My spouse and I stayed at the Renaissance Riverside Hotel Saigon for
four nights in mid-March 2014. The Marriott brand owns this hotel, and
we made our reservation on-line using the Marriott website. Because we
logged into our Marriott Rewards account prior to making our
reservation, we had access to a package called the “Ultimate Romance
Package / Room to Room Rendezvous”. Although we normally do not book
packages, the price was cost-effective, and it included a few
value-added items that we liked. For example: executive club lounge
access, breakfast buffet for two people per day (in either the club
lounge or in the regular restaurant), a 20% discount on food in any
restaurant, one bottle of champagne upon arrival, nightly turn-down
service, late 4:00 pm checkout, and two 45-minute foot or body massages.
However, we booked the package primarily because it featured our room
selection: a Deluxe Suite.
Because our flight to Ho Chi Minh City
arrived at the Tan Son Nhat Airport (SGN) after midnight, we arranged
an airport transfer from the hotel. Our driver was waiting in the
Arrival Hall on time and as arranged. The cost was approximately $50 USD
for a one-way transfer. (The cost to hail a public taxi is
substantially less than to use the hotel car.)
This hotel is
located (not surprisingly!), alongside the Saigon River, although the
river is not particularly picturesque or bustling when we compare it to
the hotels located alongside the Chao Phraya River in Bangkok. However,
every evening, hotel guests can watch many dinner boat cruises depart
and return. The hotel is located on a busy street corner, and from where
our room was situated, we could watch (but not hear) the parade of
traffic from about 6:00 am to 12:00 midnight. It was quiet after those
hours, so street noise does not bother guests while they sleep. The
hotel is located within walking distance of the Cho Ben Than Market, the
Saigon Opera House, restaurants, and shopping. It is a 20-minute walk
to the Post Office, Notre-Dame Cathedral, and the Presidential
(Reunification) Palace. A few Circle-K convenience stores are located on
nearby blocks, where guests can purchase drinks (both alcoholic and
non-alcoholic), snacks, and sundry items. A small driveway at the front
of the hotel allows cars to safely pick up and drop off guests. The
street next to the hotel hosts a queue of taxis, and an attendant
arranges available cars. In March when we visited, a bank (with an ATM
machine) was located directly across the street from the hotel, but we
saw a posted notice that states that the location was moving soon.
The
hotel layout includes space on the street level next to the front desk
for a travel agent called Buffalo Tours. We e-mailed with Buffalo Tours
for information (they were responsive and informative), but we booked
our tour with an alternate guide. Originally, we thought that we would
do three days of touring: two half-day City Tours and a day trip to the
Cu Chi Tunnels and Cao Dai, but we booked two half-day City Tours
instead.
The Renaissance hotel is attractive but compact (319
rooms and 17 suites spread over 21 floors). The lobby area is not
expansive and feels a bit restricted because the lobby is not
multi-story. Some seating exists in the lobby adjacent to the Lobby
Lounge, which is a small coffee bar / pastry shop. A gift shop is
located between the front desk and the elevators; although we did not
enter the shop, it seemed to be a clothing boutique instead of a hotel
pantry / forgotten item type of establishment. The main restaurant
(Riverside Café), where we ate breakfast daily, is located on the street
level. Despite the restaurant’s riverside location, no outdoor seating
on the sidewalk exists. The Riverside Cafe features a breakfast buffet
that contains several stations / areas: hot, cold, Asian, Western, and
pastries / breads. The Asian selections included a made-to-order Pho
station, as well as prepared dumplings, rice, noodles, and so on.
Fresh-squeezed juices (although house-bottled) were included with the
price of breakfast, along with coffee and water. (Our morning beverage
choice, Diet Coke, was an extra charge.) The breakfast hours last from
6:00 am until 11:00 am. The restaurant also serves lunch and dinner in
the buffet format. The Atrium Lounge is located in the attractive and
airy (but fully enclosed) atrium area and opens at 12:00 noon. Kabin
Chinese Restaurant, the fine-dining venue for the hotel, serves
Cantonese cuisine for lunch and dinner. Guests can also order room
service, or they can dine on the rooftop terrace next to the outdoor
swimming pool. On Friday and Saturday nights, the pool deck is the scene
for an outdoor barbecue dinner.
