Marriott..Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: MSP
Programs: DL DM, Marriott Plat, National Exec Elite
Posts: 1,357
Marriott..Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
I would have to say out of my 500 plus nights in a marriott in the past 5 yrs, that this is probably one of the worst hotels. Small rooms, mold on the shower curton..etc
Thought the international marriotts were better?
Just my two cents
Thought the international marriotts were better?
Just my two cents
#3



Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: DUB - Ireland
Programs: EI-GCE, BD-G, BA-G, A3*G, TK*G, FB-G, HH-G, Hyatt-Dia
Posts: 8,527
Well, I'm in the Marriott Riyadh and while not exactly knocking my socks off, it is still a nice enough hotel - and I would come back here again, if I had to comeback here again, if you see what I mean. 
I'm in a standard room - and it appears to be about 25 sq. m and is furnished with a very comfortable king bed, two winged chairs, a work desk with high speed internet, modest TV (which isn't a problem, cos there's nothing on but guys with beards, CNN and BBC World). Th bathroom is spotlessly clean and of a good size. Room safe, ironing board and bottle of complimentary water daily. mini-bar, reasonably priced, but not containing anything interesting - chocolate, water, juices gum and cigarettes. Decor is a bit 1990s, or American style - depending on your perspective - clean, well maintained, but about to be tired, but not quite yet. There are two executive floors and a lounge. Haven't been up. A local English paper is hung on my door each morning.
Room: 7.5/10
Reception is inside the main door, past all the scurity, barriers, and x-ray machines. Check-in was efficient (at 3am, mind) and the bags were in our rooms before we were. The lobby is a large open atrium containing the 6 floors of the hotel, with balconies looking down on to the cafe area, a fountain and on to the lift shaft, which has 4 glass lifts (elevators) lookong in to the atrium. As with everything in Saudi Arabia, it is a smoking area - and the smoke makes its way on to the non-smoking floors. There is a coffee/snack/light food menu available all day - service is a bit slow, but the quality is good. Regardless of what you purchase, it always seems to costs SR110.
Check-in 8/10
Lobby/Atrium 6/10 due ot smoke - otherwise 8/10
Pool and health club are very nice and well resourced - there is a large selection of cycle/running/stepping machines - all working with varying programmes and cardio-monitoring, full gym, sauna, steam room, freezing plunge pool and the smallest changing rooms in the world. Such a shame, as everything else is generously proportioned. There's also a squash court with a/c. The ppol was heated to 28 degrees, which was a bit too warm, while the plunge pool was just 12. Staff are helpful and friendly. Women not welcome - this is Saudi afterall, but a female colleague was accommodated by having a cycle machine placed in her bedroom - which I thought was excellent service. ^
Health club: 8/10 (9.5 if the changing rooms had space)

I'm in a standard room - and it appears to be about 25 sq. m and is furnished with a very comfortable king bed, two winged chairs, a work desk with high speed internet, modest TV (which isn't a problem, cos there's nothing on but guys with beards, CNN and BBC World). Th bathroom is spotlessly clean and of a good size. Room safe, ironing board and bottle of complimentary water daily. mini-bar, reasonably priced, but not containing anything interesting - chocolate, water, juices gum and cigarettes. Decor is a bit 1990s, or American style - depending on your perspective - clean, well maintained, but about to be tired, but not quite yet. There are two executive floors and a lounge. Haven't been up. A local English paper is hung on my door each morning.
Room: 7.5/10
Reception is inside the main door, past all the scurity, barriers, and x-ray machines. Check-in was efficient (at 3am, mind) and the bags were in our rooms before we were. The lobby is a large open atrium containing the 6 floors of the hotel, with balconies looking down on to the cafe area, a fountain and on to the lift shaft, which has 4 glass lifts (elevators) lookong in to the atrium. As with everything in Saudi Arabia, it is a smoking area - and the smoke makes its way on to the non-smoking floors. There is a coffee/snack/light food menu available all day - service is a bit slow, but the quality is good. Regardless of what you purchase, it always seems to costs SR110.
Check-in 8/10
Lobby/Atrium 6/10 due ot smoke - otherwise 8/10
Pool and health club are very nice and well resourced - there is a large selection of cycle/running/stepping machines - all working with varying programmes and cardio-monitoring, full gym, sauna, steam room, freezing plunge pool and the smallest changing rooms in the world. Such a shame, as everything else is generously proportioned. There's also a squash court with a/c. The ppol was heated to 28 degrees, which was a bit too warm, while the plunge pool was just 12. Staff are helpful and friendly. Women not welcome - this is Saudi afterall, but a female colleague was accommodated by having a cycle machine placed in her bedroom - which I thought was excellent service. ^
Health club: 8/10 (9.5 if the changing rooms had space)
Last edited by GoldCircle; Dec 24, 2009 at 3:52 pm Reason: the end of my post went missing - must have been flaky Marriott internet ;)
#4



Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: DUB - Ireland
Programs: EI-GCE, BD-G, BA-G, A3*G, TK*G, FB-G, HH-G, Hyatt-Dia
Posts: 8,527
The place is beginning renovations now and some of the facilities are closing in rotation. Rooms still have that 90s feel about them. And the beds are still super-comfortable.
Executive room, this time - and absolutely identical in every detail, except for the following: extra bath mat in front of sink, weighing scales and cotton wool in a jar by the sink. Fluffy bathrobe in wardrobe. 1 small bottle of water per day is provided; there's a larger 1L one costing SR20 on the desk. The executive lounge is on the fifth floor and is reasonably nice, if somewhat small. Breakfast was nice - selection of pancakes and French toast, scrambled eggs (really quite good), turkey-bacon and who-knows-what-meat sausages, youghurts, pastries, fresh fruit and cerials. Also, a Saudi breakfast food was in one pan - I didn't investigate. Coffee machine provided good coffee, but simply not hot enough. Sevice was poor - with most people sitting down to dirty tables and the waiter scrambled to clear up around them. My rate includes breakfast, so I'll be eating downstairs for the rest of the week as the selection is bigger and clean tables available.
Internet is not free on the executive floor - costing SR500 p/w - considering the costs of this only-slightly-above-average hotel that's a very big
#5
Used to be bulldoggolfer05
Join Date: May 2007
Location: So Paulo, BR/Miami Beach, FL/NYC/DXB
Programs: HGP DMD, HHonors DMD, SPG PLT, MR PLT
Posts: 2,295
#6


Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: ATL
Programs: DL SkyMiles, MR, HH, ICH/PC, Avis Pref., Hertz Gold
Posts: 2,897
Although it has been a few years since I've been there (and I didn't have to go back
), the lounge used to have free Internet terminals. Is that no longer the case? Not that it matters much as the Internet was heavily censored with any sites with any reference whatsoever to sex or Judaica a guaranteed block.
), the lounge used to have free Internet terminals. Is that no longer the case? Not that it matters much as the Internet was heavily censored with any sites with any reference whatsoever to sex or Judaica a guaranteed block.
#7



Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: DUB - Ireland
Programs: EI-GCE, BD-G, BA-G, A3*G, TK*G, FB-G, HH-G, Hyatt-Dia
Posts: 8,527
There are terminals in the lounge. The internet servcie seems considerably faster now than before and very much less censored; of course, a VPN, properly configured, never hurts. 
Also, the TV has been upgraded to include various satelite channels form the Emirates and elsewhere. I even saw a woman in a Bikini on one channel.

Also, the TV has been upgraded to include various satelite channels form the Emirates and elsewhere. I even saw a woman in a Bikini on one channel.
#8



Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: DUB - Ireland
Programs: EI-GCE, BD-G, BA-G, A3*G, TK*G, FB-G, HH-G, Hyatt-Dia
Posts: 8,527
Also, just to add, that in my experience, the points never post from this property (unlike Jeddah, when next day is the norm) and so a retro-claim becomes necessary.
#9
A FlyerTalk Posting Legend




Join Date: Aug 2002
Programs: UALifetimePremierGold, Marriott LifetimeTitanium
Posts: 74,139
GoldCircle, I'm maintaining a master list of Marriott exec lounges open on the weekend worldwide (see stickey in this forum).
Looking for a) is it open on the weekend; b) if not, do they offer brekkie certs to Golds/Plats; c) if the lounge is closed, is it key accessible for water/soda & i-net terminals; d) are there i-net terminals; e) date of reporting. I'm assuming we can pass on if the booze is free
So if your stay includes a weekend if you could report, or if you're not there during the weekend, if you could ask while you are there & report it would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers.
Looking for a) is it open on the weekend; b) if not, do they offer brekkie certs to Golds/Plats; c) if the lounge is closed, is it key accessible for water/soda & i-net terminals; d) are there i-net terminals; e) date of reporting. I'm assuming we can pass on if the booze is free

So if your stay includes a weekend if you could report, or if you're not there during the weekend, if you could ask while you are there & report it would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers.
Last edited by SkiAdcock; Jun 16, 2010 at 8:42 pm Reason: forgot something...
#10



Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: DUB - Ireland
Programs: EI-GCE, BD-G, BA-G, A3*G, TK*G, FB-G, HH-G, Hyatt-Dia
Posts: 8,527
The lounge in Riyadh is open both on the Islamic weekend (Thurs. and Fri.) and the western weekend (Sat. and Sun.) from 7am to midnight. It is key accessible and not monitored.
Internet - 5 terminals plus free printing.
Internet - 5 terminals plus free printing.
#11
A FlyerTalk Posting Legend




Join Date: Aug 2002
Programs: UALifetimePremierGold, Marriott LifetimeTitanium
Posts: 74,139
Thanks - much appreciated. I'll update the stickey. Cheers.
#12


Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Sydney,Australia
Posts: 1,155
The union for Cathay Pacific flight attendants has urged the airline to stop overnight crew stays in the Saudi capital over fears for the safety of female staff, a spokesman said yesterday.
The demand follows an incident last month in which a man tried to force his way into the hotel room of a junior Cathay attendant, Tsang Kwok Fung, general secretary of the Cathay Pacific Flight Attendants Union, said.
Other complaints have been made involving unwanted telephone calls to female staff also staying at the Marriott Hotel in Riyadh, he added.
The demand follows an incident last month in which a man tried to force his way into the hotel room of a junior Cathay attendant, Tsang Kwok Fung, general secretary of the Cathay Pacific Flight Attendants Union, said.
Other complaints have been made involving unwanted telephone calls to female staff also staying at the Marriott Hotel in Riyadh, he added.
Seems suprising if true I would have thought this would be a high security location for Marriott...


