Hotel Centrale
- Italia
- Siena
- Hoteller
|
Via Cecco Angiolieri, 26, Siena |
5 priser
6.40/10.00
|
+39 0577 223434
|
Vurdering
kyle rossiter (29.09.2017 04:01)
Cool hotel in Siena but be prepared to haul your luggage up four Flights of stairs the reward is a little outside deck with a table and chairs and a neat view of the street below. Close to piazza
Christopher Sarzen (10.06.2017 19:02)
There wasn't really any roI'm service. The beds were nice. The hotel bathroom was really smelly and the shower was always cold, but besides that the hotel was pretty nice. It had drinks you can buy in a mini fridge. The beds had nice blankets and the pillows were comfortable. I stayed there for 3 days. The location is really convenient because it's right in the city and there areally so many ships around it.
Arthur Pedro (02.12.2016 21:16)
When I arrived there was no one in the reception. I was lucky to have a Italian mobile to call the place, otherwise I would not have entered. The place is in 5th floor and there is no elevator. So if you have a big bag it is hell. The only good thing was the size of the room
Mario Tani (12.11.2016 23:33)
The hotel is a central one. Rooms are cosy and they have a little balcony. In order to reach the hotel you have to climb 4 floor of stairs. If you arrive late (10 pm) there no front office to ask for guidance...
In spite of these situations it has be a good night
Prof. FGC (30.04.2014 22:17)
5th floor walk up and they change the bath towels every three days. and you can't hang your towels to dry outside. no sir. if you take a shower two days in a row (a rarity in the summer, right?) you will have to dry yourself with thin, very thin, cotton towels still wet from the previous day.
about the climb up the stairs: if you read the 'contract' you will see that the "hotel" (major misnomer) is on the "last floor" with no elevator. Last floor? Yes, that means "top floor" but it doesnt' tell you that's the FIFTH (american count) floor.
this is not a hotel by any stretch of imagination: it's an apartment in an old building. maybe it's ok for backpackers and people who love to feel claustrophobic, love old beat up forniture, microscopic bathrooms where you can't turn around without banging an elbow or a knee. but it's right downtown, near the campo, where the tourist traffic is thicker and you get skinned alive for lousy mass produced food for hordes of bussed-in tourists. exactly the kind of cumulative experience you were looking for in italy.