Hah, not that kind of hotel!

Although when I saw this post in my feed I didn't realize it at first, and I thought, "what in the world is this guy trying to do!?!"
Yes, JunkCatsOnThePorch is right, a Scoby hotel is not the same thing as your brewing vessel. It's a different vessel where you store your collection of Scobys when they're not in use, or you're waiting to give them out to friends, etc.
Brewing vessel - This is the pot you brew up your sweet tea in before fermentation.
Fermentation vessel - This is the thing you put your sweet tea in, drop in your Scoby, and leave it to do its thing.
Scoby hotel - Where you store scobys when you're not using them.
Claypot2 has the right idea though. That's more or less the continuous brew method. Basically take out most of the fermented kombucha, leaving a little bit behind as your "starter" tea. Then fill the vessel back up with unfermented sweet tea, leaving the Scoby on top of course.
I think the starter tea is actually more important than the Scoby, and modern line of thinking is that the Scoby might not even be needed at all, but is more of a protective barrier byproduct of fermentation, similar to a pellicle on sour beers.
I didn't actually buy an Scoby to kick off my kombucha brewing habit. Just start by using a bottle of commercial, all natural, unfiltered, unflavored kombucha as your starter tea (GT's is great for this), and brew a batch as directed, just don't use a Scoby. A couple of weeks later you should have kombucha and a nice scoby on top.