The Idiots who Design Marriott Rooms
#451
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 7,875
#452
Some things I don't like:
- closets where the the lights won't ever go off. Why do I even need lights? I have had to manually turn them off at the fuse box level.
- Family rooms where there is a glass wall into the bathroom. Seriously, why would they do this? (I am curious why hotels have gone the glass wall route anyways???)
- Bathrooms where the toilet is next to the the shower and the shower wall doesn't give you a lot of room to sit comfortably on the toilet.
- Bathrooms where the toilet has its own little room. I think sometimes the space could be bigger.
- Lighting controls where you have to walk over the other other side of the king to turn off the left/right side reading light. Why can't the side with the phone control ALL the lights?
- Rooms that don't have a proper desk.
- Bathrooms with those drains that don't really let water go down, so when you shave you have to run the water for 5 mins to get all the foam to go down.
- Hotels with like 20 floors but only a couple elevators.
- closets where the the lights won't ever go off. Why do I even need lights? I have had to manually turn them off at the fuse box level.
- Family rooms where there is a glass wall into the bathroom. Seriously, why would they do this? (I am curious why hotels have gone the glass wall route anyways???)
- Bathrooms where the toilet is next to the the shower and the shower wall doesn't give you a lot of room to sit comfortably on the toilet.
- Bathrooms where the toilet has its own little room. I think sometimes the space could be bigger.
- Lighting controls where you have to walk over the other other side of the king to turn off the left/right side reading light. Why can't the side with the phone control ALL the lights?
- Rooms that don't have a proper desk.
- Bathrooms with those drains that don't really let water go down, so when you shave you have to run the water for 5 mins to get all the foam to go down.
- Hotels with like 20 floors but only a couple elevators.
#454
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 2,042
The glass wall bathroom can save a few inches as opposed to the thickness of a wall. The additional glass can make a small room feel lighter and airier. But I hate the loss of privacy whether it is in a king room for a couple or a double/double. Who does not want privacy in the bathroom? Even if the glass is obscured glass, you still see the silhouette.
#455
Join Date: Aug 2003
Posts: 2,373
We recently stayed at the Marriott Marquis San Diego Bay, and noticed that in our balcony room, when standing near the sliding glass doors to the balcony, we could both see and be seen by guests on the level below and above us-just by looking at the glass partition on the balcony. This was startling and freaky. This is a great location if you like to people watch, or if you like to be watched.
#456
Suspended
Join Date: Jun 2005
Programs: Delta Diamond, Marriott Ambassador & Lifetime Titanium, Hertz President's Circle, United Silver
Posts: 6,334
We recently stayed at the Marriott Marquis San Diego Bay, and noticed that in our balcony room, when standing near the sliding glass doors to the balcony, we could both see and be seen by guests on the level below and above us-just by looking at the glass partition on the balcony. This was startling and freaky. This is a great location if you like to people watch, or if you like to be watched.
#457
Privacy smart glass would be even better but probably too costly for most properties.
#458
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: DAY
Programs: UA 1K 1MM; Marriott LT Titanium; Amex MR; Chase UR; Hertz PC; Global Entry
Posts: 10,159
Stayed at the Newark Airport Marriott recently. Open air, very small closet nook. No desk / desk chair. More like a motel 6 then a full-service Marriott. But I am sure it saved a couple bucks per room when furnishing...
#459
They were going for the Gilded Age look at St. Regis Astana but the faucet has no indication for temperature or flow. You get blasted first turn no matter what. Designer never took a shower in this hotel.
#460
Suspended
Join Date: Jun 2005
Programs: Delta Diamond, Marriott Ambassador & Lifetime Titanium, Hertz President's Circle, United Silver
Posts: 6,334
I've stayed at some other properties where either the the water temperature wasn't marked or hot was cold and cold was hot.
#461
Suspended
Join Date: Apr 2019
Programs: Marriott Ambassador
Posts: 117
I have been very disappointed in the quality of decor and furnishings at new and renovated properties, most of which feature that hip, new design supposedly favored by millennials and whatever the generation after them is called. Unlike the older, classic design that lasted a good 7-8 years before it needed replacing, I've stayed at a lot of properties that within 2 years of opening (either brand new or after extensive renovations) show a surprisingly amount of wear and tear, including door knobs and handles. Has Marriott International's standards changed to the point where developers are using cheaper, less durable furnishings and decor elements? Some of this stuff is just cheap. It looks cheap, feels cheap and proves not to be durable. I guess it's true that they don't build things like they used to do.
#462
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 17,457
I have been very disappointed in the quality of decor and furnishings at new and renovated properties, most of which feature that hip, new design supposedly favored by millennials and whatever the generation after them is called. Unlike the older, classic design that lasted a good 7-8 years before it needed replacing, I've stayed at a lot of properties that within 2 years of opening (either brand new or after extensive renovations) show a surprisingly amount of wear and tear, including door knobs and handles. Has Marriott International's standards changed to the point where developers are using cheaper, less durable furnishings and decor elements? Some of this stuff is just cheap. It looks cheap, feels cheap and proves not to be durable. I guess it's true that they don't build things like they used to do.
#463
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: RSW
Programs: Delta - Silver; UA - Silver; HHonors - Diamond; IHG - Spire Ambassador; Marriott Bonvoy - Titanium
Posts: 14,185
Sorry I didn't get a picture of it, but I had a Marriott room recently that was a strange shape, made up obviously out of a corner of miscellaneous leftover space on the floor. The small bathroom was configured so that the shower had half a fixed plexiglass (perspex) wall, and half that slid back for entry. The immovable wall had no obstruction all. Unfortunately, the sliding entry section was "blocked" by the toilet, requiring the guest to squeeze past (over jump over!) the bowl.
#464
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Join Date: Apr 2019
Programs: Marriott Ambassador
Posts: 117
#465
In Memoriam, FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Durham, NC (RDU/GSO/CLT)
Programs: AA EXP/MM, DL GM, UA Platinum, HH DIA, Hyatt Explorist, IHG Platinum, Marriott Titanium, Hertz PC
Posts: 33,857
First time I've run into this. I was staying at a new construction CY (Columbus Phenix City / Riverfront) and there was a desk (yay) which had a light under the TV which was above the desk:
I could not figure out how to turn off that light. I looked around for five minutes until I finally called the front desk to ask for help. The agent on duty had to ask her manager who explained it to me.
You have to pull the TV away from the wall (it's designed to swivel) and the switch is hidden behind it. In all my years of travel this is the dumbest design feature I've encountered.
I could not figure out how to turn off that light. I looked around for five minutes until I finally called the front desk to ask for help. The agent on duty had to ask her manager who explained it to me.
You have to pull the TV away from the wall (it's designed to swivel) and the switch is hidden behind it. In all my years of travel this is the dumbest design feature I've encountered.