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Review: the Hotel Amigo, Brussels – a sad decline

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This is my review of the Hotel Amigo in Brussels, run by Rocco Forte Hotels, where we spent an eventful couple of days last weekend.

It has been impressive to watch how Rocco Forte has built up his chain of luxury boutique hotels over the last 18 years.  Hotel Amigo was one of the first to join the group.  I had only stayed with them once, in St Petersburg, but I also have the occasional drink in Browns in London.

They have good-looking hotels, without a doubt, and I include Hotel Amigo when I say that.  The company overstretched itself financially in the run up to the financial crisis, however, and it has lost a couple of properties.  At one point it was thought that the entire business may collapse but a recent equity injection seems to have stabilised the ship for now.

Hotel Amigo Brussels review exterior

Unfortunately, the lack of money in the business appears to have had an impact on the hotels themselves.  There is no other explanation for the string of issues which befell us last weekend – when the Hotel Amigo was, note, was charging €339 per night for a standard room.  Let me review what happened.

This will not happen to you

When reviewing a hotel you need to separate out events which are unlikely to happen twice from things which impact every guest.  The following story will hopefully not impact you but it is symptomatic of the management approach.

We arrived at Hotel Amigo off a Brussels-bound Eurostar at 9pm with two interconnecting rooms booked, one for me and my wife and one for the kids (6 and 3).  My online booking confirmation noted interconnecting rooms.  More importantly, I had spoken to the hotel directly after booking and they had blocked out our rooms for us.  In theory they were ‘locked’ and could not be touched.

Not so.  The Hotel Amigo had given away our rooms – in fact, despite written proof, they claimed to have no record of our request for connecting rooms.  The only rooms left were on opposite sides of the building which was obviously impractical.  The only solution was to put two mattresses on the floor in one of the rooms.

This is obviously not what you expect from a five-star hotel.  What I REALLY did not expect, though, was to be told that I still had to pay for the 2nd room at €339 per night even though it would be left empty.

In 20 years of staying at 100+ luxury hotels, I have never come across such an astonishing position.  It beggared belief.  After one hour – yes, one hour – of standing at the desk and disputing this, with my little kids having to sit in the lobby, they reduced it to effectively 50%.  I would have to pay for 3 room nights (across 2 days).  Take it or leave it – except I was with two small children and if I left they would charge me anyway.  I had no choice but to agree to pay 3 x €339.

As it turned out, an unexpected reallocation of rooms meant that, on Saturday, we were given a second room which connected to the one we were in.  (The hotel did not, of course, bother to remove the mattresses from the floor of our original room.  They sat there for the remainder of our stay.)

This was not on the cards the night before when I was forced to agree to pay for an empty room.   Rather like my stay at the St Regis in Doha, this ‘unexpected reallocation’ of rooms only happened after the hotel found out what I do for a living.

This will happen to you

None of the above should happen to you if you visit the Hotel Amigo, to be fair.

The following will happen to you:

Very poor in-room wi-fi – room 233 had an exceptionally bad connection, even in the dead of night when nobody else would have been on the system.  In other parts of the hotel it was better

A faulty TV remote control

Lots of street noise from drunken youths in the early hours (the hotel is one road back from the Grand Place)

No newspaper delivered to my room in the morning, despite ordering one (at the suggestion of reception, ironically)

A long queue for breakfast in the ‘too tiny’ breakfast room

More importantly, the Hotel Amigo had the WORST breakfast buffet I have ever seen in a five star hotel.  The selection is laughably poor, even if you can find some food left.

On Saturday there was no egg at 10am:

Hotel Amigo Brussels review breakfast

and no pastries (although as the pain au chocolat were rock hard, I was possibly not missing much):

Hotel Amigo Brussels review pastries

and no glasses if I wanted juice:

Hotel Amigo Brussels review glasses

Breakfast cereal consisted of four different types of muesli because, of course, everyone loves muesli.  In particular, small children.

Hotel Amigo Brussels review breakfast cereal

There was egg on Sunday morning but this was probably because the hotel had not put out a serving spoon so no-one could eat it.

There IS a decent ‘cooked to order’ breakfast menu at the Hotel Amigo.  The problem is that, as the buffet is so bad, everyone is forced to order from the menu or risk going hungry.  This puts a huge strain on the kitchen which it cannot handle.  My wife waited over 30 minutes for a pancake on Sunday, by which point my kids had eaten and I was forced to take them back to the bedroom before they caused chaos.  The only time the staff ever showed any sign of speed was when we tried to leave on Saturday after forgetting to sign for our additional items.

My wife was also disappointed that their Christmas tree was fake although I did not check this fact personally and cannot verify it!

Conclusion – avoid

It is sad to review a grand hotel like Hotel Amigo in Brussels and find it so wanting.  It is clear that the financial problems at the group have led to scrimping and saving which has brought down the service level considerably.

None of the issues I highlighted are life-threatening, of course.  The fact is, though, that when you are paying €339 per room (x 2 in our case) per night none of these things should happen at all.  My newspaper still did not appear even after I complained about not receiving it, which is unforgivable.

