Tuesday, February 23, 2010

What is the difference between hotel and motel?

Hotels usually have a restaurant and room service, while a motel is geared for driving travelers and they essentially don't have room service.What is the difference between hotel and motel?
HOTEL: Building that provides lodging, meals, and other services to the traveling public on a commercial basis. Inns have existed since ancient times (e.g., along the Roman road system during the Roman Empire) to serve merchants and other travelers. Medieval European monasteries operated inns to guarantee haven for travelers in dangerous regions. The spread of travel by stagecoach in the 18th century stimulated the development of inns, as did the Industrial Revolution. The modern hotel was largely the result of the railroads; when traveling for pleasure became widely popular, large hotels were often built near railroad stations. In 1889 the Savoy Hotel in London set a new standard, with its own electricity and a host of special services; the Statler Hotel in Buffalo, N.Y. (1908), another landmark, catered to the growing class of business travelers. After World War II, new hotels tended to be larger and were often built near airports. Hotel chains became common, making purchasing, sales, and reservations more efficient. Hotels fall into three categories: transient hotels; resort hotels, intended primarily for vacationers; and residential hotels, essentially apartment buildings offering room and meal service.





MOTEL: An establishment that provides lodging for motorists in rooms usually having direct access to an open parking area. Originally a hotel designed for persons travelling by auto mobile, with convenient parking space provided.





Origin: 1925 %26gt; The announcement came in Hotel Monthly for March 1925: ';The Milestone Interstate Corporation...proposes to build and operate a chain of motor hotels between San Diego and Seattle, the hotels to have the name 'Motel.'';





It was only the dawn of the motel age, but Interstate was seeing far into the future. At the time, roads for automobiles were still primitive, and so were most lodgings for travelers by car. The first such places were simply campgrounds with parking spaces nearby, though they were often furnished with tents or cabins. Reflecting their character, they took names like auto camp (1922), tourist camp (1923), motor camp (1925), rest cabins (1934), and tourist park (1936). To suggest a more comfortable kind of accommodation, proprietors sometimes used the word court, as in motor court (1936), cottage court (1936), tourist court (1937), and auto court (1940).





But there were more and more car travellers who preferred the comforts and conveniences of a hotel, so motel--which contains four-fifths of hotel--gradually evicted all other names, including the short-lived autotel and autel (both 1936). Indeed, motel has even rendered its parent phrase motor hotel obsolete.





Meanwhile, on the model of motel, we have the boatel (1957) at dockside, for those who drive on water, and the zootel for pets. There is even a snotel, a site where snow surveys are conducted during the winter at Rocky Mountain National Park.What is the difference between hotel and motel?
A motel is geared for driving travelers. There will be many entrances that you can park your car close by to your room. A hotel will have a main entrance and that is where you have to pass through to get to your room. Parking is usually in one location and not all the way around the building. Hotels are designed for the air traveler for the most part.
According to dictionary ; hotels or group of cabins by road with


overnight accommodation for motorists. That is to say roadside


basic overnight accommodation is motel.
Hotels have a restaurant and room service. Motels do not. Most 'Hotels' are in reality actually 'Motels.'
hotels are classier and more expensive. motels are cheaper and not as luxurious
a motel is waaay cheaper and kinda ghettoish..

No comments:

Post a Comment