Story highlights Entrepreneur opened up the small hotel using memorabilia from Hong Kong's Occupy Central protests

For as little as $10 per night, guests can pay to sleep in an original occupy tent

11-week-long pro-democracy protests captured the imagination of people around the world

Hong Kong (CNN) The face of Hong Kong's chief executive covers the toilet paper and China's leader lingers next to you in the shower. Safe to say -- it's not your average hotel.

Tucked away in an apartment building on a quiet side street of Hong Kong's busy Causeway Bay district, this small hotel is a shrine to the Umbrella Revolution.

Freelance translator Stephen Thompson rented the apartment in early December, in the same week that police began clearing out the city's pro-democracy protest sites.

Photos: Hong Kong Occupy Central Hotel Photos: Hong Kong Occupy Central Hotel Hong Kong resident Stephen Thompson opened the Occupy Central Hotel on the 13th floor of a Causeway Bay residential building in early December 2014. Hide Caption 1 of 11 Photos: Hong Kong Occupy Central Hotel Guests can rent tents with names from the protest movement, such as "Freedom House" and "Foreign Force HQ." Hide Caption 2 of 11 Photos: Hong Kong Occupy Central Hotel In addition to original posters from the Hong Kong pro-democracy protests, the "Occupy Central Hotel" is decorated with artwork by activists depicting some of the demonstration's memorable moments. Hide Caption 3 of 11 Photos: Hong Kong Occupy Central Hotel Owner Stephen Thompson says he had 1,000 rolls of toilet paper printed in China with Hong Kong Chief Executive CY Leung's face. Hide Caption 4 of 11 Photos: Hong Kong Occupy Central Hotel The chief executive, who refused to engage with the movement's leaders, was a focal point for the protesters' frustration. Hide Caption 5 of 11 Photos: Hong Kong Occupy Central Hotel Gas masks, police tape and other Hong Kong protest artifacts fill Thompson's 600-square-foot apartment in Causeway Bay. Hide Caption 6 of 11 Photos: Hong Kong Occupy Central Hotel Newspaper clippings, posters and artwork from Hong Kong's three main protest sites wallpaper the kitchen of the Occupy Central Hotel. Hide Caption 7 of 11 Photos: Hong Kong Occupy Central Hotel Chinese President Xi Jinping is depicted holding an occupy movement umbrella on the hotel's shower curtain. Hide Caption 8 of 11 Photos: Hong Kong Occupy Central Hotel Thompson says he has had about 40 guests so far from all over the world come and stay at his Occupy Central Hotel to learn more about Hong Kong's pro-democracy protests. Hide Caption 9 of 11 Photos: Hong Kong Occupy Central Hotel Nicholas Watmough, 26, England, told CNN: "I'm traveling around the world at the moment and this was something that I wanted to see -- a minor gesture in support of the movement since I couldn't be here for the actual protests." Hide Caption 10 of 11 Photos: Hong Kong Occupy Central Hotel Thompson says he has been warned by the building security guard to remove the police tape outside his door, after neighbors expressed concern. Hide Caption 11 of 11

Memorabilia

"I literally got the keys and then the next day I went down to Admiralty (the main protest site) and the police were coming and I just grabbed as much as I could," says Thompson.

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