Skip to main content

Standard contents in a Guest Room

IN A 5 – STAR HOTEL

GUEST ROOM:-

1. BED:- 1. Mattress (1)

2. Maters protector (1)

3. Bed sheet (2)

4. Night spread (1)

5. Blanket (1)

6. Pillows (2)

7. Bed cover (1)

(Boisters)

2. ENTRANCE DOORS:- 1. Lire exit plan

2. DND card on the door know

3. Collect my laundry card

4. Please clean my room card

3. WARDROBE:- 1. Coat hangers

2. Skirt trouser hangers

3. Laundry bags

4. Pot

5. Extra blanket and pillows

6. Bed slippers

4. LOUNGE :- 1. Sofa, armchair, easy chair

2. Coffee table

3. On the coffee table (a) Daily newspaper

(b) Ashtray with matchlrox

(c) In house magazine

5. SOFT-FURNISHING’S :- 1. Heavy curtains (curtains that provide texture and cut the light come in)

2. Sheer curtains (curtains that are light in colour and stop the glare of light coming in and provide

privacy to some extent when heavy curtains are up.

3. Cushions on the sitting.

6. DRESSING CUM WRITING TABLE :-

1. Mirror with well mounted lamps

2. Bud vase

3. Study table lamp

4. A stationary folder containing

(a) Hotel letter pad

(b) Envelopes

(c) Aerogrammes

(d) Picture post card

(e) House rule card

(f) Main wording address card

(g) Expecting a call card

(h) Ball pen

(i) Guest comment card (guest questionnaire)

(j) Room service menu card book

(k) Hotel sales and promation brouchers

(l) Scrilling pad

In a study table drawer

1. Breakfast hanger
2. Dutch wife (sewing kit)
3. Business kit
4. Lelegram or telefax forms
5. Laundry list



Under the study table

1. Waste paper leasket
2. Shoe shine card



7. BED SIDE TABLE :- 1. Scrilling pad

2. Hotel telephone directory

3. Pen/pencil

4. Bhagwat gita

5. Vacum flask on tray (in double room). It is kept on led side table or dressing table.

6. Sterlized drinking glasses

7. Local telephone directory

8. T.V./MUSIC control

9. Light control switches

10. Telephone tent card

8. OTHER ITEMS :- 1. Luggage rock

2. T.V. with/without remote

3. Programme guide

4. Minilar

5. Safe/electronic safe

6. Fax machine

7. Ler/coffee maker

9. FLOORING :- Well to well carpeting

SUPPLIES IN A BATHROOM

1. BATH TUB :- Tub mat, bathmat, bath soap, mug, showerhead, shower culicle,

(a) Bath towel

(b) Shower curtain

(c) Rod

2. WASH BASIN COUNTER :- 1. Hand towel (2)

2. Face towel (2)

3. Well mounted mirror

4. Hair dryer

5. Tooth brush glasses (2)

6. Electric switch plate

7. Shower/shaving kit

8. Face tissue box

9. Extra toilet roll

10. Ashtray

11. Shower cap

12. Soaps/shampoo

13. Moisturizers, loofah

14. Lotion, nail file

15. Shaving mirror

UNDER THE WASH BASIN COUNTER

1. Bathroom supplies
2. Sanitary lins with disporalle lags
3. Weight scale

3. WATER CLOSET C.W.C.J. :- 1. Sanitary disinfectant slip/loard (in vacant rooms)

2. Toilet roll holder in a triangle bar fold

3. Deodriser (odinil stick)

4. Shoe shine slip

5. Wall mounted telephone

4. ENTERANCE OF BATHROOM:- 1. Full length mirror facing the room behind

2. Cloth bags

3. Bath role

4. Bottle opener on the door frame inside the bathroom.

NOTE:- Ventilator grill is above the bath tub or shower area.

Comments

VARON VARMA said…
Amazing!!! Thank u so much for posting.
Anonymous said…
Thanks you for the information on standard co contents of guest rooms

Also read

What if you could undo every regret? An uncomfortable conversation with The Midnight Library

Have you ever replayed your life at night, wondering how things might have turned out differently? The Midnight Library by Matt Haig asks you to sit with that question. Through Nora Seed’s quiet despair and imagined alternatives, the novel explores regret, possibility, depression, and the fragile hope that living at all might be enough. Have you ever wondered if one different choice could have changed everything? You probably have. Most people do. Usually at night. Usually when the world goes quiet and your mind decides to reopen old files you never asked it to keep. The job you did not take. The person you loved too late or too briefly. The version of yourself that felt possible once. You tell yourself that if you had chosen differently, life would feel fuller, cleaner, less heavy. The Midnight Library begins exactly there, in that familiar ache. Not with drama, but with exhaustion. Not with chaos, but with a woman who feels she has quietly failed at everything that mattered. Mat...

Epitome of equality

First of all This is not to demean any religion.. I am a Hindu by birth, but yes I respect all religions .I offer my daily prayers , fast on holy days , but there was something that was disturbing me . God as per me was a Friend, someone who was by my side always , someone who was a dear friend , but this is not what everyone else thought , for others he was the Judge who gives his verdict always and punishes anyone and everyone . Walk into any temple and you would see , if you have money , you will be treated in a way as if you are the ONLY disciple of the God . I have had too many experiences where I was treated as a second class citizen in the temple . Why? Well I could not afford giving thousands as donation. This is not how it should be , God looks at each one of us with the same divinity .As I mentioned God for me is a friend, so tell me, do we chose friends based on their bank balances? Do we give our verdict on them ? then how can God do it? I know many of us would ...

Does India need communal parties?

I think, it was Tan's post on this blog itself, Republic Day Event, where this question was raised. My answer. YES. we need communal parties even in Independent, Secular India. Now let me take you, back to events before 1947. When India was a colony of the British Empire. The congress party, in its attempt to gain momentum for the independence movement, heavily used Hinduism, an example of which is the famous Ganesh Utsav held in Mumbai every year. Who complains? No one. But at that time, due to various policies of the congress, Muslims started feeling alienated. Jinnah, in these times, got stubborn over the need of Pakistan and he did find a lot of supporters. Congress, up till late 1940's never got bothered by it. And why should we? Who complains? No one. But there were repercussions. The way people were butchered and slaughtered during that brief time when India got partitioned, was even worse than a civil war scenario. All in the name of religion. And there indeed was cr...