It was difficult to find because the entrance is in the courtyard and there was no sign. They are simply rooms that are rented out without a reception (at least I didn't find one). When I arrived I asked a porter from another hotel and he called the lady. She immediately came out onto the street and took me to the room. Contact was always via WeChat. To our surprise, we had to go to the local police and confirm the rented period and sign (I'm not sure if it was a rental contract - everything was in Chinese).
The hygiene and the furnishings were, so to speak, bearable (I would say Chinese conditions - if you've never experienced anything like that, then this room is not for you). It hadn't been freshly mopped or dusted. However, the bedding was clean and fresh. It's a bit like Chinese standards, broken furniture and inventory. You can't go by the photos, the furniture is there but it's old, worn, smells, the TV didn't work, there's no kitchen (just a fridge and kettle with two glasses), the air conditioning blew but didn't heat (the temperature couldn't be adjusted), the hairdryer didn't work properly - but here I got a new working one after two days, the washing machine worked.
In general, I have to say that since I rarely stayed in the room, I say it was OK, I had a bed and a place to sleep. In contrast to my colleagues who stayed in a hotel with western standards, I can only say that this room is very bad, but there was no room for this price in Hangzhou. My colleagues had to pay three to four times as much for the same period of time. But they had every luxury. Everyone has to decide where their priorities lie.
Original TextTranslation provided by Google