Guest User
November 27, 2021
About a 10-minute walk from Tottori Station, the hotel entrance is on the other side of the one-way street from the bus street. I thought Hakuto Kaikan was a very retro hotel name, so I looked it up and it turned out to be a welfare facility of the Public School Mutual Aid Association. The building itself is undeniably old, but the rooms have been maintained and renewed in their own way, so there is no problem in terms of accommodation. Wifi speed is very slow for both upload and download. The large communal bath is on the 3rd floor and is switched between men and women. On the first day, the dressing room in the large public bath had only 9 dressing baskets on the dressing shelf because the number of bathers was limited due to the corona disaster. There is also a locker for valuables. The bathroom has 7 galangs, the indoor bath has 1 bathtub that can accommodate 5 to 6 people, and there is no open-air bath, sauna, or cold water bath. The next day after the change, the large public bath is narrow, with 4 galangs and an indoor bath that can accommodate about 3 people. Dinner is a Japanese course meal that includes appetizers, sashimi, mini-nabe, tempura, rice, and dessert. I was able to spend a comfortable time soaking in the free-flowing hot springs.
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