Finding an accessible hotel room on a Saturday night in the middle of the summer is always a crapshoot, but they had one. The clerk who made my reservation was the same one who checked me in – managers of this hotel, give Debbie a raise. She was efficient, helpful, friendly, and welcoming. The accessible room I had was ginormous. with plenty of maneuvering room and an extra-wide bathroom door. There was a nice couch [which might have been a pull out], a fridge & microwave(which I didn’t use, but it’s nice to have ‘em), a roll-in shower with a real shower-chair [not the usual flop-down bench] in the bathroom — while the shower didn’t have a hand-held showerhead the design worked well enough because you could move the chair, a comfortable bed, an armless chair at the desk(awesome!), and, bonus, the desk was right next to the bed, which made it a really huge night table and was extremely convenient. Now for the bad: The whole place reeks of cigarette smoke, which leeches into your room, especially if you run the bathroom fan. The room was down near the end of a short hall and had a standard-sized door, which made getting in to the room with a mobility scooter very difficult. The bed was high — almost too high for me to get into easily. The roll-in shower had no grab bars, which made getting in and out a bit dicey. And there were no easily available outlets — not at or on the desk, near the bed — nowhere. I had to charge my tablet in the bathroom! Also, I was never able to connect to the wireless. Were I staying for more than just sleep time this would have been a problem. Annoying but not critical: The light switches are non-intuitive — the one by the main door controls the lights next to the bed, and the light«switch» in the bathroom controls the fan — the actual lights are controlled by a plastic button. Summary: I might return were I in the area but, especially due to the smoking smell and the lack of outlets, it would not be my top choice.