I want to warn everyone else

Written: 29 october 2009
Travel time: 9 — 20 september 2009
Who does the author recommend the hotel to?: For a relaxing holiday
Your rating of this hotel:
6.0
from 10
Hotel ratings by criteria:
Rooms: 7.0
Service: 8.0
Cleanliness: 9.0
Food: 9.0
Amenities: 8.0
Hello everyone! My name is Julia, I am 25 years old, and I managed to go to the Ai-Petri sanatorium with my mother in September 2009. Before the trip, we had heard a lot about this sanatorium, moreover, only from the good side. Most importantly, I want to note the operation of the elevators. We lived in building 11, there are 14 residential floors in total, but there are two more lower floors, on the first reception, on the second medical offices. Our room was on the 13th floor, you know, it’s quite difficult to walk up, as for the elevators, there are two of them, but each of them serves certain floors, leaving is UNREAL!! ! From the reception floor, the elevator is not called at all, for this you need to go up to the third floor (i. e. , the first residential one), it’s especially fun when you just arrived and you have to dangle around the floors with all your suitcases, there is another option, but it’s not very suitable when you return from the sea. Since the entrance to the reception floor is closer on the road from the sea, in order to enter the 1st residential floor from which you can call the elevator, you need to go around the building on the other side and climb the stairs to the second entrance. In order to leave the 13th floor, it took about 15 minutes to wait for the elevator, while people, for example, from the 10th floor could already walk, because the elevator carries about 5-6 people, depending on the build, if it is overloaded, it simply does not leave. Another feature of them approximately every 15 minutes, these elevators, as the employees of the sanatorium say, “rest” for 10 minutes, each of them just stands with the doors open and is not going to go anywhere, in general, if you leave the room and forget something, all write is gone, come back quickly and take this thing will not work, in total it will take you about 40 minutes (I counted on purpose). So, in general, the rooms are not bad, this is already an amateur, we are just not picky, but I can say right away that most often we relax in Turkey or Egypt, and for the person who has ever been there, the rooms of the Ai-Petri sanatorium are resting, the TV turns off if you unplug the cord from the outlet, the furniture, of course, is all old, still Soviet times, but nothing if you do not focus on this. As for the medical building, everything is paid everywhere, if you want to take any useful procedures, then you need to pay money, and for free only such a trifle as inhalation, electrophoresis, and a room where they breathe salt. The staff is rude, they came for the first time if, then you can only find out something from people who are already in line for the procedure, I tried to ask for help, they say where to go and where to sign up, to the staff, but I was either completely ignored, or with screams they tore out the sanatorium book and asked to go out and get in line. In general, I want to say, everything of course depends on your mood for rest. Maybe I'm too mean. For a while, my mother and I referred to something that just after a vacation abroad, you look at a vacation in your homeland in a different way. But I love Crimea, and I go there 1-2 times a year, I have never met such fascination, I always liked it everywhere, and I stayed pretty, just in Ai-Petri, I think people got drunk, and for them to please customers is already lost concept. Now judge for yourself whether it is worth going there, I consider my opinion to be objective, and while talking with other vacationers in the sanatorium, they did not hear anything else. There is no entertainment, boring things, well, in principle, this is understandable, most vacationers are people of retirement age, they are not interested in these entertainments.
Translated automatically from Russian. View original