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Travelodge hotels woes

(57 Posts)
infoman Mon 16-Mar-26 14:03:30

I have stayed in Travelodge hotels a few times,always found it okay till now.
The boss of travelodge is to meet with M.P.S in Portcullis house in London to discuss the events of the last few days.
Not sure if the meeting is being broadcast LIVE,but I understand there will be another meeting with the boss of Travelodge with M.P.s later in the week.

Biglanz Thu 19-Mar-26 12:17:12

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Visgir1 Thu 19-Mar-26 11:38:54

They are all fitted with this bar/lever thing you flip over as a lock.
Don't ever recall not seeing this in hotel rooms? My last hotel stay was in December and they had one.
Premier Inn definitely has these as standard.

Witzend Thu 19-Mar-26 11:29:13

If staying on my own I’d always use a wedge. But I so rarely do now.
TBH in the U.K. we nearly always choose a Premier Inn nowadays - if there is one.

Dickens Thu 19-Mar-26 11:18:02

infoman

Not good news:
www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvgkg85k245o

Hmm, maybe if we start boycotting Travelodge it might concentrate the CEO's mind a tad?

However, an independent review has been commissioned by them to look at those 'lessons-they-can-learn' because they treat the situation with the utmost seriousness.

... four years after the incident?

Does it need an independent review to understand that handing out keys to anyone who's not booked into the room is not good practise?

infoman Thu 19-Mar-26 10:46:31

Not good news:
www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvgkg85k245o

David49 Mon 16-Mar-26 21:14:58

twaddle

That doesn't sound good from a H&S perspective. How would the management gain access in the case of an emergency?

They have a special security key to open the deadlock to get access if the smoke detector was activated or an alarm was raised.

Personally we use PI because they have good beds, the security comes with it.

David49 Mon 16-Mar-26 20:39:14

Here is Premier Inns policy, it's what I have seen.

When you check in, we'll hand you your room details discreetly and we won't say your room number out loud, so no details about you can be overheard at reception
• Where possible, we won’t check vulnerable or solo female travellers into rooms that are on the ground floor or at the end of a corridor
• Every Premier Inn has a door entry system and only Premier Inn guests can enter after 11pm at night
• Every bedroom door is fitted with a deadlock or chain for the most secure protection

twaddle Mon 16-Mar-26 20:36:20

That doesn't sound good from a H&S perspective. How would the management gain access in the case of an emergency?

David49 Mon 16-Mar-26 20:30:13

twaddle

David, I'll check next time I stay in a Premier Inn, but I don't ever remember a door chain. In any case, I've never used it.

Usually it's the knob or lever below the internal handle, we certainly use it if we are staying in a dodgy location. If the windows have bars on its dodgy!

Allira Mon 16-Mar-26 20:21:20

twaddle

GrannyGravy13

Fallingstar I have no recollection of staying in a hotel room with no internal lock or chain, and I have traveled extensively.

My default hotel when staying in the UK is Premier Inn and I don't ever remember seeing a door chain or dead lock.

I've never seen one either in various hotels around the world.

David49 Mon 16-Mar-26 20:19:17

GrannyGravy13

Fallingstar I have no recollection of staying in a hotel room with no internal lock or chain, and I have traveled extensively.

There is often an internal lock that stops the electronic lock working

twaddle Mon 16-Mar-26 19:59:41

David, I'll check next time I stay in a Premier Inn, but I don't ever remember a door chain. In any case, I've never used it.

twaddle Mon 16-Mar-26 19:58:11

GrannyGravy13

Fallingstar I have no recollection of staying in a hotel room with no internal lock or chain, and I have traveled extensively.

My default hotel when staying in the UK is Premier Inn and I don't ever remember seeing a door chain or dead lock.

David49 Mon 16-Mar-26 19:56:12

We havnt stayed at TL recently Premier Inn first choice, there and other places a chain is usually fitted, Ive forgotten my key a few times. Ive never asked for a new key, I go to the door and knock, doors have spy holes an unexpected person would be identified. In many hotels the key is needed to get past reception and operate the lift as well as the room.l

All sorts of ruses could be used to get in but there is no way a spare key should be given to anyone, in an emergency situation the concierge should accompany the person to the room.

Fallingstar Mon 16-Mar-26 19:45:07

GrannyGravy13

Fallingstar I have no recollection of staying in a hotel room with no internal lock or chain, and I have traveled extensively.

I will take your word for it. We must have been a bit lax then because we assumed the door would be locked when it swung shut.
Will be more careful in future

GrannyGravy13 Mon 16-Mar-26 19:27:21

Fallingstar I have no recollection of staying in a hotel room with no internal lock or chain, and I have traveled extensively.

GrannyGravy13 Mon 16-Mar-26 19:25:48

infoman

Travelodge hotels don't have chains fitted.

Regarding wedges,I think that would be a no go,if smoke was detected in the room and the occupant was thought to be inside,the door would have to be smashed down.

Some do have chains or the swing type deadlocks.

Some rely on automatic locking after using key card entry.

Fallingstar Mon 16-Mar-26 19:24:36

GrannyGravy13

I cannot understand why people do not lock their hotel room doors and/or use the chain 🤦‍♀️

We always lock the door when we are inside a hotel room, whether it be night or daytime.

Can a hotel room with a key card be locked from the inside?
The door locks automatically from the outside once you are in the room so the only way in is with a keycard. I don’t believe chains are usual in such hotels.

Fallingstar Mon 16-Mar-26 19:22:10

I think was a dreadful response initially by TravelLodge who simply offered the victim £30. And as was said on the news it has taken many years - it occurred in 2022 - for the hotel chain CEO to do anything about this, with MPs, the HoL, and the PM having to get involved.
Giving key cards to anyone other than named guests occupying the room is totally unacceptable.
The man was jailed for the sexual assault but no doubt the woman is still suffering after such a terrible attack. God forbid if the man had a knife….

JaneJudge Mon 16-Mar-26 19:15:51

So it’s already taken 4 years?

infoman Mon 16-Mar-26 19:09:28

Travelodge hotels don't have chains fitted.

Regarding wedges,I think that would be a no go,if smoke was detected in the room and the occupant was thought to be inside,the door would have to be smashed down.

Litterpicker Mon 16-Mar-26 17:19:44

The man claimed he was the woman’s boyfriend and apparently they had met each other at a party the previous evening - presumably he had her name? He managed to convince the reception person anyway.

www.leeds-live.co.uk/news/leeds-news/travelodge-staff-gave-rapist-keys-33547389

SORES Mon 16-Mar-26 17:01:52

Door wedges should be handed over with room keys.

GrannyGravy13 Mon 16-Mar-26 15:57:42

I cannot understand why people do not lock their hotel room doors and/or use the chain 🤦‍♀️

We always lock the door when we are inside a hotel room, whether it be night or daytime.

Georgesgran Mon 16-Mar-26 15:54:05

I saw KS making a statement about it in parliament on the news yesterday or perhaps today.