HOLIDAY INN THE CASTLE
Hotel
•
€€
2024
Recommended
•
2024
Jumping into a fairy tale is now possible on International drive with this hotel, which literally has the shape of a castle. Nothing to do with a relais-château, it is an American style, thick curtain with walls, candelabre in candelabre, modern baroque decoration. Swimming pool, bar, restaurant. Transformation of the toad into charming prince not included. Free transfers. The swimming pool is pleasant with a Jacuzzi in the open air.
Did you know? This review was written by our professional authors.
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Members' reviews on HOLIDAY INN THE CASTLE
3.8/5
16 reviews
Value for money
Location
Cleanliness
Setting / ambience
Service
The ratings and reviews below reflect the subjective opinions of members and not the opinion of The Little Witty.
The issues started upon arrival at my room:
-Food (crushed almonds) and pills (Advil) strewn across the rug in the middle of the room. I’d be very upset if an economy hotel called my room clean with food on the floor, let alone what Marriott calls their “boutique to luxury” collection.
-Couch stained all over with over a dozen crusty white spots that I hope were milk.
-The shower smelled like a wet gym towel. Clearly it had been left damp and then the room closed up. It was overpoweringly unpleasant, so I opened the window and ran the room fan on high until housekeeping could clean it properly (remember this detail).
-A tear/ hole in the bed’s fitted sheet right at head level. Impossible to miss with even the quickest glance.
The rug and shower were quickly remedied by the hotel, but at 11:30 PM, after a long day of travel and work, standing in the hall while my room is cleaned is not a “luxury” experience.
Next, the breakfast: a few trays of soggy eggs, potatoes, breakfast meat, etc…with the only a la carte offerings being omelets or other egg preparations. The average Residence Inn/ Fairfield Inn, etc…has more diverse offerings that also taste far better. Every Autograph Collection at which I have to date stayed has had a fantastic restaurant, always well above average. It was unexpected to be offered such bad food and no “menu” choices.
Finally, and worst of all: on the morning of my checkout I was woken (despite a do-not-disturb sign) at 7:30 am to a phone call from the front desk. Despite the fact that my room’s window freely opens (and even has the common hotel “stopper” so that it can only open a few inches), despite the fact that nowhere in the room is a sign asking guests to not open the window, and despite the fact that the window has been opened for the past three days straight, apparently an employee had noticed my open window from the pool deck and decided that at 7:30 in the morning is was essential that I close it immediately, due to an unpublished “engineering rule”.
Is it a “luxury” or “boutique” experience to be woken at 7:30? Is it a luxury or boutique experience to have an employee argue with you that you are not allowed to open a second floor window (that only opens three inches) on a dry 65 degree day? Did this need to be addressed at that hour, considering I was checking out just three hours later? I am still stunned that this occurred.
It completely cheapens the Autograph brand that this hotel is allowed to retain membership.