T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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453.1 | Not sure | VAXUUM::FARINA | | Mon Mar 06 1995 18:22 | 24 |
| I have never used the Concierge floor (never knew anything about it
until I read your note!). It doesn't sound worth it to me, somehow.
Have you asked if you can get a small fridge at the Contemporary? If
so, you can buy cereal and milk to take care of the 2-year-old. You
can also snacks on hand that don't require refrigeration. I certainly
understand the concern about waking up others, but it seems like
chances are almost equal to having that happen anyway. (Getting
dressed and going out can cause as much or more commotion as having a
bowl of cereal in the room.)
I haven't thought this all the way through, because I'm terribly busy
right now, but wanted to reply. There are many notes in this file
comparing "packages" of all sorts.
I'd compare the cost of the food 'n fun for everyone but the toddler
with the concierge. Will is cost $900 for food 'n fun? Will you use
the additional services of the food 'n fun card? Do you enjoy a
sit-down meal more than snacking?
I'd go for the Contemporary, have snacks for the toddler on hand, and
have one big meal a day, probably at lunch.
Susan
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453.2 | We used it/liked it on our honeymoon, Especially since it was free :-) | UHUH::TALCOTT | | Tue Mar 07 1995 08:32 | 24 |
| We stayed at the Buena Vista Palace. Someone had messed up & the people staying
in the room we were supposed to get decided to stay longer. That was the hotel's
claim, anyway. Instead they offered us a 9th (I think) floor room on the
concierge level. It was very nice having them make all our reservations for us
and the seats were typically very good. We got in to see everything/eat
everywhere we wanted, all with no advance reservations on our part. It's also
handy when you purchase things you want shipped home - we'd drop them off at the
concierge desk and they all got packed/mailed for us. While I'm not much of a
drinker, I did enjoy the evening cocktail hour - the food/spirits were excellent
and we met people I'd probably never have had a chance to bump into anywhere
else (eg real world travelers who had a ton of fascinating stories to tell).
On the other hand, $900 is a *big* chunk of change. You don't say how long
you're staying there. I think I could convince myself that considering the
zillion dollars I'd be spending on such a vacation anyway and the fact that we
only go down once every 5 or 10 years, it'd be worth, oh, $100 a day to get that
additional level of "wonderfulness." My wife's informed me that we're going
there for our 10th anniversary and she has eyes on staying at the GF.
Considering how much time one spends in one's room and the goal of an
ultimately hassle-free stay, I'd prefer to spend some extra bucks for concierge
service at some other on-site hotel than stay at the GF. We still have 3 years
to see who convinces who. Trace-who'll-stay-at-the-GF-concierge-level-if-they-
have-one-and-Digital-stock-hits-100-by-1998 :-)
Trace
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453.3 | an alternative... | ODIXIE::ROBINSON | | Tue Mar 07 1995 11:34 | 9 |
| My husband and I stayed at various accomodations for several years when
we went to WDW when we lived in Houston. After our second child was
born, we started insisting on staying in suites, timeshares, etc. Then
we stayed in a private home and then we bought one and have a property
manager rent it for us. It's the way the Europeans vacation, and you
still have a conceirge service to arrange bookings at discounted rates
for dinners, character breakfasts, etc. Mail me if you are interested.
Maureen
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453.4 | Pass on the upper floor for $900+ | ASDG::WATSON | Discover America | Tue Mar 07 1995 12:23 | 6 |
| I've used concierge floors in many Sheraton hotels including the
Dolphin at WDW, but the $900 price tag is too much unless you're
burning 2 weeks of vacation time. I was always upgraded either free or
at a small charge. I like the special attention, and, if I was the one
that hit the 100M power ball lottery, I'd never stay any other way.
Save the money. You won't regret it.
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453.5 | What does "worth it" mean | PAMSRC::MARCUS | DECmessageQ Engineering Manager | Thu Mar 09 1995 10:15 | 25 |
|
My wife and I go down to WDW at least once per year (no kids, other than
myself). We always stay on the Concierge Level of our hotel if at all
possible, in the following order: GF, YC, Contemporary.
There is no question that the Concierge service is not "worth it" on a strict
economic basis. The value of having the concierge make reservations for you,
rather than dialing yourself and being on hold for 2 minutes, or having some
food available which you could also buy in a store, etc., is a lot less than
the extra you pay. And, if you are planning "full days" (out by 8:00, back
after Illuminations or MK fireworks), then you aren't there to enjoy most of it.
However, there is no doubt that having those amenities "free" (i.e., not being
paid for as used) is very relaxing and enjoyable.
So, the real question is the value of the $900 and the sense of joy, if any,
that you will get from the extra level of feeling more pampered and special
than normal for WDW (which is pretty high to start with).
One other note: we have never had a refrigerator in our room. Most of the
rooms now have minibars; we regularly take their stuff out and put any stuff
we want in. However, I have never had a refrigerator as a "normal feature"
of the Concierge level. This may be recent or maybe we missed it (we only
stayed at the Concierge of the Contemporary once and it was awhile ago). But,
this may be something you could get in any level room.
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453.6 | | WONDER::REILLY | Sean / Alpha Servers DTN:223-4375 | Fri Mar 10 1995 18:01 | 18 |
|
We had the Concierge floor at the Grand Floridian during our honeymoon.
