Room Category: Junior Suite (Room 208)||||See my profile page for my video tour of this hotel. ||||Overview ||||I first came across this hotel in Bald and Bankrupt’s YouTube video. I was intrigued by the history, the Soviet past and the rumoured hidden rooms. So, I decided to stay in the hotel and booked a junior suite to fully experience what it was like for a Soviet apparatchik or a foreign dignitary to stay in this hotel. ||||Location||||Hotel Sovietsky is located along Leningradsky Avenue. This is Moscow’s main central thoroughfare – it leads to the airport on one direction and Red Square on the other. However, the hotel is not located in the centre of Moscow. It is not within walking distance of any noteworthy attractions. The nearest metro station (Dinamo) is 10 minutes’ walk away. The location reflects the price. The price of a suite here costs cheaper than a standard room at a comparative hotel in the centre. I would say it is good value for money. You can take a taxi which can get you to the centre of Moscow in 15 minutes (and taxis are cheap in Moscow). However, if you like to walk and have all the attractions at your doorstep, this may not be the hotel for you.||||||Room||||I booked a Junior Suite. I was told that all suites in this hotel are unique and have their own character. The suite we stayed at is very spacious. It has three rooms divided by double doors – the entry hallway, the reception/sitting area and the bedroom. This room was advertised as being 30 square metres, but I am pretty sure it is bigger (if not double). The décor follows the hotel’s soviet past. It is as if the time has stood still. From the furniture to the wallpaper, the suite seems stuck in the past. However, this only adds to the uniqueness of the room. It is well-maintained and also offers some modern conveniences e.g. coffee and tea making facilities, a big flat screen TV and air-conditioning. ||||In the reception/sitting area, there is a large writing desk and a big sofa. It looks like a reception area for some junior soviet apparatchik and it did make me feel that way. ||||The bathroom is also very spacious. The toiletries are hotel branded and are pleasant enough. However, the linen, the towels, the robes and the slippers are of a very high quality. I was pleasantly surprised. It is comparable to any five star hotel I have been in. My only complaint would be that the sink is a little low and it was quite difficult to use. I am 175 cm and I was having difficulties. I imagine someone taller would have greater difficulties. But otherwise, I am pretty happy with the bathroom and the suite. It is living in history.||||Facilities||||I should note that this hotel has no fitness centre / spa facilities / swimming pool. Hopefully, this changes in the future.||||It has a breakfast area / lobby bar on the first floor which was tastefully decorated. The buffet breakfast on offer was quite limited. There is definitely room for improvement.||||The hotel’s jewel would be the Yar Restaurant. This restaurant first operated between 1826 and 1925 and was popular amongst Russia’s elite and literary circle. Chekhov, Gorky, Tolstoy and Pushkin all dined here. The restaurant offers traditional Russian fare in a grand space. Yar has one of the most impressive chandeliers I have ever seen in a restaurant. The restaurant looks like a palatial room.||||Service||||The service is friendly and everyone we met at this hotel have been professional and courteous. ||||I would totally recommend this hotel. This hotel is a living history and I hope this hotel continues to survive the challenges of the modern hospitality market and preserve the history to which it is a...
Read moreRoom Category: Junior Suite (Room 208)||||See my profile page for my video tour of this hotel. ||||Overview ||||I first came across this hotel in Bald and Bankrupt’s YouTube video. I was intrigued by the history, the Soviet past and the rumoured hidden rooms. So, I decided to stay in the hotel and booked a junior suite to fully experience what it was like for a Soviet apparatchik or a foreign dignitary to stay in this hotel. ||||Location||||Hotel Sovietsky is located along Leningradsky Avenue. This is Moscow’s main central thoroughfare – it leads to the airport on one direction and Red Square on the other. However, the hotel is not located in the centre of Moscow. It is not within walking distance of any noteworthy attractions. The nearest metro station (Dinamo) is 10 minutes’ walk away. The location reflects the price. The price of a suite here costs cheaper than a standard room at a comparative hotel in the centre. I would say it is good value for money. You can take a taxi which can get you to the centre of Moscow in 15 minutes (and taxis are cheap in Moscow). However, if you like to walk and have all the attractions at your doorstep, this may not be the hotel for you.||||||Room||||I booked a Junior Suite. I was told that all suites in this hotel are unique and have their own character. The suite we stayed at is very spacious. It has three rooms divided by double doors – the entry hallway, the reception/sitting area and the bedroom. This room was advertised as being 30 square metres, but I am pretty sure it is bigger (if not double). The décor follows the hotel’s soviet past. It is as if the time has stood still. From the furniture to the wallpaper, the suite seems stuck in the past. However, this only adds to the uniqueness of the room. It is well-maintained and also offers some modern conveniences e.g. coffee and tea making facilities, a big flat screen TV and air-conditioning. ||||In the reception/sitting area, there is a large writing desk and a big sofa. It looks like a reception area for some junior soviet apparatchik and it did make me feel that way. ||||The bathroom is also very spacious. The toiletries are hotel branded and are pleasant enough. However, the linen, the towels, the robes and the slippers are of a very high quality. I was pleasantly surprised. It is comparable to any five star hotel I have been in. My only complaint would be that the sink is a little low and it was quite difficult to use. I am 175 cm and I was having difficulties. I imagine someone taller would have greater difficulties. But otherwise, I am pretty happy with the bathroom and the suite. It is living in history.||||Facilities||||I should note that this hotel has no fitness centre / spa facilities / swimming pool. Hopefully, this changes in the future.||||It has a breakfast area / lobby bar on the first floor which was tastefully decorated. The buffet breakfast on offer was quite limited. There is definitely room for improvement.||||The hotel’s jewel would be the Yar Restaurant. This restaurant first operated between 1826 and 1925 and was popular amongst Russia’s elite and literary circle. Chekhov, Gorky, Tolstoy and Pushkin all dined here. The restaurant offers traditional Russian fare in a grand space. Yar has one of the most impressive chandeliers I have ever seen in a restaurant. The restaurant looks like a palatial room.||||Service||||The service is friendly and everyone we met at this hotel have been professional and courteous. ||||I would totally recommend this hotel. This hotel is a living history and I hope this hotel continues to survive the challenges of the modern hospitality market and preserve the history to which it is a...
Read moreUsed to be a great hotel long ago now it’s on a downfall and how.
Positives: Big rooms, clean, old Russian style interiors.
Negatives: No good options in breakfast, food in the restaurant is waste. The agency who booked my room had given wrong checkout dates. Our check out date was given a day before we were supposed to leave the hotel.
We came back to the hotel from a long tiring day just to find out our key cards were invalidated and all our luggage was packed by the hotel haphazardly without our consent and informing us/my agency.
I am a photographer and most of my equipment was in the room, they lost/stole one of my MacBook charger and an expensive cf memory card, which cost me more than 200usd.
Agreed to the fact that my agency was at fault for providing wrong dates, they did not care to call the agency and check about why the check out wasn’t done.
The receptionist confirmed that they did not call anyone before messing with my personal belongings. Let alone the expensive equipment.
The only reason they couldn’t take our bags out of the room was because my camera bag was locked to the TV unit as shown in photo. Worst was they even tried to unlock the number lock.
Worst thing to do ever.
Never stay here if you care for your...
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