Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - What kind of hotel service is the most inhumane?

What kind of hotel service is the most inhumane?

The most inhumane service I have ever experienced is hotel service. The most annoying thing is that you are not allowed to bring your own food or a bottle of mineral water. It is not humane at all.

Moreover, most hotels require check-out at 12 o'clock, while high-end hotels can generally delay check-out until 14 o'clock, or even later. Breakfast in ordinary business hotels usually starts at seven o'clock, and the night before the meal ends at nine o'clock, socializing until 11 o'clock, and you can't get up to have breakfast at all the next day.

Usually traveling is not only about seeing the scenery, but also about cylindrical milk protection. When traveling to a city, apart from checking in at scenic spots, you will try to taste the local food and find a place to rest. There are many kinds of hotels now, and you can choose according to your personal consumption level.

I had the opportunity to go to the largest plateau summer resort in Southeast Asia. On the Genting Highlands, I had to rest for two nights and find a comfortable hotel. It's a pity that I chose the most inhumane hotel here.

Since I came here for vacation, I thought it would be easier to stay one more night, so I booked a hotel in the earliest hotel built in Genting Highlands, which is truly the largest hotel.

I went to the hotel to check in with great joy, but when I arrived at the hotel lobby to check in, all my previous good ideas were shattered.

Although the check-in counter in such a large hotel is more than 30 meters long, there are very few check-in staff at the counter. At the busiest time, there are only three or five hotel rooms. So many , there are many passengers checking in, but these few staff members are obviously not enough. The passengers checking in have queued up early, which is not humane. I originally thought about queuing up, but was kindly informed that I would recommend checking in at the self-service counter to save time.

Imagine the world’s largest hotel with 7,351 guest rooms. There are very few staff in the hotel lobby. There are more than 50 self-service check-in and check-out machines in the entire hotel lobby, which is quite impersonal. .