Belmont Hotel Manila – Pasay, Philippines Review

Belmont Hotel Manila

The hotel does everything right, I just can’t get to sleep here.

The Belmont does almost everything right. It is a small hotel that doesn’t try to be glamorous with a decent price per night, nice rooms, incredibly friendly staff, and in a great location. However, if you are like me and need a decent bed in a dark room, then there are going to be problems.

I am writing this review now. But in reality, this is probably my 8th or 9th stay at the Belmont. With the hotel literally being a stone’s throw away from Terminal 3, it is ideal to stay at if you have an early morning flight or just want to avoid the awful Manila traffic. In fact, with the new air-conditioned walkway, it is even easier to get from the Belmont to Terminal 3, and with the NAIA expressway, it’s also a breeze to get a taxi/Uber to Terminal 1 or 2. There is also Resorts World, a 3 minute walk away if you want to gamble (I would suggest other casinos though) or shop.

The staff at the Belmont are extremely friendly with check-in usually being quick despite there only being two or three desks.

The hotel entrance is relatively small, with the hotel Café (where you also eat breakfast) being right there as you walk in. Do not expect grand entrances with chandeliers at this hotel, but do expect a well kept, neat, and tidy lobby that is replicated throughout the halls and room. The breakfast buffet is a little on the simple side, but they have an egg station, so you can get a nice omelet or some pancakes.

The rooms are a little small, but are modern and have everything you need. The shower is nice and powerful, which is always positive. On this particular stay, the management was nice enough to leave a little chocolate welcome dessert, which was nice. All rooms have free wifi, which in all my 8 or 9 stays have never dropped out and is fast enough to watch some YouTube videos and what have you.

The corner rooms are very slightly larger and come with two windows as opposed to one, and herein lies my issues with the hotel… the curtains do not close all the way. Whoever designed this hotel made the walls entirely flush with the side of the curtain rail, which means that the curtains will never fully close and you get about a 2/3 inch gap on each side. With the direction of the hotel rooms, this means that at about 5:30 am when the sun rises, the room is lit up. The beds are also incredibly firm, so if you are like me and are a bit “Princess and the Pea,” then sleeping just doesn’t happen. I even tried to fashion some way to keep the curtains close to the wall, but alas my attempts were in vain. All of the rooms are designed in the same way, so it is a fundamental issue with the hotel structure.

It’s a real shame, because the hotel does everything I need it to do as a traveler, but I’ll likely not be staying again due to this problem meaning that I can’t get a wink of sleep. If you tend to sleep soundly, then I skip this minus point of my review.

JW Marriott Hotel – Hong Kong, China Review

JW Marriott Hotel - Hong Kong

Nice hotel, nice location, not much to do at night.

I’m a frequent visitor to the wonderful city that is Hong Kong, but this is my first time staying at the JW Marriot.

First up, the hotel location. The hotel itself is located right above the Pacific Place mall, which, along with housing the usual boutique clothing shops, doubles up as the entrance to Admirality MTR station. The Mall also houses entrances to the other two hotels in the area: The Conrad and The Shangri-La, and has a decent enough selection of restaurants on the bottom floor along with a pharmacy for getting any toiletries and what have you.

Outside of the Mall and around the hotel, there isn’t really much else in the immediate area. Don’t get me wrong, the area as a whole is bang in the middle of Hong Kong, but you are unlikely to be really wandering around the immediate vicinity of the hotel to find a bar or a hidden restaurant or what have you.

As with most places in Hong Kong, the hotel is a breeze to get to from the airport. You can book a hotel car, but it is frustrating because it’s about the only hotel in the world which doesn’t send you a link to do so in the confirmation email, nor does there seem to be any way to book the car directly through the website, so you are going to need to call. The hotel car is about 950HKD, with an Uber Black being about 750HKD, a regular Uber being about 450HKD, and a Red Metered Taxi being about 280HKD. A car ride from the airport to the hotel will take you about 30 minutes or so in normal traffic. You can, of course, choose to take the Airport Express train into Central station and then from there, go one stop on the MTR to Admirality, or walk it in about 20 minutes.

Checking in to the hotel was quick. They did this in our room due to booking a hotel car, but I didn’t see queues at the usual check-in desks. They also upgraded our room, which was very nice of them. I do like the hotel design, very traditional with a huge lobby and chandeliers and what have you — the way a hotel should be.

The rooms (at least ours on the 26th floor) were decently sized for Hong Kong. We had a nice sized bathroom with a bathtub. The shower was incredibly powerful and hot, which is what I need in the morning. Back to the room, the beds were soft and comfy with the pillows being a little too soft for my liking, but there is a choice of other style pillows if you wish it. The windows to the rooms are NOT reflective on the outside, so if you like to walk around naked with the curtains open, then you are going to get seen by people in the other buildings across the way — whatever floats your boat.

