This hotel is in a good location, inland from the beach area and all the staff are professional and friendly.
The reception area is bright and cool. The cafe to the south of the building has a nice shaded area, outdoors and a few metres from the street. The indoor courtyard on floor 3 was also superb, a zen den if you catch it early in the morning. The rooms are passable.
We stayed 16 nights so have a decent idea on what works and doesn't for guests so any negative feedback is meant with good intentions.
This leg of our Vietnam trip included a uni event for my son and half his teammates were housed here.
I was asked upon checking in if I had any special food requirements which I responded to as vegetarian.
Breakfast was underwhelming so I gave up after a few days of the same meat orientated buffet and stale bread so just drank fruit juice, and coffee then ate out.
I travelled with a wheelchair user and elevator/room doors were very narrow and difficult to navigate with only 1cm clearance either side so watch your knuckles if someone is not pushing. This hotel, like most I've stayed at in Vietnam, falls below European and American standards for being remotely disabled friendly. To be honest everything in Vietnam from a wheelchair perspective is awful from being unable to traverse pavements due to motorbikes, cafe stools and shopfronts taking up paths which forces you onto roads where drivers do not give a damn and zebra crossings are merely a suggestion.
A fireworks display was shown on the Han River our first weekend and the staff allowed us onto the roof as we could not walk or get a taxi to the display site. That was really appreciated.
There's a pool and there's a steam room plus seperate sauna which are both out of order. They had 16 days to sort this so I assume it's been out of use a long time. The pool is shallow, cold and underused, in the shade on the ground floor. There's ground floor access from the street and we look on with envy at the other half of our group who were housed in the G8 luxury elsewhere in Danang with their pool on the 19th floor and a city view. We've been to this part of the world several times and this is the first instance we haven't had a private pool at our disposal. My god, words can't describe how I miss it in this stifling heat.
The open space on the roof at floor 6 has wasted potential, tables and chairs... and perhaps the pool would have been great up here?
I score the staff a 9, and the hotel a 6 out of ten. It's a 3 star at best by...
Read moreThe receptionist are all very friendly, kind and humble. Able to communicate in common English. We are also welcomed with a welcome drink, something like ginger tea. Spacious lobby with lots of sofa installed for large group of guest arrival.
It stated a 4-Stars⭐⭐⭐⭐hotel, located in the heart of Danang.
There is a mini sky garden at 3rd floor, whilst swimming pool at ground floor beside the hotel. Better get direction assistance from the friendly receptionist. The breakfast menu given are limited choices, still good to eat if you are not a picky eater. Several types of bread, rice, congee, beef curry, salad 🥗, sweet potato 🍠, sausages, spaghetti 🍝, soup noodle, coffee, fresh milk 🥛 etc.
Other than that, the condition of the room we stayed is overall clean and tidy, u could get extra laundry bag/sanitary pad/drinking water bottle if needed from the receptionist/cleaner. You can catch a sunset at Level 5!
I am truly satisfied with my stay here. Would recommend to others for sure! Hoping hotel management could keep up...
Read more1st time here. Honestly the room is somewhat very normal even though they gave us the wrong type of beds instead of a queen size bed.
Bathroom errors could happen. You'll need to check 'CLOSELY before confirming staying in that particular room. Or else you'll need a plumber or good luck with going through language barrier issues. Luckily for us, we have a local translator.
Food, service, location and environment wise are very convenient especially finding a cafe or restaurant. All are walking distance and the people around there are friendly, humble and honest and they would try to help tourists (even with language barriers or calculating money in their currency part).
Opposite the hotel you'll find a cafe something like a coffee shop / bistro. The place is called Cafe Hoa Dat I really recommend to those who are a coffee lover to try out their...
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