"This is maybe the most treacherous place I've ever stayed in, and I've stayed all over, nice, dangerous, upper class, poverty stricken.
Staff were aloof (when present), at best. I literally tripped over the door step ledge into the door, and glad I didnt fall all the way through.
The "chair" was in the way between the door and the bathroom and you had to pull it out of the way to get across the room. The chair was old and peeling and was at least 30 years old. and dangerous. It sunk to the floor.
Beds were hard as a rock, and dirty.
It was obvious that the shower was dangerous to get into, stepping down and filthy. There was no way I was going to do that.
The rooms were disgusting. The pool was empty. The men sat around reading papers in the front.
As I told the woman who represented a Wyndham property in MX, I'd given Wyndham another try and was very very sorry I did.
I left before I unpacked and went to another hotel room. A Marriot, which was so so so much nicer and less dangerous.
Because the woman I'd talked to about the Mexico City Property had asked for pics (and I had them, and she "apologized" and said that wasn't expected of the Wyndham name), I took some this time too. And it was a lot worse. At least the one downtown had a live band in one of the rooms.
P. S. That "multilingual" staff does not exist. I do NOT expect the people of Mexico to learn English, but ppl in the service industry should know how to use a translator.
I could write more."