The Ritz-Carlton, Washington, D.C.

The Ritz-Carlton, Washington, D.C. is a luxury hotel located at 1150 22nd Street NW in the West End neighborhood of Washington, D.C., in the United States. Managed by the Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, the hotel has 300 guest rooms, including 267 deluxe rooms and 32 suites.

The Ritz-Carlton, Washington, D.C.
Location within the District of Columbia
General information
Location1150 22nd Street, Northwest Washington, D.C. 20037, United States
Coordinates38°54′16″N 77°2′57″W
ManagementRitz-Carlton
Technical details
Floor count11
Other information
Number of rooms300
Number of suites32
Number of restaurants2
Website
www.ritzcarlton.com

About the hotel

The hotel underwent a $12 million renovation which was completed in 2008. The hotel has two restaurants, one of which (Westend Bistro) is led by executive chef Eric Ripert. The hotel also has an extensive 100,000-square-foot (9,300 m2) sports facility called Equinox Sports Club, (formerly The Sports Club/LA), and first-floor retail space housing a CVS/pharmacy and a bank.

Rating

In February 2016, the hotel had a four-star rating from Forbes Travel Guide,[1] but a five-diamond rating from AAA.[2]

gollark: I also don't get what you mean by doing it in radial layers.
gollark: I'm not sure what you mean by abstract structures, but it has... tables and such.
gollark: I want to do some degree of procedural generation, hence why I'm using an actual programming language.
gollark: Lua, actually.
gollark: How might I go about implementing a simple text adventure thing on a {4,5} tiling? I think it should probably just be represented as a graph for most operations, but I have no idea how to actually build one (incrementally/lazily) for it. Some page on the HyperRogue says that you can identify tiles by a path from the origin, but I don't know how you would make a canonical form for those/check if they are equal to each other.

References

  1. "Forbes Travel Guide 2016 Star Award Winners". Forbes Travel Guide. February 2016. Retrieved May 3, 2016.
  2. American Automobile Association (January 15, 2016). AAA/CAA Five Diamond Hotels (PDF) (Report). p. 1. Retrieved May 3, 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.