British street artist Banksy unveiled his latest project on Friday – a hotel overlooking Israel's West Bank security barrier.

Banksy reportedly said the so-called Walled Off Hotel, which located just outside Bethlehem and is to open its doors this month, has "the worst view in the world."

The Guardian on Friday described the project as "hotel, protest and art in one."

Open gallery view An Israeli security watch tower is seen from one of the rooms of Banksy's Walled Off Hotel in the West Bank city of Bethlehem, March 3, 2017. Credit: Dusan Vranic, AP

The facility, which consists of nine rooms and one suite, is meant to bring tourists and jobs to Bethlehem and foster dialogue between young Israelis who would stay there and the Palestinian residents of the city, according to The Guardian. Banksy's support team is treating it as a business endeavor and not an art stunt, the report said.

The hotel is located in an area under Israeli security control, which means Israelis would be able to travel there legally. Its walls will feature exhibitions by Palestinian artists, who, according to Banksy, have scarce opportunity to show their work around the world.

In addition to serving high tea to passing visitors, in line with its "colonial" theme, the hotel has a small museum. One exhibition features a wax statue of Lord Balfour signing his declaration.

Open gallery view Street artist Banksy's newly opened Walled Off hotel in the Israeli occupied West Bank town of Bethlehem, on March 3, 2017 Credit: Thomas Coex, AFP

Banksy, a longtime critic of the occupation, has in the past drawn works on the separation barrier in Bethlehem.

And after the 2014 Gaza war, the artist snuck into the Strip to make a "tourist video" showing squalid conditions there.

In 2015, Banksy's so-called bemusement park project, Dismaland, featured the works of Israeli and Palestinian artists side by side. This prompted a protest from one of the latter creators, Shadi Alzaqzouq, who covered his work with a sheet on which he had written “RIP Gaza: Boycott Israel” in charcoal, then lay down for an apparently spontaneous “die-in” in front of it.

Open gallery view A picture shows a bed and graffiti inside street artist Banksy's newly opened Walled Off hotel in the Israeli occupied West Bank town of Bethlehem, on March 3, 2017. Credit: Thomas Coex, AFP

Open gallery view A bellboy stands outside street artist Banksy's newly opened Walled Off hotel in the Israeli occupied West Bank town of Bethlehem, on March 3, 2017. Credit: Thomas Coex, AFP

Open gallery view Street artist Banksy's newly opened Walled Off hotel in the Israeli occupied West Bank town of Bethlehem, on March 3, 2017 Credit: Thomas Coex, AFP

Open gallery view Wall decorated with security cameras and slingshots in the bar area of the Banksy's Walled Off Hotel in the West Bank city of Bethlehem, March 3, 2017. Credit: Dusan Vranic, AP

Open gallery view A picture taken from street artist Banksy's newly opened Walled Off hotel in the Israeli occupied West Bank town of Bethlehem shows Israel's controversial separation wall, March 3, 2017. Credit: Thomas Coex, AFP

Open gallery view Banksy's work is displayed in the Walled Off Hotel in the West Bank city of Bethlehem, March 3, 2017. Credit: Dusan Vranic, AP

Open gallery view Street artist Banksy's newly opened Walled Off hotel in the Israeli occupied West Bank town of Bethlehem, on March 3, 2017 Credit: Thomas Coex, AFP