Unbelieveably crappy room.
At first glance, this hotel was a pink and blue disaster of art-deco meets southwestern gone terribly awry. A scrawled sign on the restaurant claimed "closed for water damage repair". The women who checked us in were friendly, though.
The room was a dark and tiny cell. A large sign on the wall of the room claimed "WARNING - uneven floor." Really, that was an understatement. It seems the room was either a later addition to the hotel, or was built over a sink hole, because the room was so slanted that there were uneven gaps above and below the bathroom door of at least two inches, and the room was so slanted that the door did not close properly. If you expect bathroom privacy, do not expect to find it here.
The wall to the outside (doors open to the parking lot) was thin, and didn't seem fit for an external wall. A family pulled up outside our room at midnight or so, and I could hear through the wall so clearly that I was able to discern the approximate ages of their two children, and that the older girl's left leg is about an inch longer than the right, and the boy was about five years old and had a slight sinus infection.
The shower was surrounded by plaster that was buckled and about to fall down from water damage. The shower head was about five and a half feet high, making showering a tricky task. The shower head shot water out in so many different directions that it was difficult to position yourself correctly to maintain contact with the water stream. The bathtub and sink were stained and scratched.
I really can't believe that anyone would expect customers to pay for a room that was so unkept and rickety. We did, however, get several pictures of the room as keepsakes. It was so unbelieveably bad that it was actually funny.
The continental breakfast was in a small room with too few tables, but had a decent selection.