This is a nice, historic hotel. We have stayed multiple times. The beds are comfortable, but the walls are very thin. You can hear the conversation of your neighbors. Check-in is very impersonal. They have you read a full page taped to their plexiglass in order to be checked in rather than actually talking to you like all other hotels we stay. The clerk was somewhat rude. The floral decor in the room appears to be 30 years old. A simple update would give the room a fresh feel and there is zero counter space around the bathroom sink. Unless you can walk up several stairs off the street, you must park across the street behind the hotel a tote all of your luggage in, then after check in, you need to walk back out and place a parking permit on your car. Its not a big deal to many, but its a lot when you are disabled and have worked a 10 hour day. One other disappointment was breakfast. They ran out of food 15 minutes before breakfast was over. There literally was a foot race to the breakfast room and people didn't get a thing to eat. Its a nice place, but not being run well. I hope management trains their staff to be more hospitable, freshen up the rooms, and pays more attention to the residency numbers and appropriate breakfast needs.