Guest User
July 5, 2025
If you want to be discriminated against, just stay here. Every day brings new life. The hotel is in a good location, close to Tivoli and the central station. But the rooms are very old. The windows of the rooms below the corner room are very dirty. The room I was assigned at the beginning even had live spiders and spider webs on the ceiling. Similarly, the air conditioners of the rooms below the corner room blow directly to the bed, and there are many mirrors facing the bed. If you book a skyline room, it is likely to have the same orientation as the ordinary collection room, and you will be given a lower floor (the skyline is 10-20 floors, the two white people in front of me were given the 15th floor, and I was given the 11th floor). If it faces Tivoli Park, then congratulations, wait for the noise every night, because Tivoli will have music performances, especially on Fridays until after 11:30 pm, the sound insulation is very poor and you can hear it clearly. You can't sleep without good earplugs.
Most of the front desk staff have good service attitudes, but when problems arise, they don't solve them and only play Tai Chi. I called Radisson Denmark's customer service to complain, and was transferred to the front desk manager before they said they would change the room. The front desk only told me to come back at 2 pm to ask if they have any rooms available.
In addition, if you have breakfast here, you will be 100% discriminated against and ignored. For three days, breakfast was given a very bad seat + no menu was introduced for ordering or breakfast facilities. The waiter pretended not to see when you wanted to order, and it took a long time to serve after you ordered. Because on the first day, all the waiters pretended not to see, especially a male waiter, who was very enthusiastic about the white family sitting in front and next to me, and was facing me when ordering the white table in front of me. After he finished ordering, I immediately waved to call someone (the voice was quite loud and the people at the next table looked at me), but he still pretended not to hear or see. After at least five minutes of trying to call any waiter, it was the same. I was really angry and went to the middle counter to ask them if I was invisible to them. The male waiter replied that it must be because I didn't call them, and "don't take it personally" and walked away. Because I had a photo shoot later that day, I didn't have time to argue at the time. I went back to the hotel to ask the waiter's name, and he said he would help me check it, so I continued my trip. Three hours later, I went back to the hotel to ask the same front desk staff, who said he didn't have time to help me check it (even though he was chatting with the concierge at the time), and suggested that I ask the restaurant manager the next day. The next day, after asking the restaurant manager, I only got the first name of the male waiter, and said that he couldn't tell me his full name for confidentiality reasons. I said I wanted to make a formal complaint, and the manager said that she had worked here for 6 years and this was the first time a guest had made a complaint, so there must be a misunderstanding (and kept talking about how hard the male waiter worked, and kept interrupting me). I insisted on complaining, and she found a front desk staff member and asked me to go to the front desk to complain to her after breakfast. When I arrived at the front desk, the staff member was not there, so I asked to see the front desk manager. After waiting for a few minutes, the general manager came down to ask about the situation. I told the situation of the previous day and said that the hotel needed a formal apology. The GM expressed understanding and then expressed his apology through email and handwritten letter. Unfortunately, on the third day, the service team was changed for breakfast, but it was still outrageous. I had put down my phone on the sofa table to get the meal, and when I came back, I found someone else's plate. Then two white people came to sit in my seat. I asked the waiter to change to a chair and a small table. There are very few choices for breakfast, and the omelet can be fried (maybe it's intentional). It's hard to believe that it's the level of Radisson. Every day when eating, it's like a war to find people everywhere, and it's too hard to keep your own table.
At the same time, the wifi here is very poor, intermittent, and it's hard to load a video. It's slower than the wifi on the plane. There is no spa swimming pool, only one gym, and they won't tell you where it is if you don't ask.
This hotel is the crew accommodation of Air China, but for solo trip travelers like me, I will not come again. It's a very bad experience. If you can tolerate all white people first, you can live here for the geographical location, but for the same price, I believe there will be choices around that don't pay for discrimination.
Original TextTranslation provided by Google