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InterCity Hotel, Bremen

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InterCity Hotel, Bremen

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A First Class Choice at Second Class Prices

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4 Dec 4th, 2008 

47 Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful

Advantages:
Very convenient location

Disadvantages:
A little bit basic

Recommendable Yes:

Detailed rating:

Value for Money

Quality of Rooms

Standard of Service

Cleanliness

Quality of Facilities

koshkha

koshkha

About me:

I'm back!

Member since:26.12.2005

Reviews:281

Members who trust:238

In the golden age of rail travel, the railway hotels were giants of hospitality. You only have to see some of the fabulous railway hotels like the one at St Pancras or the Great Eastern at Liverpool Street (I think it has changed its name recently) to get a sense that there was a time when nothing but the best of architecture went into railway hotels. These were times when the railways represented a massive sense of hope and opportunity. Unfortunately these days the term 'convenient for the railway station' is often short-hand for 'shabby, run down and in a dodgy part of town'. Many years ago I remember a learned newspaper (probably The Sun or the Mirror) coining the phrase 'Have-it-away-days' for part-time prostitute housewives heading into the city to earn a bit of extra money in the hourly-rented hotels around the major London stations. There is a slight air of sleaze for me in the concept of the transient railway hotel.

In the case of the Intercity in Bremen, neither of these situations is true - it's not an architectural gem and it's not a sleazy dive either. What you get is a very nice, clean, modern hotel that's right next to the city's very attractive red-brick hauptbahnhof and right in front of the bus and tram station. As you can imagine, this isn't going to be the quietest hotel you've ever stayed in and if you open the windows, you will get a lot of noise. But with the windows closed it's not at all bad and since the aircon works in summer - not something you can take for granted in Northern Germany - you can easily live with the windows closed.

The location is great for the station and the public transport network, but not quite so good for seeing the historic heart of Bremen or for nights out at the riverside bars and restaurants. These will take you a 15-20 minute walk or a short taxi ride or you can use your free public transport pass, but more of that later. The Intercity works for me because it's a short walk to our Bremen office but after many stays, I now think that if I were going for tourism, I would still seriously consider the Intercity. On the downside, I sometimes find the plaza outside the front of the railway station can get a bit over-run with scruffy smelly punks with dogs on strings which can give the place a bit of an unsavoury feel but it doesn't feel unsafe as there are always lots of other people around.

I've stayed at the Intercity many times since I started my new job and it quickly became my first choice among the hotels that my company uses in Bremen. The other hotel is the Maritim and despite that being a lot grander, it just doesn't come close to the Intercity for convenience and value for money. The Intercity is not a grand hotel and the rooms and public areas are a little basic but they are always clean and tidy.

The reception desk staff are lovely and I've had some great conversations with some of them including the guy who was exceptionally sympathetic when he learned I'd been given one of the 'sofa bed' rooms on my previous stay and went out of his way to update my hotel profile to say I never wanted that again. On my next visit, a different receptionist checked the profile and said 'Ah yes, you are the lady who doesn't want the sofa-bed'. (The hotel has six rooms that have sofa-beds and they must rank as some of the most uncomfortable in the universe). We had a bit of a joke about how bad it had been and to compensate from my previous stay, he gave me an 'upgrade' to an internal room that would be quieter and which included a free minibar. When he explained that he was putting me 'on the backside of the hotel', I have to confess I doubled up giggling and had to explain that he'd effectively just offered me a room in the arse of the hotel. Once we'd got over that, I asked for an internet code (free but you have to ask) and headed off to my room.

I've stayed in five or six different rooms, some more than once and all slightly different. The first was a very standard small room with a double bed. The second was a nice large room with the most uncomfortable sofa-bed, and the third was the 'upgraded' business room. This was very little different from a standard room and all three were quite basic. However the business room had a mini-bar and I'd been told it was free. There were also better toiletries in the bathroom and extra magazines on the desk although all of them were in German so it wasn't much of a benefit. Other than that the standard and business rooms were all very similar. The beds (with the exception of the sofa bed) were comfortable though I needed both pillows because they were so soft. I also had my usual irritation with the way that German hotels seem to do origami with their duvets, folding them sideways. I now seem to be settled into one particular room on the inside of the hotel. It irritates me a little because the window doesn't open properly but I think it's a sign
Pictures of InterCity Hotel, Bremen
InterCity Hotel, Bremen Bear air conditioning
Pooh checks out the contents of the mini-bar
they like me that I get one of the 'quiet' rooms.

