Double Beds - Austria...why?

Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 04:01 AM
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Double Beds - Austria...why?

Hi, Looking around at various hotels, including some pretty pricey ones in austria, all the beds in the pictures look like 2 twin matresses pushed together as opposed to one queen or king. Why is this? Do Austrians cuddle? Do couples on vacation really sleep on thier own "side"?
Thanks, perhaps an unusual question but I'm really curious.
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 04:10 AM
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In my experience this is increasingly common everywhere in Europe - or at least everywhere I go. It's to give the hotel maximum flexibility, so they can let out a room as a double or a twin. It's a rare treat now to get a proper double or kingsized bed.
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 04:24 AM
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and before you discount those "separated" beds, beleive me, they are darned comfortable! You get your coverlet...your partner gets theirs...no hogging! <GRIN> They can move or scruch about and you won't feel it...
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 04:29 AM
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I remember traveling in Europe extensively with my parents in the 1950s and 60s--the two beds pushed together were the norm back then, at least in the places we stayed. A real double bed was a rarity (Did king-sized ones exist at all back then?).
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 04:38 AM
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And I was going to ask why many US motels have two queen-sized beds in each room. That one is still beyond me.



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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 06:09 AM
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Customs and practices vary between countries. In Italy and Germany, for example, a room for two normally has twin beds, though they're often next to one another but can be moved apart. In France, double beds (wide beds for two people) were normal.
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 07:02 AM
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I too rarely see a true queen or king bed. The beds in Germany were all twins that were pushed together, but they were still quite comfortable and, like Suzie mentions, its great having my own blanket! You can still cuddle, even with the beds pushed together, because most of the beds come together nicely without a huge gap between them. We've never had a problem.

Tracy
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 07:12 AM
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I've seen "real" king beds ib various European countries; sometimes they are in hotels which some would classify as "business" establishments. But I also had one in my last B+B in the UK.

The floor of bedrooms sometimes offers more space for other activities and there isn't that annoying and distracting crevice in the middle, either.
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 07:24 AM
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Along with flexibility of room use, if the hotel is in an older building, i.e. converted from an old residence, it might actually not be possible to manipulate a queen mattress up the stairs (which could have a low overhang or a tight turn); and/or into the miniscule phone-booth sized elevators that serve many small hotels in Europe; and/or down a narrow hall and into a room. (This is in fact the case in our own house - a queen mattress will not fit up the stairway.) It isn't universal, of course: many old buildings have quite large rooms, halls, and stairways. Just not all.
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 07:28 AM
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Dukey wrote: "The floor of bedrooms sometimes offers more space for other activities and there isn't that annoying and distracting crevice in the middle, either."

Anything I said in response to this would be in questionable taste, so I confine my response to inviting other readers to think up (but not post) their own responses.
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 07:48 AM
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To get a double bed in Italy it is useful to specify a matrimonial bed.
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 09:02 AM
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<<< In my experience this is increasingly common everywhere in Europe - or at least everywhere I go. It's to give the hotel maximum flexibility, so they can let out a room as a double or a twin. It's a rare treat now to get a proper double or kingsized bed. >>>

This type of bed is the norm in Austria - and they aren't designed to be separated. Twin beds in a room has also been the standard for most city hotels for decades
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 10:39 AM
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It's a German thing, and that general part of Europe. Austria has that influence. I don't know why, but it's a cultural thing -- my German friend said it was just the norm there that they've always had beds that way (she's around 50 years old) because even German married people did not often sleep in the same bed, but in twins. It was a real revelation in the 60s, she said, when regular double beds became trendy and they were seen as "sexier" than the typical German furnishing. This is also why they commonly call a real double bed with a single mattress a "French" bed in Germany, because that was where they copied the style from of one big mattress rather than two twins, and French people were seen as sexier than Germans/Austrians, etc. It didn't have anything to do with what was convenient for hotels, it was customary in people's homes so that's why hotels do it.
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 02:48 PM
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Two queen-sized beds in many American hotel rooms allow for a family of 4 to sleep in one room. Or for 2 people to have their own space.
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 04:55 PM
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People want to really sleep now and then instead of just cuddle. I cannot stand those "queen" and "king" beds if I have to share them. That night would be lost to me.
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 10:02 PM
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Thanks Underhill.
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 10:19 PM
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Why worry? We have been ther many times and have enjoyed all of our stays no matter what the bed arrangement has been. Go and have fun, you'll be so tired from wandering beds will be the least odf your concerns.
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Old Dec 6th, 2006 | 11:16 PM
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I have always wondered about this myself. When looking at pictures in magazines or on hotel sites, seeing two beds together - I never understood the reasoning. Thanks guys
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Old Dec 7th, 2006 | 01:03 AM
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And not just in hotels - we do home exchanges, and so far all homes have had the same bedding arrangement in the main bedroom - a single unit that is made up of twin matresses on the same base, and twin quilts; also the same flat square pillows. But there is often a double bed in one of the other bedrooms . . .
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Old Dec 7th, 2006 | 03:52 AM
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It's always been like that. The space between the two beds is called "Besucherritze" in German. The space for visitors
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