Anonymous wrote:I'm not surprised there wasn't a manager on duty and had nearly this same thing happen to us at a Marriott (Fairfield, I think). In our case we had other options and checked into a Home2Suites by Hilton. Marriott fought us (hard!) on giving us anything back even though we left immediately. We ended up getting money back from Amex, probably because the Hilton manager had noted at check-in that we'd just left the Marriott down the street due to the room being uninhabitable (chemical smell/humidity/no a/c). Anyway, I'd try to get something back from Marriott and, if that fails, your credit card.
Anonymous wrote:I work for a hotel company. (Hilton/Marriott)
Most hotels in our class don’t have operable windows- safety issue. People fall, try to smoke, or try to jump.
Most hotels have revenue management departments that know when demand is high and raise prices and when demand is low, they lower prices. This is true across the portfolio. It is market driven.
If you have a problem with a room, you can
1. Ask your switch rooms (tough when they are sold out)
2) ask for or go buy an air filter
3) leave, find another hotel and ask for a credit later after your trip. Easier to fight the cost later after the trip.
There typically isn’t a general manager at the hotel on a weekend, but there is someone in charge of the front desk. But easier to deal with complaints and credits after the weekend is over, during business hours with the hotel or with the corporate call center.
Anonymous wrote:At the Ritz? 24/7 Yep. At a Residence Inn in a college town? Probably not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this story is fake. There is no hotel that has operable windows you aren’t allowed to open. If you’re not allowed to open them, they aren’t operable.
Can you imagine how much time a Residence Inn would spend asking people to close windows if there were operable windows that were just not supposed to be opened?
If it’s a fire escape, it would be alarmed. OP wouldn’t be able to just open them.
It’s also ridiculous to say that OP would have asked about opening the windows in the first place. You just try them. No one goes to the desk to ask if they can open a window.
Not fake. I thought most hotels don’t allow you to open the windows (and have measures in place to prevent it.)
So I didn’t even try to open it.
I asked the employee at the front desk for a fan to help air it out and she mentioned that they open. So I went back to my room and looked—and she was right! So I opened them. Then, like I said, there was a shift change and suddenly a guy I hadn’t seen before was at my door telling me I had to close them. He and his co worker (not the same one who told me the windows open) were the ones I felt with after that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you know there was no possibility of moving rooms; what did you want to tell the manager?
This, OP.
Btw hotels (and airlines) always jack up prices for parents' weekends. I remember that happening when I was in college in a city 35 years ago. Of course a chain hotel in a college town is going to be overpriced and sold out. Either book your stay way in advance (like as soon as they release the calendar) or stay further away from your kid.