Houston Chronicle

Wandering a grand hotel emptied by virus, checking 1,400 taps

- By Raphael Minder

BARCELONA, Spain — Every five days, Daniel Ordoñez opens 1,400 pipe taps in a waterfront hotel in Barcelona that locals call “The Sail” because of its shape.

Each tap has to run for about five minutes, so the task takes him a full day.

“It’s probably the most boring part of my job, but it’s needed,” he said, to avoid a form of pneumonia that can be spread by bacteria in the water: Legionnair­es’ disease.

Ordoñez, who is in charge of maintenanc­e at the hotel, has been its sole continuous occupant for the past two months, wandering its ghostly halls because of another illness that has ravaged the country and the globe: COVID-19.

When the hotel closed in midMarch as part of a nationwide lockdown to contain the spread of the coronaviru­s, Ordoñez, an industrial engineer, agreed to self-isolate inside to avoid any deteriorat­ion of the premises that could delay its reopening, whenever that might be.

He now lives alone on the 24th floor, which gives him an unrivaled view of the city, its beaches and the Mediterran­ean.

“At the start, I thought I would be here for about two weeks,” said Ordoñez, who is single. “But now it’s been eight, with no clear end in sight.”

Arguably Barcelona’s most emblematic luxury lodging, the W Hotel stands 325 feet tall and 27 stories high, dominating the city’s waterfront. Some might find walking its deserted corridors, peering into its vacated salons, or dining alone on a plate of fried chicken and vegetables cooked in a cavernous restaurant kitchen unsettling, but Ordoñez does not.

“It’s been a bit weird to watch my few socks spin inside the washing machine of a huge laundry room, but I’ve now also had time to get used to that,” he said with a wry smile in a recent interview with a visitor from a safe distance.

With an official death toll of just over 27,000, Spain has been one of the European countries hit hardest by the coronaviru­s pandemic. This month, the government in Madrid started to gradually ease lockdown restrictio­ns in order to return the country to what Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez calls “the new normalcy” by late June.

But there is no indication of when Spain will recuperate losses from a tourism industry that accounted for 12 percent of its economy last year. As of Friday, foreign visitors face a 14-day quarantine upon arrival, a measure that will be maintained “as long as necessary” to avoid “imported cases” that could annul the gains of the domestic lockdown efforts, the Spanish health minister, Salvador Illa, warned Tuesday.

Ordoñez, 37, left behind a house on the outskirts of Barcelona to take up room in the grand hotel and continue his maintenanc­e duties. Still, he said, he would stay as long as needed in a hotel where he knows every nook and cranny, from its ventilatio­n shafts to its undergroun­d storage areas.

“This was already my second home before the lockdown,” he said.

The lockdowns and border closures imposed around the globe to limit the spread of the coronaviru­s left many people stranded in unlikely locations, including two friends who hunkered down in an empty London pub or a couple on an extended honeymoon in the Maldives. Many wealthy people fled big cities, finding a haven in their countrysid­e homes or even a Bali wellness center.

But the Barcelona hotel’s decision to ask Ordoñez to stay inside highlights a different issue: infrastruc­tures that need looking after, even when business has ground to a halt.

Barcelona, one of Europe’s main tourism destinatio­ns, drew almost 12 million visitors last year. Before the coronaviru­s hit, residents and politician­s had been debating the impact of this record tourism influx, including issues like the flood of day-trippers disembarki­ng from cruise ships and the proliferat­ion of Airbnb apartments that raised property prices in central Barcelona.

Now the absence of tourists has left Barcelona and other vacation destinatio­ns across Spain facing an ominous economic threat.

Exceltur, a Spanish tourism lobby, forecast in March that Spain’s tourism revenues would fall by at least 55 billion euros — nearly $60 billion — this year.

One night in the penthouse at the W Hotel in Barcelona can cost as much as about $14,660. The hotel’s management declined to discuss the financial consequenc­es of keeping the suite and its other 472 rooms closed since March, but last week, its parent company, Marriott, reported a slump in first-quarter earnings. Marriott also said its revenue per available room fell 90 percent in April.

On his own in the hotel, Ordoñez, who is normally in charge of a crew of 20 maintenanc­e workers, has faced some challenges — such as trying to fix something while standing on a stepladder. Occasional­ly, he has called on the help of the only other person on duty in the building: a rotating guard who monitors the hotel’s security cameras from a basement control room. (The guard does not sleep in the hotel.)

But there is an upside to working in a deserted space, Ordoñez said. This month, he tested the hotel’s public address system without worrying about disturbing the clientele.

“A fair share of our time normally involves responding to customer complaints,” he said. “This issue has certainly gone away for now.”

“At the start, I thought I would be here for about two weeks. But now it’s been eight, with no clear end in sight.”

Daniel Ordoñez, W Hotel maintenanc­e manager

 ?? Samuel Aranda / New York Times ?? Daniel Ordoñez has lived alone in a room at the W Hotel in Barcelona, a luxury hotel that plans to welcome guests again once Spain’s lockdown ends. He is in charge of the hotel’s maintenanc­e.
Samuel Aranda / New York Times Daniel Ordoñez has lived alone in a room at the W Hotel in Barcelona, a luxury hotel that plans to welcome guests again once Spain’s lockdown ends. He is in charge of the hotel’s maintenanc­e.

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