The outdoor pool is located on
the top floor of the hotel, along with the fitness center and spa.
Although our package included two 45-minute spa treatments, we did not
have time to use them. The spa environment, although attractive, does
not seem relaxing or serene, because guests must walk through the spa to
access both the fitness center and the pool. The fitness center
contains a few machines in a small and window-less room. The pool
terrace is lovely, and the pool itself is large. Approximately 15+
lounge chairs and 6+ tiny tables with 4 chairs each surround the pool. A
sunshade offers protection to some of the tables. Sometimes umbrellas
shade some of the lounge chairs, but it was too windy to use them safely
when we visited. A small bar exists on the pool deck, but it is more
functional for the servers than a place for guests to sit. One
semi-comfortable couch / lounge grouping is located under the canopy
area, along with this unusual (perhaps 2 foot x 2 foot raised platform)
that contains fake grass. We are not sure what purpose the grassy area
serves (perhaps some sort of Feng Shui element for your feet?). We
enjoyed the pool area, because it is a lovely place to spend an
afternoon, and to enjoy the views of the river and the surrounding
streets and buildings, particularly if guests do not have a view from
their hotel rooms. The hotel provides pool towels at the valet stand at
the top of the stairs. Guests can smoke on the pool deck, as well as
outside of the main lobby on the street level.
The executive
lounge on the 18th floor operates from approximately 6:00 am to 12:00
midnight, although the design of the doorway makes it seem as if guests
can always access the room itself, but perhaps the complimentary food
and beverages are not available round-the-clock. Complimentary Wi-Fi,
several computer terminals, and a printer are available in the lounge,
as well as some reading materials. Seating in the lounge can be a bit
cramped at busy times (such as during breakfast, afternoon tea, and
evening cocktails). The staff in the lounge is friendly and willing to
honor most requests. The Continental (primarily Western-style) breakfast
served in the lounge each morning (from 6:00 am to 10:30 am weekdays,
and until 11:00 am on weekends) represents a small subset of the food
that the Riverside Cafe offers. Afternoon tea offers requisite tiny
sandwiches, clotted cream / strawberry / biscuits, and other light
items. Evening cocktail hour (from 5:30 pm until 9:30 pm) features both
hot and cold items and complimentary beverages (both alcoholic and
non-alcoholic); the lounge serves food in the evening only from 5:30 pm
until 7:30 pm.
Our Deluxe Suite was spacious! The decor was
traditional. (We hesitate to describe it as “dated”; it just was not hip
or modern). The living room / dining room area was huge, with two walls
of windows that overlooked the river and the nearby park. The living
room contained a sofa, two armchairs, a dining table with four chairs,
desk and chair, large flat-screen TV, and bar area (mini-bar, coffee
service, glassware, and so on). The air conditioning was powerful and
made our room amazingly cold. It worked so well that at times, we wished
that the hotel provided an extra blanket that we could have wrapped up
in while watching TV; instead, we used the hotel bathrobes. A
half-bathroom / powder room was located off the living room, and it
contained a sink and a high-tech (perhaps Japanese?) toilet.
The
separate bedroom area (which you could close off completely from the
living area by a door) was not as expansive as the living room, but it
featured another large flat-screen TV, king-size bed bordered by two
nightstands, and two armchairs. The bedroom provided access to the main
bathroom, which featured a single sink, toilet (the usual kind, not a
fancy one like the one in the small bathroom), a stand-up glass-door
shower, and separate soaking bathtub. The toiletries supplied by
Pecksniffs Mood Therapy, a British company, included items like “Calm”
handy & body lotion, “Happy” shampoo and conditioner, and “Alive”
bath & shower gel). Although the hotel was generous with most
toiletry items, it was stingy with bars of soap. In the main bathroom,
only one bar of soap was available to share between sink, soaking
bathtub, and shower! A large closet contained bathrobes, slippers, and
an electronic safe, among the usual storage hanging bars and cubbyholes.
The hotel provides maid service twice daily, including an evening
turndown service.
In-room wired and wireless Internet are
complimentary, and the TV channel selection is better than we have seen
in any other foreign country. The programs and episodes broadcast were
current with what we were watching at home.
We were happy with
the location of the Renaissance Riverside Hotel Saigon, and we loved the
extra room that the Deluxe Suite afforded us.
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