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Amenities in London Hotels
This question is slightly tongue-in-cheek and slightly serious as well.
I was reviewing London hotels looking for a place to stay. I found a hotel website that had a list of room amenities. The first one listed was a fire escape. Is that a feature that is so unusual in London hotel rooms that it commands attention as an amenity? I think of a fire escape as a legal requirement that would be classed as an absolute necessity. |
perhaps it's a hotel that has so little going for itself that they think having a fire escape is really great...or maybe, the hotel is in such bad shape that a fire escape is an amenitie....because it will help you run for your life! :)
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I don't know where you normally stay, brookwood, but I can't remember the last hotel I stayed in that had a fire escape out my window! In fact, have I ever stayed at a hotel with one?
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What hotel was this?
I have seen smoke detectors listed as an amenity, and I think it's quite true that many European hotels do not have them in the rooms. |
Do they mention providing free doors and windows also? :)
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Elaine - Do you think he should check for floors and walls as well :-)
That at least would make a whole room |
Sorry Brookwood - I don't know why I assumed you're male - my apologies if I'm wrong :-(
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The meaning of 'fire escape' is probably that the hotel allows the fire to escape but not the guests!
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Agree with Patrick - donl;t think I've ever stayed in a hotel with a fire escape. Typically you would find these only in very small, older hotels - anything above 4/5 stories won;t have them - nor any modern buidling which would have fire stairs.
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Given today's events, the availability of a fire escape doesn't seem like such a silly thing to note after all.
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Agreee that its important to know how to get out of a hotel in case of fire - I always check on this as soon as I get to my room.
But modern or high-rise hotels have sprinkler systems and enclosed fire stairs for leaving the building - not old-fashioned fire escapes. The latter would be useless anyway - imagine climbing 30 flights of stairs down the outside of a burning building - and there weould never be enough of them to provide access from every room anyway. |
Of course that's what a modern hotel would have, but the worst case is to have an old hotel with only a single exit and no fire escapes, as appears to be the case with the doomed Paris hotel. An old hotel with a fire escape is obviously better than an old hotel with none, although a modern up-to-code hotel is undoubtedly safest of all.
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