Housekeeping by design : hotels and labor / David Brody
Material type:
- 9780226389097
- TX 928 .B76 2016

Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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National University - Manila | LRC - Main General Circulation | Hospitality Management | GC TX 928 .B76 2016 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | c.1 | Available | NULIB000016531 |
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GC TX 925 .B76 2008 The Waiter's handbook / | GC TX 925 .G53 2010 The sommelier prep course : an introduction to the wines, beers, and spirits of the world / | GC TX 925 .N38 2007 NRAEF ManageFirst : customer service : competency guide / | GC TX 928 .B76 2016 Housekeeping by design : hotels and labor / | GC TX 928 .C37 2012 Housekeeping management / | GC TX 928 .C85 2006 Culinary Essentials : he American Culinary Federation / | GC TX 928 .J66 2005 Professional management of housekeeping operations / |
Includes index.
Chapter 1. Theoretically checking in -- Chapter 2. Design and the Chambermaid -- Chapter 3. A textbook case: Pedagogy and housekeeping -- Chapter 4. Laboriously unreal: Design and hotel impossible -- Chapter 5. Go green: design, hotels, and the sustainability paradox -- Chapter 6. We truly listened to our guests: rethinking the redesign of the hyatt regency chicago
One of the great pleasures of staying in a hotel is spending time in a spotless, neat, and organized space that you don’t have to clean. That doesn’t, however, mean the work disappears—when we’re not looking, someone else is doing it. With Housekeeping by Design, David Brody introduces us to those people—the housekeepers whose labor keeps the rooms clean and the guests happy. Through unprecedented access to staff at several hotels, Brody shows us just how much work goes on behind the scenes—and how much management goes out of its way to make sure that labor stays hidden. We see the incredible amount of hard physical work that is involved in cleaning and preparing a room, how spaces, furniture, and other objects are designed to facilitate a smooth flow of hidden labor, and, crucially, how that design could be improved for workers and management alike if front-line staff were involved in the design process. After reading this fascinating exposé of the ways hotels work—or don’t for housekeepers—one thing is certain: checking in will never be the same again.
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