Wujindexinjing
November 21, 2024
When I first checked in, I felt that the hotel was close to the subway station, the front desk could speak Chinese, and it was pretty good. Although the room was small, it looked clean.
But on the first day, I felt that the room was a little cold after I checked in, but I didn't care. I was tired from walking during the day, so I took a hot shower (the faucet was not like other hotels in Japan where you can set the temperature while running water. There was a hot water faucet on one side and a cold water faucet on the other side, and you had to slowly adjust the water temperature yourself) and just wanted to rest immediately, so I didn't find a hotel. The next day, the temperature in Tokyo dropped sharply. I went out for a walk early in the morning, and it was okay to put on a scarf. In the afternoon, I was getting colder and colder, so I ended the trip early and went back to the hotel to rest. At this time, the room seemed particularly cold, and I couldn't warm up in the quilt (the quilt was not down). I asked if the hotel air conditioner could adjust the temperature? I couldn't find the remote control of the air conditioner. The hotel replied that the air conditioner was a central air conditioner without a remote control, and now it only had ventilation but no temperature adjustment (what era is it, the central air conditioner can't adjust the temperature? And it's mid-to-late November now, and it's cold and you don't turn on the heater?) They said that if it was cold, I could go downstairs to get a blanket. I asked why you couldn't send it over? The hotel said that they did not have this service, and their attitude was arrogant, rude, and cold. Even when Ctrip staff took the initiative to help contact them, the result was the same. What kind of hotel lets guests suffer from the cold and still feel that it is their due? There is always a group of Chinese people who are on tour groups in the lobby every day. The business license of this hotel online is also a Chinese business license, so I will not associate it with any discrimination. I was very uncomfortable so I didn't want to go downstairs, so I ended up sleeping in a cashmere sweater and cotton pants. I stayed for two days, and the so-called cleaning in the middle was just picking up the garbage and replenishing disposable toothbrushes. Nothing else was cleaned, and the quilts and sheets were not tidied or changed. I will not stay in this kind of hotel again and I don't recommend it to anyone. Fortunately, Ctrip has been helping to coordinate and apologize, and gave me some compensation so that I could buy a cup of hot milk tea to warm up, so that the foreign trip did not become impersonal. I wish Ctrip will do better and better! ,
Original TextTranslation provided by Google