GGuest UserThe hotel door is unlocked and you can directly enter the lobby on the first floor, which has sofas, a terrace and fruits. However, there is no response when pressing the screen of the self-service check-in machine. You can only make a local phone call and communicate in English. You say the message, the staff fills it out, and you look at the screen to see if the input is correct. The staff's English is pretty good. The information is name, nationality, date of birth, passport number, permanent address, zip code, etc., but each guest needs this information. After filling everything out, swipe your card to pay, and the room card and receipt will come out automatically. The whole process takes about 10 minutes.
The superior room I asked for was large in size and had a small balcony. The room was also warm. Breakfast is simple, including milk, yogurt, bread, cereal, cheese, fruit, coffee, tea... these are quite complete. When you check out, just put your room card in the room card collection box at the front desk. The only staff I saw during the whole process were the cleaners and the girl at breakfast. They didn't care about check-in and didn't speak English.
The next morning, I encountered a room where the fire alarm device was triggered. The alarm sounded in the room and required evacuation. It was just a false alarm and there was no real fire.
Let me focus on the sauna, which is on the underground floor. From booking to checking in, there was no information about the sauna. The road signs said wellness. I guess everyone thought it was a gym or something, as there was no one there during the hours I went there. However, according to European custom, men and women, regardless of gender, should be steamed naked together. The facilities here are complete and the equipment is very new. There are bathrobes, towels, changing rooms, showers, a sauna, four lounge chairs, tea...
By the way, there is a large locker outside the sauna where you can store your luggage for a fee.
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