The hotel pool area is on the 7th floor and kind of juts out from the side of the building. The area is nice with a decent-sized pool and a Jacuzzi off to the side. The pool bar area is also very nice, with big comfy sofas and a fish bar-restaurant that seems to seat about 50 people. Two big complaints about the pool bar are:

  1. It closes at 10 pm, which I will never understand from an international hotel
  2. The service is really slow. There is often only 1 or 2 staff from the pool bar wandering around, and it can be a hassle trying to get their attention.

The other slight issue is bar food. They seem to have weird hours where you can order food from the Fish Bar, or you have to order very simple snacks from the bar menu. Let’s say you want a cheese and ham sandwich at 3 pm, well that isn’t happening. I didn’t personally eat at the Fish Bar, but my friends did and they said the food was good. Also, try the Wagyu Burger.

The other restaurants in the hotel are a Chinese Restaurant that we didn’t try, a Steak House that was booked for a private party, and also the standard-hotel-affair evening buffet. We ate at the buffet on two occasions and I’ve got to say that it is expensive. Look, I know I am staying at a 5-star hotel in the middle of Hong Kong, but 850HKD per person for the quite limited selection that the buffet offers isn’t really worth it, in my opinion. On top of that, I ate two lonely looking scallops that had probably seen better days and ended up throwing up all the next morning, so maybe that soured my view of the buffet?

The hotel lobby bar is right next to the buffet area, so you can go in there after eating if you wish. It is quite a quaint little lounge bar with a band off to the side that provides almost any drink you could think of. However, you better not be a night owl because the bar is open until 12 midnight and then that is your lot, which was quite the dismay to most of the tables as the lights went up and people realised there was nowhere else in the hotel to get a drink. Again, an international hotel closing the bar at midnight just boggles my mind.

Anyway, if you do want to drink a little later, then you can run through the lower floor of the now-closed mall and get over to the Conrad, who keeps their bar open until a slightly more reasonable 1 am. Or of course, head to Lan Kwai Fong in a taxi in about 10 minutes, which is the famous drinking area in Hong Kong, but not really a place to relax with a cocktail.

If you are sight-seeing, then honestly, it doesn’t much matter where you stay on the island. Everything is easy enough to get to either through the MTR, Uber, or metered taxi.

Check-out was quick. I booked an Uber Black back to the airport which came in about 10 minutes, so no issues there.

All in all, I think the JW Marriot is a nice hotel. I like the layout, I like the pool area, and despite the slow service around the pool, the rest of the hotel service is impeccable. My only gripes are the expensive and limited evening buffet, and that there is nothing in the area to do once the mall is closed, and then closing the pool bar at 10 pm and the lounge bar at 12 midnight doesn’t help this at all.

Hyatt Regency Manila, City of Dreams – Paranaque, Philippines Review

Hyatt Regency Manila

Good for a single night and gambling.

I’m writing this review after staying in the Hyatt for one night over this weekend, however, I have stayed at this hotel 4 or 5 times now so consider this review an aggregate of all those stays.

I’ll start with the most annoying aspect of the Hyatt and that is check-in. Unlike almost every other hotel in Manila, check-in time is 3 pm, not the standard 2 pm, but you are going to be stood around waiting to check-in for ages anyway, so it may as well be 3:30 pm. For some reason, there is no indication for guests to ask questions at the concierge, so because of this, each check-in desk becomes “general-questions-money-changer-and-anything-else”, so it means the queues are long. Then comes the actual check-in process when you finally get to the front of the queue… I have no idea what they are typing into those computers when you check-in (and why it is different than every other hotel I have stayed at), but I would say that me writing this review is quicker than them going through all the selections and actually giving you your key card — it’s blood boilingly infuriating.

I think it is also worth pointing out that on my trip before this one, we ended up waiting until 5 pm for our rooms to be ready, which was just crazy. On the flip side, and to be fair to the hotel, during my stay yesterday I did initially book a non-refundable and no-modification room, but had a family emergency and couldn’t make it. The hotel allowed me to change the date, nonetheless, so that was good of them.

So once you have finally checked in, then it’s up to the rooms. I usually stay in Wing 1, which I think are all the 56sqm. rooms. This time, I was in Wing 2 (36sqm. rooms) and the rooms are a little smaller and they do not have a bathtub. I’d recommend staying in Wing 1 where you can, as the rooms are much nicer and the tub is a nice touch, along with the view being a little better and it is easier to navigate to the rest of the hotel.

I have never had any issues with the rooms. Both sizes are very spacious, and despite other reviewers saying the contrary, I do think they are nice and modern. Make sure you avoid corner rooms as these are designed poorly. And do not get a room on the same level (Level 1) as the swimming pool, else you are going to have people screaming and shouting going past your room all day.

