ORLANDO, Fla. – Might U.S. hotels be showing room service the door?
The New York Hilton Midtown sent tremors through the industry last month when it announced it was dropping the pricey amenity this summer in favor of a grab-and-go cafe in the hotel lobby.
But just as obituaries were being prepared for in-room dining, travel columnist Joe Sharkey of the New York Times told the world about a large, freshly made chicken Caesar salad delivered to his room in the Peabody Orlando hotel — at 2 a.m., no less.
Room service, Sharkey declared in his Times column, is here to stay, at least in high-end hotels.
In Orlando, the nation's second-largest hotel market, folks in the industry tend to share Sharkey's view of room service's possible demise.
"I don't think we're there yet. The Hilton in midtown Manhattan, they're first, and I think others will watch," said Hugh Anderson, regional director of operations for InterContinental Hotels Group. Anderson has no plans to eliminate in-room dining at any of the Florida hotels that he oversees.
It's not that hoteliers are big fans of room service. Keeping meals hot while delivering them across sprawling resorts is a challenge — and labor-intensive. Demand for the service varies wildly from day to day. Some operators say it's a money-losing operation. Others suggest that the white-tablecloth generation that cherished in-room dining has passed on.
And not many hotel guests actually use room service. For Tammy Green, a South Floridian who travels regularly to Orlando on business, it isn't a priority.