Question on Guaranteed room/bed type
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: Dec 2004
Programs: AA CK, Marriott plat
Posts: 169
Question on Guaranteed room/bed type
I checked in and the FDC said all she had was an accessible room- I pointed out that my guaranteed room type and it did not seem that an accessible king was the same as a regular king for the guaranteed room type. Does anyone have knowledge that confirms or refutes this?
#2
A FlyerTalk Posting Legend




Join Date: Aug 2002
Programs: UALifetimePremierGold, Marriott LifetimeTitanium
Posts: 74,122
I checked in and the FDC said all she had was an accessible room- I pointed out that my guaranteed room type and it did not seem that an accessible king was the same as a regular king for the guaranteed room type. Does anyone have knowledge that confirms or refutes this?
Cheers.
#3




Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: GEG
Programs: Marriott Titanium (Lifetime Platinum,) Lifetime SkyClub, AS Atmos Platinum
Posts: 2,515
But it's hardly a room to assign to a Plat with a reservation (unless requested).
Had a King accessible room given to me by the Orlando World Center where the shower was basically unusable since the shower seat wouldn't fold up. Maintenance was less than helpful.
#4
A FlyerTalk Posting Legend




Join Date: Aug 2002
Programs: UALifetimePremierGold, Marriott LifetimeTitanium
Posts: 74,122
Agreed.
But it's hardly a room to assign to a Plat with a reservation (unless requested).
Had a King accessible room given to me by the Orlando World Center where the shower was basically unusable since the shower seat wouldn't fold up. Maintenance was less than helpful.
But it's hardly a room to assign to a Plat with a reservation (unless requested).
Had a King accessible room given to me by the Orlando World Center where the shower was basically unusable since the shower seat wouldn't fold up. Maintenance was less than helpful.

I'm Platinum. Occasionally over the years I've gotten an accessible room (usually when I've checked in really late). I just make sure that they don't have someone coming in who will actually need it. Accessible rooms don't really bother me that much, although I know others don't like them. The times I've gotten them have usually been on one night stays.
Cheers.
#5
Moderator, Marriott Bonvoy & FlyerTalk Evangelist




Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: McKinney, TX, USA
Programs: United Silver; AA Plat/2MM; Marriott LT Titanium; Hilton Gold
Posts: 11,775
I can't argue with you here, but unfortunately, I don't think an accessible room in covered under the elite Guarantee. So while I also might push to get a different room (and maybe even try to play the Plat card), there is nothing in the room or bed type Guarantee that the hotel would have to pay up on if they don't have another room.
#6




Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: GEG
Programs: Marriott Titanium (Lifetime Platinum,) Lifetime SkyClub, AS Atmos Platinum
Posts: 2,515
I can't argue with you here, but unfortunately, I don't think an accessible room in covered under the elite Guarantee. So while I also might push to get a different room (and maybe even try to play the Plat card), there is nothing in the room or bed type Guarantee that the hotel would have to pay up on if they don't have another room.
What it does indicate to me is that the people assigning rooms don't do a very good job at it, which in my mind is an indicator of a poorly-run hotel.
#7
A FlyerTalk Posting Legend




Join Date: Aug 2002
Programs: UALifetimePremierGold, Marriott LifetimeTitanium
Posts: 74,122
Cheers.
#8




Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: GEG
Programs: Marriott Titanium (Lifetime Platinum,) Lifetime SkyClub, AS Atmos Platinum
Posts: 2,515
I wouldn't go that far, but that's just me. Just like the very late arriving Gold/Plat might not get upgrade, sometimes the late arriving elite might get an accessible room. To me poor planning is if someone reserves the accessible room, arrives & finds out they're assigned a non-accessible room.
Cheers.
Cheers.
#9
A FlyerTalk Posting Legend




