in Chinatown
Located in Nagasaki Shinchi Chinatown, Hotel JAL City Nagasaki is perfectly situated for both sightseeing and business. Our modern guest rooms designed along “Old Shanghai” themes promise your trip will be next-level.
A copy of the Dejima-Ezu (gro und plan of the Dejima trading post in the early 1800s) is displayed in the hotel lobby as the hotel stands on the former site of the Tojin-nigura (Warehouse for Chinese merchants). Next to the Dejima-Ezu stands a section of the stone seawall that was part of the Tojin-nigura. Excavated in 1996 when the hotel was being built, this section of wall was relocated and put on display in the hotel lobby as a reminder of the past.
Protecting community prosperity by purchasing local produce
Another of the hotel’s attractions is the “Nagasaki Breakfast” Japanese-Western-Chinese-style breakfast buffet. In addition to an alternating selection of Chinese dishes such as Dim-sum, Congee, Mapo Tofu, and Fried Shrimp in Chili sauce—perfect for breakfast in Chinatown!—the buffet serves representative local Nagasaki dishes Champon and Sara Udon noodles on alternate days. Not only that, the buffet includes local gourmet foods Toruko (Turkish) Rice and Agodashi (dried flying fish broth) Miso Soup as well as familiar local sweets such as Castella cake and Candied Pomelo Peel, presenting a uniquely Nagasaki menu that emphasizes the purchasing of local produce. The buffet also features a selection of popular local drinks including Nagasaki Mandarin Juice (containing 100% Unshu Mandarins), Sonogi-cha green tea, and Isahaya Milk.
Giving Form to Responsible Usage and Hope for Peace
At Hotel JAL City Nagasaki, we pursue eco-friendliness from various perspectives, such as providing biomass products for guest room amenities and using LED lightbulbs at the Front Desk and in the Lobby. We also highly value our philosophy of “Together with Our Guests.” An example of this is an initiative whereby we ask guests to fold origami cranes with a wish for world peace, then collect these paper cranes and string them together in bundles of one thousand to be displayed in Nagasaki Peace Park on August 9, the anniversary of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki. We also place eco cards in guest rooms that guests can hang on the door to their room to indicate they do not wish for the towels or sheets to be changed, thereby saving washing water.
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