Anonymous wrote:OP, this will be a funny story in a few years. It doesn't seem like tha big of a deal to me. You didn't read the reviews and were disappointed to find an aspect of the design is not to your liking. This isn't exacty new, I stayed in the W hotel in NYC and the wall between the room and bathroom was glass, and that was maybe 10 years ago. I've since stayed in maybe 5 or 6 hotels with similar features that lack privacy. I always read reviews and check pictures on trip advisor for this reason. It would have been nice if the hotel mentioned this on the website, but it's pretty common in big cities and most couples probanly wouldn't car. You have the towel for privacy, that's about as much as you can ask for. Next time make sure the hotel you book is familiar friendly.
Anonymous wrote:Im.guessing it didn't show up that often on TripAdvisor or yelp because most people just wouldn't care about this. And I agree with others. Unless you have a suite. You shod have 2 rooms. I'm guessing the hotel also thinks its main clientele wouldnt care.
Is this really an issue?
Anonymous wrote:OP, this will be a funny story in a few years. It doesn't seem like tha big of a deal to me. You didn't read the reviews and were disappointed to find an aspect of the design is not to your liking. This isn't exacty new, I stayed in the W hotel in NYC and the wall between the room and bathroom was glass, and that was maybe 10 years ago. I've since stayed in maybe 5 or 6 hotels with similar features that lack privacy. I always read reviews and check pictures on trip advisor for this reason. It would have been nice if the hotel mentioned this on the website, but it's pretty common in big cities and most couples probanly wouldn't car. You have the towel for privacy, that's about as much as you can ask for. Next time make sure the hotel you book is familiar friendly.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Ok, I have to think you're grasping here. Do you really have people looking through the crack of the door just to see someone on the toilet? The issue might lie elsewhere.
IDK if I missed something about the layout but can't the non-showering folks just face in the other direction while someone is showering so they can avoid the awful silhouette situation??
Anonymous wrote:Crap. Literally. I read this thread and then it prompted me to check out our Vegas hotel we have booked for April. I am big on doing research but somehow I missed that the door to the small toilet room is made of frosted glass and is pretty much see through. Sure, you can close the door to the bathroom completely (I think), but this is supposed to be a sexy weekend for me and DH. We don't need to see each other taking a crap. Why do hotels think this is a good idea?
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:Anonymous wrote:Who take kids to Vegas?
Entitled jackasses like OP who thinks the hotel should be held accountable because *gasp* you can see an outline of someone in the shower!
Anonymous wrote: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.
Mirrors on the ceiling and rotating beds? When's the last time you were in Vegas, 1977?