Once hotel guests leave and head to checkout, the staff at Tel Aviv’s Hotel Artist starts a tightly timed race to reset the room before the next arrival. Libi Shoshani, the hotel manager, described the process as “a military operation,” saying the window runs from roughly 11:00 a.m., when guests depart, until about 3:00 p.m., when the room must be ready again. The order of cleaning is not random, since management, housekeeping, and reception first check whether any guests requested early check-in, especially after long flights.
Before cleaning begins, staff search for anything the departing guest may have left behind, either in the room or in the safe. Shoshani said the hotel has even taken a taxi to the airport after guests forgot their passports, and has also kept items such as a home pillow, medication, and glasses. The safe is a common problem area because jewelry can slip into a lower gap. In one case, the hotel found a diamond gold earring hidden in the safe and shipped it to California by FedEx.
The average room takes about 40 minutes to prepare, though the time varies by room size and layout. Housekeeping first checks maintenance issues, then cleans, while a technician inspects faults such as flickering lights, broken air conditioning, doors that do not close properly, and faulty sinks or faucets. Shoshani said turnover cleaning is more thorough than a daily refresh for occupied rooms. For an occupied room, staff only refresh towels, floors, trash, mirrors, toilet paper, and sheets.
Among the hardest areas to clean are street-facing windows, which are handled in a separate weekly project, and walls, which can be marked by children, guests leaning on them, or suitcase wheels. To check a finished room, Shoshani looks at lighting, air conditioning, bedding, towels, curtains, the television, bathroom cleanliness, handles, and the door. She said guests can judge cleanliness by smelling the sheets and checking the floor and window tracks. She expects guests to at least pick up towels from the floor and throw trash away, but not to fully tidy the room. In this hotel, a towel hanging on a hook signals that it should be replaced.
Shoshani said she does not expect tips, though she appreciates them, whether it is 10 shekels or $50. She also confirmed that some guests still take hotel towels, including beach towels, which creates inventory shortages. She added that in the Artist Hotel, where art is displayed in rooms and public areas, some guests have reacted unusually to the artwork, including covering a picture of a crying girl with a towel. In her view, cleanliness accounts for 50 to 60 percent of the hotel experience, with service and food making up the rest, and she said the housekeeping team works extremely hard from early morning until the end of the day.