Two maintenance workers taped 2 towels from the room side yesterday, and they told us they didn't know people can see through that "mirror" - not sure whether to believe them.Anonymous wrote:OP, there is a dollar store about a mile due east of your hotel. Go there, find either a shower curtain or a plastic tablecloth and a roll of packing tape. Go back and tape the plastic over the inside of the shower so that the person in the shower is the only one who can remove it. If the window all is large, buy 2 shower curtains or tablecloths. Done.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Yes, we are at The Cromwell. Our teens are younger girls - like 13-14 y.o., so I'm not that sure they are ready for their own room in Vegas. We planned a lot of family activities here - magic shows, trip to Grand Canyon. By accountable, I wonder if at least they could be obligated to disclose the nature of their design beforehand. Their room is also so dark that even when all lights are on, you can still see a silhuette of a person in the shower. There is also no lock on the bathroom door, it's sliding, and through the crack you can see a person on the toilet. Oh well! The hotel personnel just apologized and said they'll inform their management, but it didn't seem like they were going to offer us anything extra - vouchers, etc. I'm more concerned about making them informing other families in advance than refunding us our money.
I'm grateful for your responses, they made me happy that at least we weren't watched having sex or doing anything else in that matter.
Anonymous wrote:We made a mistake booking a hotel in Vegas without carefully reading the reviews. When we came here, it turned out that there is a see-through wall between the shower and a living space. When the lights are on in the shower, and the lights are off in the room, you can see a person in the shower. Under the normal day light, the wall looks like a mirror on both sides. Nobody in the hotel informed us about that trick, and we are a family of 2 parents and 2 teenagers, so it was a very unpleasant discovery to make. When I spoke to the receptionist, she sounded very aware about the issue and sent a couple of maintenance workers who covered the "mirror" with the towels on the room side.
It's an expensive hotel, and I feel very uneasy with the situation. Should the hotel be held accountable in any way? I just read their reviews on yelp, and people have been complaining about the issue for quite a while. I don't understand why they designed the wall that way and why they don't inform their guests, especially staying with the kids, about that.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly all hotels in Vegas are somewhat like this. Mirrors on the ceilings, rotating beds, open showers... It's not really the place for kids. Stay somewhere cheaper and get two hotel rooms.
Anonymous wrote:Absolutely, if it was just my husband and I, it wouldn't be a problem, but I strongly believe that they should inform the families in advance or don't allow families with kids in the hotel. Even if I stayed with my mom or my girlfriend, I would be quite upset to make that unexpected discovery.