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Zenger
Zenger
Lifestyle
Simona Kitanovska

Online Travel Service Booked Vacationer In Foreign Hotel Shuttered For Two Years

Ornate lampposts decorate the way towards buildings, including St. John's Cathedral, in the city's Old Town on April 12, 2010 in Warsaw, Poland. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

A vacationer arrived at her lodgings in Poland – only to find out the hotel had been closed for two years.

Patricia Jubb, 56, booked a package trip with Expedia in May this year.

She said she couldn’t get hold of Anton Apartments Piekna, the hotel she was staying at, to inform them of her late arrival in Warsaw.

But, she was desperate to go on vacation and attend a music concert that she’d had tickets for since 2020 – which had been canceled twice due to COVID.

Jubb flew to Warsaw Chopin Airport by herself on July 13 and got a taxi to the hotel.

Patricia Jubb poses in an undated photo. Patricia Jubb, booked a package trip with Expedia in May of 2022 to Warsaw, Poland and when she arrived she realized the hotel has been closed for two years.(Patricia Judd,SWNS/Zenger)

When she arrived a security guard at the address told her Anton Apartments Pikena had been closed for two years and the building was now office space.

Jubb, from Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, in the west of England, in the United Kingdom, said: “Before I left I tried to contact them on Facebook and on their website saying I was going to be late.

“But for the life of me I couldn’t get through to anyone and no one was getting back to me.

“I didn’t hear anything back but decided to go anyway as I thought if there was an issue Expedia would have gotten in touch.

“Although when I turned up it became immediately clear that something wasn’t right.

“I asked the security guard standing at the entrance of the address I had for the hotel and he said the building was now office space.

“He told me the hotel had been shut for two years, and I wasn’t the first guest who has turned up after it closed its doors

“I spoke to reception and they said the best thing I could do was go to the police station and ask them to sort me out some accommodation.

“It suddenly dawned on me I was homeless in Poland and had no idea where I was, which was frightening.”

Jubb went and sat on a park bench opposite the office and called Expedia, but she claims they refused to find her alternative lodgings without verifying her story first.

Jubb claims they told her they needed to find out whether she was telling the truth about the hotel closure – and that it would take 24 hours to do so.

In the meantime, she claims she was told to “sort herself out” despite the fact it was already 9 p.m. and at the height of the season.

Hotels in Warsaw were also full up with guests attending the concert which made it extra difficult to find a room.

Thankfully, Jubb had her credit cards on her and she was able to find a last-minute place on Booking.com to stay at for the remainder of her vacation.

She paid approximately $485 for four nights, an additional cost which she now claims Expedia is refusing to reimburse.

Jubb, who works as a catering assistant, said: “Expedia’s attitude towards the situation was that they didn’t really care.

“They said it would take them 24 hours to ‘confirm my story’ and until they could do that I was basically on my own.

“The fact they were happy to leave a woman on the streets of Warsaw late at night with nowhere to stay is astonishing.

“Thankfully I’m a confident traveler and a resourceful person but imagine if it had been a mom with two young children.

“I stayed four nights in this emergency accommodation which was okay – but since I’ve got back Expedia are refusing to cover the cost.

“I want people to be aware that this is the way Expedia feel it’s okay to treat their customers.”

In this photo illustration the homepage of Expedia is displayed on a computer screen on May 10, 2006 in London, England. (Photo Illustration by Daniel Berehulak/Getty Images)

A spokesperson for Expedia said: “The customer contacted us to inform us about the late check-in, but the agents were not able to contact the property.

“The traveler booked the new room and sent an email to us with the information that she booked an emergency accommodation for 401 British pounds [$484].

“Later after the investigation from Expedia, the customer was refunded for the full original booking amount. And was offered 2,500 compensatory points but the customer denied accepting.

“We will be initiating the refund for the amount difference between the new booking that the traveler made and the original booking of 180.80 pounds [$217].”

Produced in association with SWNS.

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