Big hotel in the city center. Good news: Large room Very clean bathroom Simple but sufficient furnishing Very good bed. Good service personnel and a lot of it. A bit impersonal and not all equally friendly but efficient and helpful. Great breakfast The concept of the hotel seems to be to combine an overnight stay with a sauna/spa experience. We stopped over in Seefeld on our way from Italy to the Netherlands and that concept turned out to fit in extremely well. Not so good news: The size of the hotel makes it impersonal: it tries hard to keep up with the expectations one has about your old fashioned Tyrolean "Pension" but it is, in fact, a machine. The underground garage is difficult to reach (you have to cross a pedestrian zone - something my NAV did not like at all), then leave the car in front of the garage door, walk to reception, get your electronic key, then enter the garage, to find that the parking spaces are small and the lower parking deck is only reachable by ... a car elevator! So if you have a somewhat bigger car, are a less experienced driver than Max Verstappen, suffer from claustrophobia or are easily impressed (all of which was true to some degree between me and my wife) - do not book this garage. Bad news: The hotel lacks maintenance. See pictures. The first floor corridor smells of fryer fumes from the kitchen. Hygiene in the SPA area is far from satisfactory. Staff: try having a look at the back side of the swinging seats in the resting area or pass your hand under the benches of the steam room. A thick layer of filth piled up there for what seems to be years. Yuck. Price performance: Seefeld has become very popular lately. The sleepy alpine town has evolved into a rather oppressing tourist devouring monster that has more features of a theme park than of a cute little mountain community, with dozens of restaurants all serving virtually the same, predictable, average food. Seefeld, over the past few years, has become a characterless, homogenous, faceless tourist factory owned by Austrian project developers and mostly run by (very friendly and talented) Slovak and Hungarian migrant workers. Prices are high, also for this hotel. Price/performance, therefore, is not good. In short: On our next trip to Italy we will seek a smaller town with less tourists and more authenticity, hoping to rediscover the apfelstrudel we once ate in Seefeld so many years ago - fresh and crunchy and served with crème anglaise, not re-heated in a microwave oven, sloppy , with vanilla custard out of a plastic bucket.