This place was an experience — and not the good kind.
Check-in was awkward. The front desk clerk had the enthusiasm of a houseplant and seemed more interested in badmouthing local restaurants than actually helping us. Instead of recommendations, we got unsolicited commentary on which places were “racist” or served frozen food. Not exactly the warm welcome you hope for.
The room looked fine at first glance — until we pulled back the sheets. One bed had a dried red mystery stain that looked suspiciously like blood and mucus. The other bed? Covered in long, curly black hairs. The linens were clearly wrinkled and used. It was the kind of thing that makes your skin crawl.
We went to the front desk to request fresh bedding, and a man and woman came to “inspect.” They initially refused to even look at the beds until we pointed things out directly. The man insisted the sheets had already been changed — which was bold, considering we were standing there staring at what could only be described as biohazard bedding.
They eventually brought clean sheets and changed them. When we asked about the pillows, which we also told them were dirty (they smelled like an old man’s sweaty scalp), they just handed us pillowcases for us to change ourselves. Nothing says hospitality like DIY germ mitigation in a double twin room you just paid $300 to stay in for one night.
If you value basic cleanliness and professionalism — stay elsewhere.