I agree, price-wise, it is not "worth it." Neither was the Grand Plan.
But... for once-in-a-lifetime type of trips, it was really really
nice. An personal elevator (serviced just your floor), afternoon
tea and pastries in your floor's lobby, walking to your own floor's
conceirge's to have them make reservations for you (rather than
fighting everyone down in the main lobby)....
...these things are nice (and appropriate) for those special vacations
that come up from time to time.
Certainly they are not for the average trip (we all go to Disney more
than once, right? :^)).
- Sean who liked it once at least.
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453.7 | Options? | CSLALL::HOLIHAN | | Wed Mar 15 1995 14:37 | 36 |
| After the quick replies and effort you kind people took to answer my note, I
certainly am overdue on an acknowledgement. After looking over your Notes
replies, and from others who mailed me input privately, we decided, with mixed
feelings, to go with the Contemporary-Garden view. My conclusion was that
Concierge offered valuable non-cash advantages that I could appreciate
very much, but it was good to make the decision, in any case, and move on
with great anticipation, even with the mixed feelings.
Now a wrinkle.
WDW made an error in our new phone reservation - their favor - which
was discovered when we called the next day to pay for the package.
Reservations dept. acknowledges an error occured somewhere - the total they charged us doesn't
match any combination of their offers, yet they left it to us to escalate in
writing, which I have yet to do. In the meantime, I've spent a lot of time
and effort making contingency plans in case they stand firm. Although they
never contacted us again, yesterday we received our WDW reservation
confirmation. It was marked "modified". It's the same price we were
originally quoted, it reinstates part of the package that was lost, but about
$500 remains unresolved, with me under stress for lack of closure on these
plans.
I believe they may offer a concierge free for all the trouble, which is quite
ironic given my original note. If they Don't offer that, are there any
non-obvious upgrades I can ask for to come to mutually agreeable closure?
Obvious would be: suite upgrade, longer stay, 3 meals. I don't want to be a
jerk, but I feel they do owe us something, so I want to be prepared for that
conversation.
Again, thank you in advance. I was so impressed with the original responses;
it helped us a lot to make that initial decision. I learned a lot along the
way regarding pricing, which I will insert in the appropriate note and hope it
helps you with your own plans. Regards.
P.S. The reservation phone experience can be frustrating because "there is
nothing I can do", but they are extremely polite & helpful in providing
escalation information.
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453.8 | | FPTWS1::ABRAMS | Curl up with a good CD-ROM | Thu Mar 16 1995 13:21 | 12 |
| Ouch! $500 difference? Sounds like someone was asleep at the proverbial
switch. There is no concierge level at the Contemporary, but there are
suites.
I'd consider asking for the extra night or two, or, an upgrade to a tower
room instead of the garden wing.
Do you know if the reservations person made a mistake in keying something in
or just misread something to you?
Bill A.
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453.9 | | CSLALL::HOLIHAN | | Thu Mar 16 1995 15:10 | 18 |
| "Do you know if the reservations person made a mistake in keying
something in..."
We agree on this much, the reservation department erred; perhaps I
wasn't clear that the amount they quoted me, and the amount in their
system agrees. The reason why they had to acknowledge an error was because
the amount did not match a total for any room or package combination that
they offer, yet the exact amount I was quoting was there. By the way,
I think this was an isolated incident. I read through the notes, and
talked to a lot of DW veterans recently, and rarely did I hear any
stories of phone reservation problems. I learned a good lesson,
however. The next time I negotiate anything sizeable on the phone, and
including this resolution, I'm going to inform, then record the final
order/price using my 2-way answering machine recording option, beeps and
all.
Thanks,
Heidi
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453.10 | Our concierge experience | CSLALL::HOLIHAN | | Wed Apr 05 1995 12:07 | 11 |
| We just returned from our vacation. We spent seven nights on property,
split between the Contemporary, and Yacht. WDW gave
us an upgrade to the tower in the Contemporary, plus an concierge upgrade
in the Yacht. I will write a trip report in the appropriate
note. Re: closure on our concierge experience, the (Yacht concierge) room
is quite small. I found this service helpful in terms of breakfast and
reservations, but would stay at Polynesian Concierge over Yacht
Concierge. Overall, the Contemporary tower was our favorite, and if it
had a Stormalong bay, we would never stay anywhere else. Thank you again
for your input. It was very valuable.
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453.11 | Concierge service at GF was very good. | MEMIT::MILANESE | | Tue May 23 1995 13:43 | 31 |
| Just returned from Disney and
five nights at the Grand Floridian.
I thougth the concierge service was
worth it..yes, it's expensive and you
probably wouldn't do it every time at
Disney. But, for a special trip, it's
quite wonderful.
Starting at 6 a.m., they serve some kind
of food until 10 p.m. I think there's
only one hour in the day when you can't
get some thing to eat up there.
There's breakfast from 6-10; snacks throughout
the afternoon; from 5-7 free wine, cheese, crudites;
from 8-10 desserts and cordials (good ones too).
We took full advantage of it; of course, we don't
have kids and didn't care if we spent every waking
hour at some Disney sight.
Plus, it was 90+ every day..very hot..so we spent
most afternoons lounging around, had the wine and
cheese, then went out for a late dinner..topped
off by some dessert and a cordial or two...it was
great!!!
But expensive...our room was $400 a night, and not
for a big room at that..nice view, though.
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