There is a new Novotel just north of the Grand Place, in an equally convenient location (for a tourist) to the Hotel Amigo.  That would be my first point of call next time.  It is unlikely that it could be any worse.


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Comments (61)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Colin MacKinnon says:

    Ever burnt an old real Christmas tree?

    Since we chopped one up for the fire and saw how it almost exploded with heat and flame, I have never had a real one in the house again!

    • mrtibbs1999 says:

      I would be concerned at some of these huge trees. I’ve never seen anything go up in flames like a dry xmas tree.

  • Jon King says:

    Have you seen the reviews on Trip Advisor? They are very much at odds with yours..

    • Rob says:

      And your point is?! My review is 100% factual, I am not knocking it because I didn’t like the colour of the wallpaper or something else which could be considered subjective. Your newspaper comes or it doesn’t. They have food at breakfast or they don’t. They have your room or they don’t. The Wi-Fi works or it doesn’t (well, OK, let’s say ‘the Wi-Fi works WELL or it doesn’t).

      • paul says:

        The point is that unless people review via trip advisor nothing changes. It is used extensively by travellers and given the reviews I would book this hotel…….were I not aware of your experiences. You have to be choosey about the reviews you believe but mine the stellar ratings on that site it would suggest you were unlucky.

  • MrHandBaggageOnly says:

    This sounds like a dreadful experience all around. Getting interconnecting rooms is one of the problems you never think will be hard, until you actually need them. Given how many times I have been given rooms with interconnecting doors when I didn’t want one, you’d have thought it would be easy when I did! Apparently not. I have often found it odd that there isn’t a tick box for ‘interconnecting rooms required’. I wouldn’t have thought it would be that hard (for someone running a hotel website who knows what they are doing) to sort out.

    If anyone does know of a website that specialises in interconnecting rooms bookings, please do share. Or maybe it’s a business idea for someone with industry knowledge.

    Whilst on the topic of 5* hotels and events that are unlikely to happen twice, a couple of weeks ago the Shangri-la Toronto gave me a one-bed suite, rather than a one bed deluxe suite that I had booked (and the room type they confirmed they were giving me when I checked in). I’m not sure if they were confused about their rooms or being deceitful, but it only took about two seconds to realise I only had one bathroom, not two and that the suite was about a third smaller than it should have been. Again, the resolution to the situation was not handled in a five-star fashion (even after admitting they were wrong) and I shall not be rushing back to the hotel any time soon. I haven’t posted my TA review of it yet, because I didn’t want to write it while I was angry, but two weeks on and I’m still pretty cross.

    • tony says:

      Some Radisson Blu hotels we’ve used have rooms that can be booked as family suites. It’s a genius idea because of its simplicity – two connecting rooms, a double in one and a twin in the other. They just assign that pair as a distinct room category and presumably if they sell out of other rooms, they can reclassify. As you say the number of times you get a room with a connecting door when you don’t want one.

      But it was the Radisson in NYC that took the biscuit. We requested connecting rooms, called that morning, arrived late and not available. One of our two rooms had – you’ve guessed it – a connecting door. Not impressed!

  • danksy says:

    Oh dear

    Just my twopenneth …

    At the end of the day you were very clear vis-a-vis requirements and had the associated confirmation to back this up. So the hotel were in breach of their contract with you.

    It’s not unrealistic to have breakfast at 10am – if they state it’s open at that time – I’d have been pretty miffed with that too!

    I think you were justified in complaining, as others have said if it was on a credit card I think I’d be going for a chargeback, and a stinking letter to the decision makers. As a Director in a service driven organisation I actively welcome complaints as they give me chance to put things right; I’d hope a brand that places itself at the premium end of the hotel market would take a similar view and make a “WOW” recovery; as well as learning of issues to ensure repeats are not made.

    Cheers
    Danksy

  • Henry C says:

    That’s truly awful, I would have walked out immediately and let them charge the card, but then disputed with head office and threatened to take it further etc etc

    • Rob says:

      And walked out where, at 9pm with two little kids?

      • Daz says:

        Agreed totally; It’s very easy to say what should be done and show displeasure by walking out, however the inclusion of humans in a thwarted travel plan especially small ones in a one-horse tombstone town at night tends to knock the Consumer Credit Act out the window, better to suck it up an unleash furious anger later on.

  • Mike says:

    Wow – what an experience. Cannot get over the pictures of the empty egg dish and pastry dish! From a 5 star property….a bit mad they did not do anything from check-in, through to breakfast/meals, to the mattresses on the floor, to not picking them up, to newspaper not arriving to chasing you for signing off on additional expense.

    The whole episode would be funny/comical if not so tragically handled by the hotel.

  • Alan says:

    Lol I was with you until the non sequitur in the final paragraph there!

  • Lloyd says:

    As of right now if you google Hotel Amigo Brussels it is already listed as Number 14!

    • Lloyd says:

      And now this article is hit number 3, only behind the official website and tripadvisor…

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