But more fun to watch.
'Not Fade Away'
F2F5: I forget that everyone isn't us
Plan what to do, what to wear (you can never go wrong with a corset), and get ready for the next BuffistaCon.
So Pete and I checked out the Hotel Nexxus this morning....
...I think daylight savings is eating my brain. Or I'm getting sick. He and I talked and said "yes, is mostly good" but I'm having a hard time making words out of that.
Good things: prom location, though technically only allowed until 10pm, we were told would be allowed to stay until whenever, as long as people who go smoke on terrace are not loud (if we get noise complaints, we get kicked out, but there are no rooms above/below/next to the prom room, so it's only the outdoors part, where smokers would be, that might generate that). We could bring our own booze if we wanted. It'll have a dancefloor, TV/DVD, mic.
Bad thing: the shuttle is a scheduled thing. We did get their printed schedule (they have a couple of those little vans, which run not that frequently--more like once an hour or two, not every 15 minutes). Which given the number of us and how we tend to do things...yeah. Unlikely to be super useful. Parking is free, though, so if some people got rental cars, they could work it out. And it is near a transit hub and all that jazz, so shit could be worked out.
The hospitality suite is...a suite. Though the one she showed us had a connecting door to another king size room, so if we coudl work it so that we had that room too, that'd be nice. The rooms are....rooms. It's a motel--the rooms open to the outdoors. OTOH, in June, Seattle will likely be nice. There's a pool. The highway is very nearby, so there's a fair bit of noise from that, but you can't really hear it from the rooms.
It's seriously cheaper than the other options.
I'll be contacting the other two options this afternoon.
Sounds pretty good so far. These days especially keeping the cost manageable for as many as possible makes up for a lot.
It's a motel--the rooms open to the outdoors.
We had this in LA and it was actually really nice to have doors open to the outside when 40 people were trying to cram into one hotel room.
Basically some of it that would in theory be very good was her promising us stuff that may not be able to come through--obviously they always say "oh we'll try to put all your group together", but if the hospitality suite ends up with some random person having that connecting door next to us, that'd be of the suck. OTOH, if they worked it out that we were all near each other, it would be very sweet. So, who knows.
The rooms do have microwaves and little fridges. The hospitality suite was a two room thing that had a couch and stuff, and more of a kitchen, and then the other room had two beds--it was maybe a little smaller than the LA suite, but not by a ton?
The ballroom area was probably the size of the DC prom area. I think. There was one of those folding wall things up, and she said it could go away, and it would get about 1/3 bigger, if we wanted (same price), but it just happened to be closed when we saw it. Basic big blank room, hotel-esque. High ceiling.
The hospitality suite was a two room thing that had a couch and stuff, and more of a kitchen, and then the other room had two beds
Previously, hotels have been willing to move the beds out of the hospitality suite for us and put chairs in the "bedroom" instead. Do we know if this is an option here?
I'd say we should definitely try to get the king next to the hospitality suite - I don't think we've ever had an issue with the hosp room being too big...Bringing our own booze could save a fair bit of money so it should be more doable. The only thing that really concerns me is the noise issue, since in a warm place it may not be just smokers wanting to go outside a bit.
We are very talky people, and in the past when we've had an outdoor area we have not been quiet. I'd be concerned about this, especially once we add some booze. I say this as one of the people to potentially be unintentionally a noise problem.
Previously, hotels have been willing to move the beds out of the hospitality suite for us and put chairs in the "bedroom" instead. Do we know if this is an option here?
Funnily enough, I asked about that, and the response was "Might be possible, but probably unlikely, especially in June" so that's 90% a no, really. The lady's facial expression definitely suggested it wasn't likely.
A few things. Yeah, the ballroom was basic, but the high ceiling made a lot of difference. Didn't feel pokey. It's an attached building and we were told that we'd be able to be loud in there and it wouldn't be heard outside. The 'bring your own drink' thing was if we got a banquet license, which apparently is not hard to get.
The ballroom adjoins the hotel via an open area on the second floor that has typical outdoor tables & chairs. This would be the spot for smokers and the likely trouble spot for noise issues. We were told that it was one complaint gets a warning, 2 complaints gets us shut down. She said she's try to have the Buffistas fill the rooms closest to the ballroom but there's still no guarantee.
There's 2 shuttles, each with max occupancy of 12, and with the set schedule that means they aren't as useful as we'd hoped. However, given that this hotel is measurably cheaper ($119 vs $179 and $189) does mean there's more cash for rental cars.
I'd estimate the Hospitality Suite to be about 15% smaller than the SF one. The two rooms are about the same width, but they're a little shorter.
As for whether we'll want the door open, well that's down to the roulette wheel of Seattle weather.
Edit: The spelling, oh god, the spelling!