Can messy hotel rooms save the earth?

Courtesy Provenance Hotels

Eco-friendly hotels incorporate green initiatives ranging from low flow showerheads to heating and air conditioning units that only run when there’s someone in the room.

But while 65 percent of global travelers surveyed by Booking.com for its 2017 Sustainable Travel Report expressed interest in staying in a “green” accommodation at least once, in the big picture, “The only green that really matters to traveler is money,” said Douglas Quinby, Vice-President, Research at Phocuswright, ” And how great a deal they can get,” said Quinby.

Acknowledging that, some hotels offer guests a cash incentive or some other perk to encourage them to forgo housekeeping services and help conserve water and other resources.

At properties operated by Provenance Hotels in Seattle and Tacoma, WA, Portland, OR, New Orleans, or Nashville the ‘Green for Green’ program, encourages guests staying more than one night to opt out of housekeeping services in exchange for a $5 per day credit for either the honor bar or hotel food and beverage outlets.

About 25 percent of eligible guests take advantage of that offer, said Provenance Hotels spokeswoman Kate Buska, which not only helps the hotels cut down on water usage, but also on the use of cleaning products.

“And reducing consumption of cleaning products, even if they are green, makes our environmental footprint smaller,” said Buska.

High Peaks Resort, in Lake Placid, New York, also offers guest a $5 per night food & beverage credit to opt out of housekeeping, but also offers the option of having that $5 donated directly to an organization that works to keep Lake Placid’s Mirror Lake clean and pristine.

In San Francisco, Hotel Abri’s ‘Green for Green’ program rewards guests with a $5 Starbucks gift card for passing on a room cleaning, while At Kimpton Hotel Palomar Philadelphia and Kimpton Hotel Monaco Philadelphia, guests who opt-in to the ‘Choose to Conserve’ program receive a $10 hotel or food and beverage credit each night they skip housekeeping service.

And both the Shade Hotel Manhattan Beach and the Shade Hotel Redondo Beach in California have arranged to have a non-profit organization, Plant with Purpose, plant a tree in honor of each guest that forgoes housekeeping during their stay.

Big brand hotels do this too.

So far in 2017, nearly 1000 guests of the 1,020-room DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Orlando at SeaWorld have passed on a day of housekeeping in exchange for a $5 on-property food and beverage credit or 500 Hilton Honors points, representing a saving of 13,000 gallons of water for the earth and more than $12,000 of savings for the hotel.

Guests of Holiday Inn and Holiday Inn Express hotels in the Americas who opt-in to the “A Greener Stay’ program and forgo housekeeping receive 500 IHG Rewards Club points following their stay.

And Marriott currently has 1,500 hotels in the US and Canada participating in one of three different programs that allow guests to decline housekeeping in exchange for 250-500 hotel program points or, in Canada, to have a tree planted on their behalf.

According to Marriott, since the three programs launched there have been more than 11 million participating room nights and more than 80,000 trees planted.

While it seems like a win-win situation for hotels to offer guests a perk in exchange for skipping housekeeping services, “It’s often a better deal for the hotels,” said Patricia Griffin of the Green Hotels Association.

“Hotels not only save water, energy and cleaning supplies, but also a great deal of labor,” she said, which is especially helpful in areas where hotels find it hard to keep their housekeeping department fully staffed.

(My story about hotels offering perks for guests who pass on housekeeping also appears on NBC News Travel in a slightly different version.)

 

Thanks for visiting Stuck at the Airport. Subscribe to get daily travel tidbits. And follow me on Twitter at @hbaskas and Instagram.

 

One thought on “Can messy hotel rooms save the earth?

  1. Rich McClear says:

    While I take advantage of the offer to keep a messy room and I like having options, I think it is a better deal for the hotel than it is for me or the environment. I’m sure that it costs Marriott more than $5 to clean my room, considering labor, supplies, laundry and the $5 I get is a credit for already highly marked up items in the hotel’s shop or restaurant. This is an environmental move that can also become a profit center, which is not a bad thing.

Comments are closed.