Radisson Hotel Group is taking an ambitious leap into the wellness hospitality space by launching its new “Revitalize Rooms” program.
Partnering with Biow, a European sleep technology company, Radisson has introduced Cold Atmospheric Plasma-powered devices into select hotel rooms to address a longstanding pain point for travelers: poor sleep while staying away from home.
A Strategic Response to “Away-Somnia”
Research consistently shows that sleep quality ranks among the top priorities for hotel guests.
However, only a fraction of travelers sleep better in hotel rooms than they do in their own beds. Radisson is positioning its Revitalize Rooms initiative as a direct solution to this widespread issue, which it terms “away-somnia.”
The program’s technological backbone is the Biow E-OX device, a silent, energy-efficient machine that operates 24/7 in the background. Leveraging plasma technology and integrated light therapy, the device aims to:
- Eliminate airborne biotoxicity
- Emit energy that stimulates cellular regeneration
- Reduce oxidative stress
- Promote relaxation through red and green light therapy
This approach reflects a broader strategic shift in the hospitality industry where sleep quality is no longer a mere comfort feature—it is fast becoming a core value proposition.
Initial Deployment: A Market Test or a Competitive Signal?
Revitalize Rooms are currently available in four European properties:
- Radisson Collection Royal Hotel, Copenhagen
- Radisson RED Liverpool
- Radisson Blu Hotel, Madrid Prado
- Radisson RED Madrid
While limited in scope, this pilot signals Radisson’s intent to test guest receptiveness, operational feasibility, and potential for scaling across its global portfolio. If successful, the rollout could position Radisson as a frontrunner in sleep-focused wellness hospitality, a segment that has gained traction with brands like Six Senses and Park Hyatt.
Differentiation in a Saturated Market
The adoption of Cold Atmospheric Plasma technology is a bold move. While many hotel chains have dabbled in pillow menus, soundproofing, and even sleep concierges, few have implemented hardware-based wellness solutions integrated at the room level. Radisson is redefining the guest experience around health optimization by offering what amounts to an in-room sleep lab.
This differentiation becomes particularly relevant in competitive urban markets, where traditional hotel value levers (location, food and beverage, loyalty perks) are increasingly commoditized.
Will the Science Hold Up?
Though promising, plasma-based wellness technology is still new to the hospitality industry. While Biow claims improved cellular function and stress relief benefits, independent peer-reviewed studies validating these outcomes in hotel environments are limited.
If Radisson wants to scale this offering and maintain credibility, it will need to collect guest satisfaction data, partner with academic institutions, and potentially publish its findings. Otherwise, the initiative risks being dismissed as pseudoscience, particularly by wellness-savvy consumers.
Strategic Implications
Radisson’s Revitalize Rooms are more than a guest amenity; they signal the company’s strategic direction. The group is making a clear investment in positioning itself as a wellness-forward brand, which may have downstream effects on:
- Pricing power: Wellness rooms may command higher average daily rates (ADR).
- Guest segmentation: Attracting sleep-sensitive business travelers and wellness tourists.
- Brand equity: Shifting from budget legacy perceptions to innovation leadership.
Radisson could influence industry standards if this approach gains traction, prompting competitors to rethink what constitutes a “good night’s sleep.”
Conclusion
Radisson’s experiment with Biow sleep technology reflects a growing consensus: quality sleep is now central to the hospitality experience. As wellness becomes a competitive battleground, the question is no longer whether guests want better sleep—it’s whether hotels can deliver it at scale, credibly, and consistently.
If Radisson can prove the efficacy and value to guests of its Revitalize Rooms, it may well set a new benchmark for the intersection of health tech and hospitality.
About Radisson Hotel Group
Established in 1960 and headquartered in Brussels, Radisson Hotel Group is one of the world’s largest hotel companies, operating over 1,100 properties under brands including Radisson Blu, Radisson RED, Radisson Collection, and Park Inn by Radisson.
The group serves leisure and business travelers across key global markets and has made recent strategic moves into wellness, sustainability, and digital transformation.
In recent years, Radisson has expanded aggressively in Europe, Africa, and Asia Pacific through management contracts and franchise agreements.