EP. 3 The Most Common Hotel Design Mistakes

(That Cannot Be Fixed Later)

By Charles Tan

From real-world experience across many hotels and resorts,
these design mistakes appear again and again — regardless of location or budget.

The most dangerous part is this:
once the hotel is built, these mistakes are almost impossible to correct.

  1. Designing Guestrooms Without Considering Real Use

Many guestrooms are designed to look impressive in photos,
but fail in daily operation.

Common mistakes include:

  • Bathrooms that are far larger than necessary
  • Beautiful rooms that are difficult and time-consuming to clean
  • Lighting, air-conditioning, and power outlets placed without understanding guest behavior

The result:

  • More housekeeping staff required
  • Higher maintenance costs
  • Guest complaints — with no practical solution

A room that looks good but works poorly becomes a long-term operational problem.

  1. Ignoring the Back of House (BOH)

Many hotels invest heavily in the lobby and guest-facing areas,
but forget the spaces that actually keep the hotel running.

Typical problems include:

  • Housekeeping rooms that are too small
  • Narrow service corridors
  • No proper storage areas

The result:

  • The hotel looks good to guests
  • But staff struggle every day just to do their jobs

When back-of-house areas are poorly designed,
service quality suffers — no matter how good the front looks.

  1. Designing Without Considering Long-Term Costs

Some design decisions feel right at the beginning,
but become a financial burden over time.

Examples include:

  • Materials that look beautiful but are difficult to maintain
  • Systems that are overly complex and unnecessary

Uncontrolled operating costs do not disappear.
They follow the hotel for 10 to 20 years.

What seems like a design choice today becomes a permanent expense tomorrow.

The Reality of Hotel Design

Good hotel design is not about appearance alone.
It is about function, efficiency, and long-term sustainability.

Mistakes made during design do not show immediately.
They reveal themselves slowly — through higher costs, staff frustration, and declining guest satisfaction.

And by then, it is usually too late to fix them.

 

Share the Post:

Related Posts