1/5 Adrian E. 8 years ago on Google
I
have
been
in
many
hotels
in
different
parts
of
Europe,
also
quite
often
in
Cental-Eastern
and
Eastern
Europe,
and
usually
I
was
satisfied.
I
never
experienced
anything
even
remotely
similar
to
what
happened
in
Hotel
Silver.
First
it
looked
like
a
normal
hotel.
But
the
problem
was
that
I
had
a
room
that
was
directly
on
the
other
side
of
the
wall
of
the
party
hall.
Normally,
this
was
not
a
problem,
the
hall
was
not
used,
but
on
New
Year,
there
was
a
party
(not
for
hotel
guests,
I
read
that
they
asked
high
entrance
fees)
with
extremely
loud
music.
Even
just
for
a
party,
the
music
would
have
been
extremely
loud,
but
taking
into
consideration
that
there
were
hotel
rooms
like
mine
directly
on
the
other
side
of
that
probably
quite
thin
wall
(and
with
beds
directly
at
that
wall),
that
was
just
crazy.
It
was
as
if
a
loudspeaker
was
directly
in
the
room.
Of
course,
no
one
would
have
been
able
to
sleep
in
that
room
and
even
being
awake
is
was
very
unpleasant.
It
was
already
quite
late
in
the
night
when
I
returned
to
the
hotel,
I
was
tired
and
really
wanted
to
sleep.
So
my
first
reaction
was
that
I
asked
at
the
reception
whether
I
could
rent
an
additional
room
in
another
part
of
the
hotel
(not
directly
at
that
wall
of
the
party
hall,
the
hotel
is
quite
large,
so
in
other
rooms,
it
probably
was
not
so
loud).
I
was
told
that
this
is
not
possible.
At
that
time,
I
assumed
that
the
reason
for
the
refusal
was
that
all
hotel
rooms
were
occupied,
but
later
it
turned
out
that
this
was
probably
not
the
case
(see
below).
The
lady
at
the
reception
was
very
unfriendly
and
said
that
there
was
no
problem
since
the
party
was
announced
in
advance,
and
she
even
made
the
absurd
and
obviously
wrong
claim
that
it
would
be
the
same
in
every
hotel.
So
I
asked
at
what
time
that
loud
music
would
end.
I
was
told
that
it
would
end
at
4
o'clock
in
the
morning.
Since
I
did
not
have
a
room
for
sleeping
and
the
loud
noise
from
the
other
side
of
the
wall
was
like
a
kind
of
torture,
I
went
for
a
long
walk
in
the
winter
night.
When
I
came
back
at
4
o'clock
in
the
morning,
the
music
with
the
volumne
turned
up
in
an
extreme
way
was
still
there,
and
it
did
not
end
during
the
next
ten
minutes.
So
I
went
for
a
walk
again,
and
when
I
came
back
at
4:30
in
the
morning,
the
party
had
finally
ended.
It
is,
of
course,
bad
that
they
thought
that
only
the
expensive
party
with
very
loud
music
mattered
for
them
and
that
hotel
guests,
some
of
which
had
a
room
directly
on
the
other
side
of
a
thin
wall,
were
considered
irrelevant.
But
the
worst
and
most
absurd
part
of
the
story
was
still
ahead.
After
I
left
Białystok,
I
wrote
an
e-mail
in
which
I
described
the
problems.
After
some
time,
I
received
an
answer
that
really
shocked
me.
In
the
e-mail,
it
was
claimed
that
what
I
had
written
to
them
was
wrong
and
that
in
that
night,
during
the
loud
party,
I
had
been
offered
a
room
change
and
did
not
use
this
option.
That
was
really
absurd.
Of
course,
I
would
have
been
very
glad
if
I
had
been
offered
a
room
change
-
in
most
rooms,
it
would
have
been
much
less
problematic
than
directly
on
the
other
side
of
the
wall
of
the
party
hall.
I
was
ready
to
pay
for
an
additional
room
in
another
part
of
the
hotel
-
this
was
my
first
question
at
the
reception
during
that
night,
but
I
was
refused.
The
story
with
which
they
"corrected"
my
"wrong"
version
of
events
in
the
e-mail
was
really
absurd.
Why
would
I
have
refused
an
alleged
offer
of
a
room
change
and
have
preferred
to
keep
the
room
in
which
it
was
absolutely
impossible
to
sleep
because
of
the
extremely
loud
music
on
the
other
side
of
the
wall
only
to
complain
afterwards?
This
does
not
make
any
sense.
It
is
difficult
to
know
what
exactly
happened,
but
I
think
that
this
made-up
story
with
an
alleged
room
change
offer
raises
serious
issues
about
trustworthiness.
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