Join Date: Aug 2002
Programs: UALifetimePremierGold, Marriott LifetimeTitanium
Posts: 74,122
#10
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Michigan's West Coast and wherever my clients need me
Programs: Delta Diamond (2+M MQMs), Hertz PC, Marriott Titanium
Posts: 615
I checked into a room Monday evening around 6:00pm local time with a three night Plat reservation and was upgraded to a concierge level room. At this property (which has no suites), the concierge level is nice because some of the rooms are bigger and all have balconies. However, I arrived to discover that this room was accessible. This was problematic to me for the following reasons:
1. The extra room taken up by the overly large bathroom made the closet tiny and very little space in the bedroom itself.
2. I do traditional wet shaving, which I find best if I can plug the sink. The sink in this room has no plug.
3. The modified shower head was not working properly. (I found this out later and it was probably more due to maintenance than the actual room design, though).
I called down to the front desk to ask if any other non-accessible rooms were available. First, I was told that the room was not accessible. I had to have someone come up to confirm that it was. Second, I was told that my only other option was two queens on a lower floor in a part of the hotel that is experiencing heating issues (it has been pretty cold of late in Atlanta).
It seems the issue here is that the front desk did not know that the room was accessible and thought they were assigning me a pretty good upgrade (the best available at this particular property). I chose to stay in the room and live with its size and other limitations. My question is, what would others have done in this situation? I am asking for future reference, since I would not want to stay in the same room again, but don't want to be THAT GUY.
1. The extra room taken up by the overly large bathroom made the closet tiny and very little space in the bedroom itself.
2. I do traditional wet shaving, which I find best if I can plug the sink. The sink in this room has no plug.
3. The modified shower head was not working properly. (I found this out later and it was probably more due to maintenance than the actual room design, though).
I called down to the front desk to ask if any other non-accessible rooms were available. First, I was told that the room was not accessible. I had to have someone come up to confirm that it was. Second, I was told that my only other option was two queens on a lower floor in a part of the hotel that is experiencing heating issues (it has been pretty cold of late in Atlanta).
It seems the issue here is that the front desk did not know that the room was accessible and thought they were assigning me a pretty good upgrade (the best available at this particular property). I chose to stay in the room and live with its size and other limitations. My question is, what would others have done in this situation? I am asking for future reference, since I would not want to stay in the same room again, but don't want to be THAT GUY.
#11


Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: Ann Arbor, Michigan USA
Programs: Marriott lifetime Titanium, Delta Platinum
Posts: 5,485
I checked into a room Monday evening around 6:00pm local time with a three night Plat reservation and was upgraded to a concierge level room. At this property (which has no suites), the concierge level is nice because some of the rooms are bigger and all have balconies. However, I arrived to discover that this room was accessible. This was problematic to me for the following reasons:
1. The extra room taken up by the overly large bathroom made the closet tiny and very little space in the bedroom itself.
2. I do traditional wet shaving, which I find best if I can plug the sink. The sink in this room has no plug.
3. The modified shower head was not working properly. (I found this out later and it was probably more due to maintenance than the actual room design, though).
I called down to the front desk to ask if any other non-accessible rooms were available. First, I was told that the room was not accessible. I had to have someone come up to confirm that it was. Second, I was told that my only other option was two queens on a lower floor in a part of the hotel that is experiencing heating issues (it has been pretty cold of late in Atlanta).
It seems the issue here is that the front desk did not know that the room was accessible and thought they were assigning me a pretty good upgrade (the best available at this particular property). I chose to stay in the room and live with its size and other limitations. My question is, what would others have done in this situation? I am asking for future reference, since I would not want to stay in the same room again, but don't want to be THAT GUY.
1. The extra room taken up by the overly large bathroom made the closet tiny and very little space in the bedroom itself.
2. I do traditional wet shaving, which I find best if I can plug the sink. The sink in this room has no plug.
3. The modified shower head was not working properly. (I found this out later and it was probably more due to maintenance than the actual room design, though).
I called down to the front desk to ask if any other non-accessible rooms were available. First, I was told that the room was not accessible. I had to have someone come up to confirm that it was. Second, I was told that my only other option was two queens on a lower floor in a part of the hotel that is experiencing heating issues (it has been pretty cold of late in Atlanta).
It seems the issue here is that the front desk did not know that the room was accessible and thought they were assigning me a pretty good upgrade (the best available at this particular property). I chose to stay in the room and live with its size and other limitations. My question is, what would others have done in this situation? I am asking for future reference, since I would not want to stay in the same room again, but don't want to be THAT GUY.
#12
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Michigan's West Coast and wherever my clients need me
Programs: Delta Diamond (2+M MQMs), Hertz PC, Marriott Titanium
Posts: 615
At time of checkin, when the clerk says "you've been upgraded," specifically ask what bedding arrangement the room has and whether the room is "accessible." If answer is unsatisfactory, politely decline the upgrade. As I understand the rules, the room you are upgraded to is not covered by the room type guarantee. But, IMO, that does not relieve the property of the guarantee should the upgrade (to an unsatisfactory room type) be declined.
Cheers!
#13
A FlyerTalk Posting Legend




Join Date: Aug 2002
Programs: UALifetimePremierGold, Marriott LifetimeTitanium
Posts: 74,122
#1 sounds related to an accessible room. #2 & #3 sounds more like maintenance & has nothing to do with accessible.
ohmark's input is good re: the rest.
Cheers.
ohmark's input is good re: the rest.
Cheers.
#14
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Michigan's West Coast and wherever my clients need me
Programs: Delta Diamond (2+M MQMs), Hertz PC, Marriott Titanium
Posts: 615
Can't believe I just used "#2" and "restroom" in the same sentence.