The swimming pool isn’t the best but certainly isn’t the worst. It’s kind of small and is tucked away to the side of a much larger pool, which is for guests of the Nobu Hotel. Now, my father would say to me that you should have worked harder at school so you can stay at the more expensive hotel and have a nice pool, but I didn’t — so I was stuck with the smaller Hyatt pool.

The pools also share a common pool bar, which serves the usual drinks and food you would expect beside a pool and is open until 10 pm. The Hyatt pool doesn’t get much sun due to it being surrounded on three sides by the actual building, and there is a hell of a wind trap late in the afternoon which can get quite breezy. If you are staying in Wing 1 as I told you to, then getting down to the pool is easy enough. But if you are in Wing 2, then it is a bit of a Labyrinth with you actually having to pass through an unremarkable fire-door at the end of a hallway that exits directly into the Nobu hotel. Then you have to walk by the Nobu Spa area out into the nice Nobu pool and then through a gate into the Hyatt pool… bring your map!

City of Dreams, which is the mall and casino that connects all the hotels, including the Hyatt, is nice enough. In fact, the Hyatt hotel lobby doubles up as one of the casino’s entrances. If you are a gambler (I am), then this is the best casino in Manila (perhaps bar Okada but I am yet to visit that new one) as it is spacious, has tons of table games, free drinks, excellent entertainment in the middle, a electronic virtual horse racing machine (second floor), and houses the Pokerstars poker tournament section on the second floor. The mall itself is full of restaurants and shops of different varieties and weirdly allows people to smoke inside the mall itself due to the casino kind of bleeding into it.

Except for the casino and the 8 or so restaurants in the mall, there isn’t a great deal else to do. Kids can go to the Dreamworks studio, but not having children myself, I cannot comment on it. As a childless couple, I think you would be hard-pressed to enjoy much more than two nights here. The only restaurant in the actual Hyatt hotel is the buffet, and it’s not the most expansive in terms of variety and selection, but the food is decent enough quality. You can always jump in a taxi for about 2km and travel to the Mall of Asia if you want to wander around for a few hours in a massive mall or visit the pier, but don’t expect to be able to walk anywhere around the hotel grounds as it is all construction for the mini Las Vegas they are building.

If you are looking for a hotel to stay at for an evening whilst waiting to catch a flight, then the Hyatt is about 10 minutes from any of the 3 Manila terminals. The new expressway that they have built in the area really has done wonders for negating traffic around the airport, as long as you ensure the taxi driver or Uber takes the NAIA Expressway from the Hyatt hotel and pays the small 20 peso toll.

All in all, I think the rooms are reasonable for the price, and the Hyatt is a perfect hotel for one night losing money in the casino whilst you wait for the sun to come up and catch a ride to your early morning flight. But it doesn’t really offer much more outside of that, and I am not even sure it tries to.

Ovolo Central – Hong Kong, China Review

Ovolo Central

Great location, amazing sized rooms and bathroom.

Having not stayed in an Ovolo hotel before, I wasn’t sure what to expect, but they certainly go for the funky style.

First off, having stayed in Hong Kong, in general, a few times before I picked this “hotel” based purely on location — I have put Hotel in quotation marks because it really did feel much more like a serviced apartment than a hotel (which isn’t a bad thing). The hotel building is narrow with 2 rooms per floor, and except for check-in and check out, you could easily go an entire week without seeing another person when coming and going to and from your room to the outside world.

The rooms are amazing for Hong Kong, nicely laid out and very spacious. The bathroom and shower are again very large for Hong Kong and immaculately kept. My only issue with the bathroom is that the shower could have done with being a bit more powerful for my tastes, but still entirely usable.

When you do see the staff, they are nice and friendly, speak excellent English, and are happy to accommodate you in any way. The free snacks and drinks are a nice touch, but the area is more like that of reception than any sort of bar, so it wasn’t really somewhere I would like to sit for an hour to relax. As others have noted, the room is replenished with a loot bag (snacks, candy, etc.) but we did need to prompt our house cleaner on one occasion — she must have thought we were a little greedy 🙂 Back to the reception area, it also has a couple of washers and driers, so you can do a quick bit of laundry if you so desire without charge.

As I said, the location is amazing — right on the top of Lan Kwai Fong, which is the main drinking area. There are tons of bars and restaurants (including the best Indian restaurant on the island) located a stone’s throw away from the hotel — I mean like 2 minutes max of walking. Be aware, though, that you are going to have to climb a lot of stairs if the escalators are out like they were for the duration of our stay.

Next door is a decent enough USA-style diner where you can grab some quick food before heading out. The other side is a salad bar style cafe for those who are more health-conscious.

