The hotel is located close to the shore with a 'tourist train' station at the main entrance. The parking lot is an area with trees and chaotic parking. If you're not careful you can damage your car or the tires at some tree stumps here and there.
Check in was ok, you can pay in either Kuna or Euro, but they don't exchange money. They just point you to an ATM in the lobby with a horrible exchange rate. Better go for the exchange offices closer to the city center.
The room was small with a nice little balcony. If you want to use the safe or get a refrigerator, you'll have to pay extra.
The worst thing was the bath. When the ventilation runs (and it does if the lights are on) it pulls a canalisation like smell from the shower drain. We told the reception, they said they'll inform a technician. Nothing changed (I don't even know if somebody checked anything while we weren't in the room).
The food was ok. I especially liked the grill station, where you got eggs, sausages and bacon in the morning and beef, pork, chicken and/or vegetables in the evening.
Other than that, nothing out of the ordinary.
The personnel was very eager to get the used dishes and glasses, but when one of them dropped some glasses, the clean up was very unmotivated, only collecting the big parts, leaving shards even at the place where the glasses dropped, not just the ones flying further away. That is quite dangerous, considering that many only wear open shoes and there are children running around, too.