Thursday, December 4, 2008

29 Lights is 28 Too Many

Hotels' excessive lighting isn't luxury -- it's wasteful



I am currently in a lovely small suite at the Inn at Lost Creek in Telluride's Mountain Village. Getting here (where it hasn't been snowing) from the Front Range (where it snowed a storm) was an odyssey that I might blog about some other time. Unfortunately, despite my constant asking about it after I had been reticketed to Cortez instead of Telluride, my checked bag is still in Denver and will (hopefully) join me tomorrow.



The folks at the inn could not have been nicer, more sympathetic and more dismayed at my luggagelessness, but when I opened the door to my room, I got annoyed. Really annoyed. The foyer, the living area, the kitchenette and bathroom have, among them, twenty-nine (29) light bulbs, and every single one of them was on -- and had been for who knows how long. Twenty-eight of these bulbs are incandescent, including five on a table lamp. Only one, above the kitchenette, is fluorescent. And the TV is turned on to an audio station.



The inn is a congenial boutique property with 29 suites. If every one is occupied, 29 x 29 = 841 light bulbs burning for countless hours when no one is in the rooms in this property alone -- and that doesn't count lights in the lobby, hallways, underground parking garage, restaurant, spa and elsewhere --to say nothing of Christmas lights that will doubtless appear soon . IMO, it is a misplaced notion of luxury. And the little refrigerator, which the inn had thoughtfully stocked to tide me over, was cranked down so far that the half-and-half and eggs were frozen, and the appl
and pear had the consistency of popsicles.




This is not the first time I've been appalled at excessive use of electricity -- and it's not the first time I have complained about it. I have been told that hotel rating services require some of this nonsense in order for properties to earn that extra star or diamond. This is a wasteful and outdated practice. I have a sign on my mantlepiece asking me to opt in or out of fresh linens every day in the interest of environmentalism. There should be something comparable when it comes to lights. I'm calling housekeeping tomorrow to ask them to restrain themselves.

8 comments:

  1. Strange that luxury equates with waste.
    What about towels—do they ask tht you reuse them, or replace them daily.
    I've stayed at inns where they ask whether you'll keep the same sheets, which I think makes lots of sense for a multi-day stay.

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  2. I'm glad you wrote about the excess lighting, Claire. This is one of my biggest pet peeves, because when people see waste on a large scale, they may think that their efforts to conserve won't make much of a difference. Thanks for alerting the B&B about your unhappiness with their lighting policy and for highlighting the issue here.

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  3. Sybille - When I added the photo to my post this morning (12/5), I also added a few sentences about towels as well. I was just too tired last night to download images from my camera and point out the environmental irony. And

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  4. Did you call house keeping? What did they say.

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  5. I did call housekeeping, and they asked if I would just like the foyer light on. I said yes, and that's what they did.

    I am also getting an environmental walkthrough of the property w/ one of the executives, who told me that my post did come at a morning staff meeting. So speaking up might do some good in changing this non-green policy.

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  6. Good job, Claire! It's great when speaking out has an positive impact. Sometimes organizations just fall into habits--like people--and need a nudge to change. You will have done a good deed if this place reconsiders its policies about use of electricity.

    All good wishes!!

    Anne

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  7. Anne - Indeed, the hotel has been responsive, and I will write a post about the green initiatives undertaken here. I saw their inventory of CL bulbs, which they are installing every time one of the incandecents burns out. Stay tuned.

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