The place isn’t grand. And in my opinion, Ovolo marketing tries a little too hard to really push that they are hip and happening. But the rooms, service, and location are top notch and I would recommend this place for sure. It is a little pricey if you are used to paying for grand hotel entrances and masses of concierge welcoming you as you walk through the door, but more than reasonable for a very nice room in the heart of Hong Kong.

Crimson Resort and Spa – Cebu, Philippines Review

Crimson Resort and Spa

Great layout, Villa’s are nice, staff quick to allow rain to close everything.

I’m not long back from Crimson Resort, so this is fairly fresh in mind. We stayed in the Pool Villa’s, which are a bit more expensive than the standard rooms, but all situated in the same sort of area. I will say that I have stayed in numerous villas across a bunch of different Philippines resorts, and these were by far the best.

The layout and size of the villa are absolutely perfect, along with the walls being high enough that they remain private whilst still being easy to access. The plunge pool area is a little sparse with only a “naked” double reclining bed that you see along the pools, but the area does get sunlight nearly all day, so it is fine to relax in the privacy of your “home”. The rain shower in the bathroom could do with being more powerful, but it does have a dedicated bathtub to soak in.

I absolutely loved the layout of the actual resort, especially how the dedicated beach bar had an “infinity” view. The beauty of the layout also meant that for childless couples like ourselves, we could head away from the main area and relax without the worry of being bothered by the playful noise that children make.

With all that being said, I was pretty disappointed that the staff is far too quick to close this area entirely at the slightest drop of rain. For instance, it rained a little around 3 pm one day, and it was obviously forecast to rain further. Instead of just risking it and closing the area when it did rain, they just shut the whole thing down for the afternoon/night and that was that. Also, all bar areas close strictly at 12 midnight (2 am on Friday and Saturday), which made me frustrated. Why the distinction between a weekend and a weekday when you are a resort and people are there over the holiday period?

The other bar, which is inside the resort, is named the sports bar. It had a couple of decent-ish pool/billiard tables, but the pool cues could have done with some love. It also had an unusable darts board. Unusable, because the thing has been hammered for 3 years without being replaced and none of the questionable darts would even stick into it. I asked the bartender about this and he said they have requested it to be replaced, but it never has… can management really not afford a few dollars to replace a darts board?

You can also forget about watching any Western live sports (except basketball) in the sports bar as all they have are local cable channels. Again, with the instances closing exactly at 12 midnight, you wouldn’t be able to catch much sport live anyway. Despite the last couple of lines sounding negative, the layout of the sports bar was very nice but should be called a games room as opposed to a sports bar.

The internet was way below what I would expect for a resort of this size. My iPhone 7 would often drop from Wifi to it’s own LTE due to the wifi signal not being strong enough. And when you were connected to Wi-Fi, it was slow, maxing out at around 120kbps when it wasn’t dropping out. Fine for perhaps checking the weather or firing a few quick emails, but not so good if you wanted to get some heavy work done. On that note, Globe’s cell phone reception is almost nonexistent in the villa we stayed in and barely got above 2 bars (3 at a push). They could probably do with a couple of cell towers to cover the resort.

The beach is nice enough, with a nice private area for people to sit down and swim in. Visitors of other Lapu-Lapu resorts will note that the area is rocky, so don’t expect talcum powder sand. The drop into the sea is pretty shallow too and the local fish come close enough that you can get a decent enough experience when snorkelling.

The pool is nice, 3 tiered, but is woefully lacking the number of chairs/beds needed for a resort of this size. You need to be up early to make base by the pool, and due to the way the resort is designed, you are going to constantly get foot traffic walking by your head no matter where you are situated. Families will often venture from the dedicated kids’ pool, which can be frustrating when you are trying to relax, but such is life.

The food is pretty good — not amazing, certainly not poor. I like the Indian fusion that is apparent in the menu, but it does lack the wide choice that you would perhaps find at other places. Unfortunately, I had a nasty bout of food poisoning from a room service burger, and to be fair to the resort they were on the ball on correcting the issue. The head chef came to me personally and was obviously very upset that this sort of thing happened and the director of food arranged for us to have a free spa treatment in a packed spa as compensation for the issue. I have stayed at places in the past where just having an issue like this would have made my blood boil, but it was handled with so much care that I found I could let it slide.

The staff is very friendly, as you would expect from Filipino workers, but they shone here compared to other places with being able to answer all questions and checking on ways to have custom meals or drinks, as opposed to just saying “not possible”.

Travel time from the airport is about 25 minutes, so you can fly from Manila to Cebu and get to the resort in the morning and have the afternoon to yourself.

I would recommend this resort to my friends. It’s fine for couples, and families are well taken care of with its kid-friendly focus.