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- Jun 19, 2006
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Nothing grinds my gears more in the world of travel than hotel greenwashing. Specifically, it does my head in when housekeeping unnecessarily changes linen, both bath and bed.
My stays are predominantly at Hyatt hotels. For as long as I can remember, there’s been a nice, feelgood A5 card next to the bed saying something like, ‘We care for the environment. We’ll only change your linen after every three nights’. It’s lies. Lies, lies, lies.
Almost invariably, despite hanging my towels, they are regularly changed every day. Bed linen, more often than not, is changed after one or two nights. I would not expect linen to be changed after a single night at a Mandarin Oriental or a Four Seasons or even Buckingham Palace.
A couple of years ago I took to carrying small, laminated signs saying, “Please don’t change my linen”. At a stay at the Hyatt Regency in Perth several months ago, I had three of these signs visible: one on the pillow, one on the vanity and one on top of the towel hanging on the towel rail. Despite this, all the linen was changed. After one night. It absolutely does my head in. More recently, at the Grand Hyatt Kuala Lumpur, a four-night stay saw my perfectly fine, hanging bath towel changed eight times! This despite the hotel’s big pat-ourselves-on-the-back sustainability drive and glossy online brochure proudly proclaiming it replaces towels and linen “only when requested”.
Short of coughting the bed or using the towel to clean up your spew after a big night, I see absolutely no reason for it. Not changing linen isn’t just environmentally better, it also saves hotels money, yet I seem to be in a constant battle with housekeeping at every hotel I stay at.
Why do hotels do it? Why is it so hard to expect hotels to actually do what they say? Do people really think it’s appropriate to have towels and sheets changed after a night or two?
My stays are predominantly at Hyatt hotels. For as long as I can remember, there’s been a nice, feelgood A5 card next to the bed saying something like, ‘We care for the environment. We’ll only change your linen after every three nights’. It’s lies. Lies, lies, lies.
Almost invariably, despite hanging my towels, they are regularly changed every day. Bed linen, more often than not, is changed after one or two nights. I would not expect linen to be changed after a single night at a Mandarin Oriental or a Four Seasons or even Buckingham Palace.
A couple of years ago I took to carrying small, laminated signs saying, “Please don’t change my linen”. At a stay at the Hyatt Regency in Perth several months ago, I had three of these signs visible: one on the pillow, one on the vanity and one on top of the towel hanging on the towel rail. Despite this, all the linen was changed. After one night. It absolutely does my head in. More recently, at the Grand Hyatt Kuala Lumpur, a four-night stay saw my perfectly fine, hanging bath towel changed eight times! This despite the hotel’s big pat-ourselves-on-the-back sustainability drive and glossy online brochure proudly proclaiming it replaces towels and linen “only when requested”.
Short of coughting the bed or using the towel to clean up your spew after a big night, I see absolutely no reason for it. Not changing linen isn’t just environmentally better, it also saves hotels money, yet I seem to be in a constant battle with housekeeping at every hotel I stay at.
Why do hotels do it? Why is it so hard to expect hotels to actually do what they say? Do people really think it’s appropriate to have towels and sheets changed after a night or two?