It looks like there has not been an in-depth review of this hotel lately, so I'll give it a shot.
Like every Hyatt, the bed has a down duvet and down-surround pillows. I slept very comfortably.
The front desk staff were some of the friendliest and most competent I've seen in a while. There were some service quirks (like losing my laundry for a day and dropping the ball on another service request), but I the overall experience was still very good.
Wireless is provided by T-mobile, $10/day. The network was painfully slow, and T-moble was not proactive about fixing it or offering refunds.
This is an older (1977) hotel, and you can see it in the room layout and furnishings: there are two sinks, one outside the bathroom; the TV has a tube rather than an LCD; and the counters aren't marble. But, in the end, the room is comfortable, and those details don't matter so much. There is visible wear and aging, but nothing intolerable. Most annoying thing is the lack of power outlets. The only desk-height outlets are in a panel on the side of the desk, but that side of the desk faces the wall (in every room, or so I'm told): you have you move the desk to reach them. Likewise, bedside outlets require moving end tables. Desk chair is adjustable, but reminds me of a cheap OfficeDepot chair rather than a Herman Miller.
The rooms have very quiet heating systems and digital thermostats. I had very poor luck, though, with getting the room to my desired temperature. Perhaps the quietness is a side effect of a functional deficiency?
The fitness center has modern cardio machines, five or six strength machines including a multifunction center, and a small collection of free weights. Unfortunately, the fitness center and pool are located at the far end of one of the conference room wings. You may have to walk through meeting room space to get it.
The lobby bar permits smoking, and the smoke pervades one end of the lobby. The hotel's restaurant is reasonable, offering a lunch buffet every day. The hotel is in a mall parking lot: the mall has a (poor) food court, P. F. Chang's, Friday's, and several similar chain options.
One caution: the hotel's owner, Ashford Hospitality Trust, stopped making mortgage payments in June (as announced in its August 5th SEC filing, with an explanation that the property was cash-flow negative). Hotel staff say nothing has changed, but a cash-flow negative hotel is likely letting some things slip through the cracks.
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