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| The Ideal Hostel What qualities and facilities do the best hostels in the world have? What makes "the perfect hostel"? |
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Interesting related news item from 30 April:
http://www.easier.com/view/Travel/Ho...le-176832.html Hostelworld just began asking for an "urgent" dictionary change in the definition of hostel: Quote:
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A couple of years ago (before there were any hostels in Birmingham) I asked the tourist office in Birmingham about hostels and they gave me a list of homeless shelters. I had a similar response from the tourist information centre in Leeds. I can just imagine the hassles that this misunderstanding causes for hostel owners that want to get planning permission for their hostel when the authorities at the town hall think that they want to open a homeless shelter.
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BUG: the Backpackers' Ultimate Guide |
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Very interesting discussion -- not something I'd ever put much thought into to be honest.
I'm intrigued though about the need for dormitory accommodation to qualify a place as a hostel. Surely that excludes many places which, if measured say by clientele, or presence of a common area, would qualify as a hostel. I know that here in SE Asia, dorms are becoming less common than they were in the past -- primarily due to availability of cheap private rooms and/or bungalows -- if a bungalow is costing you US$1 then the dorm is going to need to be close to free (there are free dorms in Cambodia -- the only place I've seen them) to get people going for that option. I'd hazard a guess that the bulk of travellers who bed down in hostels in Europe, US, Oz etc, stay in the same places in Asia, except they're called guesthouses, and they don't have dorms. To my mind, the value in a great hostel -- or a great guesthouse -- was the common area as that helped to create the camaraderie between travellers (though dorms can too )
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Travelfish - your online guide to Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam. |
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Granted as soon as I mentioned this thread to my better half she scoffed and said "Of course a hostel has to have dorm beds you idiot"...
So I guess Asia has precious few hostels and lots of great guesthouses... I'll leave it at that ;-)
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Travelfish - your online guide to Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam. |
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That's why I have the opinion of having common room and dormitory as a necessity, as in a private room you are by yourself, it's hard to meet people that way. You can have similar experiences in a guest house as well, but you gonna have it mostly with your host, not with other guests. Also having just a bar or lounge won't replace a common room, and this common room should be the heart of the hostel, where everyone meet. I don't think there should be any shame having a guest house, as a guest house suits for different kind of people. It is still more intimate comparing to a hotel, so in terms of intimacy it should be: Hostel > Guesthouse > Hotel. Anyway, there should be some definite description which suits for the majority of hostels, if not all of them. And instead of converting a guesthouse to a hostel, maybe we should promote guest houses as well! ![]()
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"Home is a place where you would be always happy to stay." Aboriginal Hostel Budapest |
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Hostelworld's new petition to define the word hostel:
http://www.hostelworld.com/petition/ This is Hostelworld's definition of a hostel: Quote:
What do you think? I'm sticking by this definition of hostel because I think that calling budget hotels "hostels" isn't good for genuine hostels... |
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I agree with you about this. I think the HostelWorld "definition" is more of a marketing line. Most dictionaries would consider it to be too ambiguous.
Chris Travel Plug Blog Last edited by ifij775; 30th September 2008 at 22:42. |