My spouse and I spent two nights at the Fairhaven Village Inn in late
July 2014. We booked our stay on-line using the hotel website. Prior to
our stay, we e-mailed the hotel staff, who happily answered questions.
This
hotel enjoys an excellent location in historic and charming Fairhaven,
directly across from the Village Green. The hotel is located near the
water; however, it does not enjoy a water view, even from the balcony
rooms. Business occupy several metal buildings on land positioned
between the hotel and the water. In addition, when the building project
is complete, a three-story structure on adjacent land will further
obscure the view.
The hotel building hosts three independent
business on the street level: Magdalena’s Creperie, Daphne’s Bar (wine
and cheese), and Paws a While gift shop. Nearby restaurants include
Archer Ale House, Jalapenos Mexican Restaurant, Big Pie Pizza, and
Colophon Cafe. Village Books, a huge two-story bookstore, and several
other shops, are accessible through the Village Green. A large local
chain grocery store called Haggen is a 7-minute, quarter-mile walk from
the hotel. Other shops and services are located within a three-block
radius of the Fairhaven Village Inn.
Odd-numbered rooms on the
waterside of the hotel have balconies, whereas even-numbered rooms on
the Village Green side do not. However, all guests can access the
second-floor outdoor terrace area. The terrace contains tables, chairs,
umbrellas, and potted plants. One morning, we carried our breakfast
there to dine outdoors. According to the lodging map in the hotel
directory, Rooms 211 and 311 appear smaller than the other 19 rooms
because of the positioning of the fire stairs. Room 302, the only suite
in the hotel, offers the most space.
The Fairhaven Village Inn
offers complimentary parking in a small lot behind the hotel. Guests
access the parking lot from the lower basement level, where a conference
room and vending machines are located. The hotel has a driveway area
where guests can wait for a taxi, but have the front desk call for you
because taxis do not drive around the streets of Fairhaven looking for
fares. A taxi to the airport cost about $40; the same approximate fare
applies to the Bolt / public city bus station on Cordova Street near the
Bellis Fair Mall. The Amtrak / Greyhound and Alaska Ferry terminals are
walkable from the hotel, on paved sidewalks with only one or two
streets to cross.
The hotel offers coffee, tea, and hot cocoa 24
hours a day in the library located off the lobby and near the front
desk. In the library, guests can relax, read a book, or play a game. No
fitness center nor business center exists, but the front desk attendant
can print boarding passes and post outgoing mail. A table across from
the front desk and next to the tall brick fireplace contains brochures
and informational material. The front desk often sets out freshly baked
cookies for guests. Even though this property has only three floors
(plus the basement level), it has a nice-sized elevator. This property
forbids smoking anywhere, and it bans burning candles inside of guest
rooms.
Also located off the high-ceilinged lobby is the breakfast
/ morning room, where the hotel serves a mostly Continental breakfast.
The offerings were the same on both mornings that we dined: yogurt
(packaged) with house-made mixed berry topping. Guests could also use
the berry topping to cover Belgian waffles that the breakfast attendant
prepares upon request. The breakfast also included hard-cooked eggs,
fresh fruit (like apples and oranges), two kinds of artisan bread (from a
local bakery), two kinds of muffins (which appeared to be house-made),
and English muffins. Several kinds of cold cereal were available, along
with two kinds of juice, coffee, tea, and water. We were pleased with
the breakfast. It was healthy and it did not tempt guests to overeat.
We
splurged on the Fairhaven Village Inn’s only Suite. Room number 302 was
one of the most comfortable rooms in which we have stayed! The living
area was huge, with windows that overlooked the Village Green and a
smaller window that faced the bay. The living room contained a
comfortable sofa and loveseat near the armoire that held the flat-screen
TV. The room also included a desk and chair (Wi-Fi is complimentary)
and a large dining table for eight+ people. One corner of the living
area featured two reclining armchairs positioned in front of a gas
fireplace. The room contained several small tables, one of which held
the coffee service, lots of glassware, and a corkscrew. (An
old-fashioned bottle opener was mounted to the vanity in the bathroom.)
The lighting in the rooms was fantastic! Hotel rooms are never as bright
as we would like, but our suite at the Fairhaven Village Inn exceeded
our wishes! The suite contained many different types of lights: a
chandelier over the dining table, wall sconces near the fireplace,
recessed lighting near the entry way and sofa, and regular table lamps.
The walls and woodwork looked (and smelled) freshly painted, and the
textured carpet in the living room and bedroom areas was clean.
The
bedroom was small in comparison to the living area. It featured a
king-size bed, two nightstands, an armoire with another flat-screen TV,
and a stuffed reclining lounge chair. The linens, blanket, and pillows
were high quality. The hotel even thought to provide a throw blanket on
the bedroom chaise to cover yourself while you watched TV.
The
bathroom layout was Jack-and-Jill style. The door from the living room
featured a curtained French-door entrance to the soaking bathtub area
(the bathtub was not Jacuzzi-style), and a sliding door led from the
bedroom area (which actually doubled as the closet door in the bedroom).
A regular door connected the bathtub area and the regular bathroom
area, which contained a shower / bathtub combination, sink, and toilet.
This hotel was generous with towels: a basket with four+ towels was
positioned next to the soaking bathtub, and in the “real” bathroom, a
brass and glass bookshelf held many towels of different sizes. A fluffy
bath mat was placed on the tile floor in front of each bathtub.
Toiletries made by Essential Elements (99% natural from San Francisco in
a rosemary / mint scent) included body lotion, shampoo, conditioner,
two kinds of soap (facial and body), cotton balls and Q-tips, shower
cap, and make-up remover packets. The hair dryer is attached to the
bathroom wall. The closet held bathrobes (but no slippers), and it held
an iron, ironing board, and an extra blanket and pillow. The room
contained no mini-bar / mini-fridge or safe. The Suite had no balcony,
but it was worth the trade-off for the spacious room. The ceilings were
high, which made the room seem even larger.
Both our Suite and
the Fairhaven Village Inn itself offered many homey touches that make a
second stay a must if we ever visit Bellingham.
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