Guest User
August 29, 2023
I stayed with my family: wife and 2 children in this farmhouse. Once we entered the room assigned to us, we realized that the window present was completely sealed, that is, 80% walled up and closed by glass at the top for the remaining 20%: a bit like a wolf's mouth in a basement, with the difference was that everything was well sealed! The result of this questionable architectural choice is that from this window, there was a modest passage of light, but no passage of air. The bathroom window suffered the same "impairment" with the aggravating circumstance that there was not even any light passing through it. Obviously believing that it was absurd/impossible/illegal that a structure like a hotel could have rooms without any possibility of air exchange, I went to the reception to ask for explanations, perhaps there was a ventilation system that I had missed. … And no! The room is just like that... I asked if such a situation was in order because for me the answer is clearly NO, but the boy at the reception shrugged and said he would inform the manager. The manager, who in my opinion should take on less demanding roles, did not show up either then or later to look for a solution aimed at mitigating the dissatisfaction of a guest who feels he has been cheated, having to spend a week in a room without the possibility of changing the air. Therefore, not wanting to spend a week in a "closet", we asked to change rooms, but as it was the week of August there was no possibility because the farmhouse was fully booked and unfortunately we did not find availability even in other structures, which we promptly contacted. So to recap: we stayed for a week in a room where to get a bit of air exchange I had to start waving with the entrance door of the room to create a bit of movement and let some air in. from the corridor (not fresh air, air from the corridor). The room in question is called the Nobile Suite, but from what I saw from the map the same sad fate befell the Winter Room... and if I can give some advice, if you were to come across this structure, expressly ask not to be confined in these 2 "ovens". crematoria". To understand the reason for this technical "suicide", I went to see where this window overlooked and I found that on the terrace overlooking it, they had set up a SPA... then everything became clear. To build the SPA and not have the windows of the rooms looking into the SPA itself, they walled them up! They chose to sacrifice 2 rooms and their poor guests, to exploit the space of the outdoor terrace and create a SPA. Strangely, however, in the maps of the evacuation plan hanging in the rooms and corridors, the SPA is not shown and the windows are identified as such... On the street
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