Above, Tokyo's Shiba Park Hotel. Photo by Armand Vaquer. |
The average person doesn't enter a hotel room with a CSI kit to check out the cleanliness of the room before staying in it, but one can generally tell whether or not a hotel's housekeeping staff is doing a good job or not.
The Wall Street Journal has posted an article on which cities in the world has the cleanest hotel rooms.
They wrote:
Tokyo’s hotel rooms may not overlook any white sandy beaches or have gorgeous frescoes dating back to the Italian Renaissance, but tourists say there’s one key factor that’s driving their popularity.
Based on the opinions of more than six million users, hotel booking portal Hotel.info said that Tokyo has the cleanest hotel rooms among selected international cities.
Japan’s capital scored 8.93 on a scale of one to 10, where 10 is best. Warsaw placed second with 8.76, followed by Seoul’s 8.73. Slovakian capital Bratislava and Bulgaria’s Sofia tied for fourth with both scoring 8.54.
I am really not surprised that Tokyo scored at the top. I have never seen a hotel room in Tokyo that wasn't immaculate.
To read more, go here.
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