Each of the normal rooms had a desk, bedside tables and wall-mounted reading lights. The sofa-bed room had a complicated set up with table lamps which had (annoyingly) been left unplugged. All the bathrooms were the same, decorated in crisp black and white tiling with polished black gabbro vanity units. The showers are powerful but the hotel can be a bit mean with their towels. Even when I've been down to reception to ask for an extra towel, housekeeping have taken the second towel the next day even though I had hung it up to use it again. Hoteliers please please please don't expect women travellers to get by on one towel. Some of us have hair that needs drying and can't get hair and body dry on one small towel. The rooms all have wardrobes, suitcase stands and drawers. Televisions have lots of stations but only one or two in English.

The restaurant at the hotel is ok. During the summer I ate there three times in quick succession and it was always quite empty. I'm a creature of habit and when I find something I like I stick with it so I've had their gazpacho as starter all three times. The first time there was some confusion which led to me getting Carpaccio instead of Gazpacho because thought they sounded the same. After I sent it back they quickly sorted it out and brought me the right dish.

Main courses are a bit more variable and I've had one good (a simple pasta and tomato sauce), one OK (a slightly greasy monkfish and noodles dish) and one absolutely awful dish (a red snapper that had been so overcooked I thought it was chicken). All the dishes are large but I think I'll keep it simple next time and stick with the pasta; that's more difficult to mess up. Breakfast is quite a grand affair with lots of choice of both hot and cold dishes.

On my last visit I met up with my boss after he'd been out for a run so we could have a drink in the bar. I ordered a white wine they didn't have and was given a small taste of all the ones they did have until I found one that I liked. That sort of flexibility and determination to find me something good was quite impressive. The bar is also fantastic value for money - this week we discovered that 'happy hour' is actually 'happy three hours' and runs from 7pm to 10pm. Cocktails during that time were €3.95 which I felt was very good value especially as the barman laboured long and hard over squishing fresh limes for our caipirinhas. As you'd expect in Germany, they also have a good range of beers and since Bremen is the home of Becks, you know many of them haven't travelled far.

I'm not aware of any special facilities such as a gym or pool but I think they have a few meeting rooms. This isn't a hotel you go to with the intention of hanging around all day but it is a good practical choice. The location is great, the travel connections are outstanding and you even get a free public transport ticket to use during your stay which could save you quite a lot on trams and buses. I used my travel pass for the tram to the airport yesterday saving €15 and quite a lot of time compared to taking a taxi. Free wi-fi is also something I value greatly in any hotels I use for work and that's available just for the asking.

I currently pay a negotiated rate of €65 per night including breakfast - I'm sure if you search on hotel comparison sites like trivago.co.uk you should be able to find prices around those levels. Keep in mind the bonus of free transport and wifi and the cost-savings associated with a fairly priced bar instead of a hotel bar that vastly inflates their drink prices. If you don't fancy the hotel restaurant, I can really recommend the restaurant at the Ubersee Museum just across the railway station plaza.

Bremen is a lovely little town and one I'm very happy I have to visit often and quite content to stay at the Intercity. I'm just hoping that Ryanair flights to Bremen won't push up prices the way they have in other cities they fly to - and of course, I also hope they won't make Bremen into the next stag weekend destination. 

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Comments about this review »

silverstreak 01.01.2009 19:43

When's Pooh checking into The Priory, then?

avacarrdo 27.12.2008 20:04

It's a very German method of wine tasting "You WILL sit here and try ALL the wines until you find one you like." Hardcore.

tallulahbang 11.12.2008 18:29

Pooh's quite the dipso... xx

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