Guest User
October 24, 2024
We stayed at this motel for several nights. Here is what we faced: 1. Noise: The rooms have zero sound insulation. Apart from being able to hear your neighbors’ conversations, they have some novelty, toy-like refrigerators that run extremely loudly because they are not designed for commercial efficiency. Loud enough to wake you each time the engine turns over throughout the night. We had two rooms and the fridge in one of the rooms died on the first night causing all the food we put in there to spoil. 2. Customer Service: when we spoke to the front desk person about our fridge dying and losing our food, she told us that it wasn’t her problem, but to wiggle the flammable tangle of extension cords that they use to power these toy refrigerators. She told us three times that we should just jiggle the plug and then finally said that the “janitor” would come to fix it. When we stopped back at the room, we found the toy fridge laying in the parking lot in front of the room covered in dust. 3. The “Janitor”: the first time I saw the so-called janitor, he was exiting his truck after arriving to work in the morning. As he opened the door, a haze of smoke billowed out drivers door and he proceeded to start his rounds. I have more to say about this person in my later points but that it is his introduction. 4. The Coffin-Shower: the shower in my room was the size of a coffin. This was a real problem because the shower handle and really the whole apparatus was extremely janky. They had to put a sign inside the shower instructing guests to place one hand on the shower wall and then firmly pull the handle. The reason for this instruction as I found out was that the shower handle was not anchored, so if you pulled it without counter weighting with your other hand, there was a risk it would rip through the plastic shower wall. Now, as aside from the handle issue and the shower head spurting water toward the ceiling or out of the shower due to poor seals, the water temperature fluctuated wildly at any given setting. This was the true problem because when it fluctuated to scalding hot, you could not escape the water because the shower itself was the size of a coffin and thus there was no room to escape the scalding water. You just had to endure the pain until the water fluctuated back down to a normal temperature. 5. The Furnace Filter: on the last night we were there we began to hear loud beeping five times in a row every 7 to 8 minutes from 10 PM until 4 AM. Because there is no staff there whatsoever to address any issues during the night we had to use a flashlight to explore the different areas of the room where this beeping potentially was coming from. Finally, we discovered that the alert was due to nobody replacing the furnace filter for the entirety of the summer season. When we informed the front desk in the morning that they should replace the furnace filter and that we were not able to sleep due to the continuous furnace alarm, the janitor then began