This hotel charges $99 per night (including taxes, $108). However, after staying here for two weeks, the rate was dropped to $92 per night (i.e., exactly $100 including taxes per night, but you have to ask in person at the front desk). I moved rooms twice within the first week of my stay at this hotel. However, I was ultimately very pleased with the room I ended up with, on the ninth floor overlooking the tennis courts (way below), the Jamaican mountains, beautiful water views and Kingston Harbour from the room and outside balcony. This hotel also has a pool (which is smaller than the Hilton's next door but clean and nice). Depending on where your room is located, one's perception of this hotel can radically change. Upon check-in, I was initially put in a room that overlooked nothing but a black tar parking lot. As in everywhere in Jamaica, "It pays to negotiate" (i.e., do not be embarrassed to ask and/or make a fuss) to get what you want at no additional cost.
The amenities at this hotel were very good (equivalent to the Hilton next door but with a less rowdy crowd). The rooms came with iron, ironing board, coffee maker and coffee, and office desk, and were quite spacious (equivalent to a three- or four-star hotel). The hotel's business office offers fax and computer services such as Internet connectivity and supplies (such as toothpaste) at reasonable prices that I found to be cheaper than buying the same item outside.
This hotel also has a very good restaurant and bar that is frequented by expatriates together with the middle to upper middle class of Jamaican society (for example, I saw Jamaican cricketer Mr Walsh one day, considered one of the best bowlers in the world in international test matches). As I mentioned earlier, the crowd at this hotel restaurant and bar tends to be less rowdy than at the two other hotels on either side of i, the Jamaican Pegassus and the Hilton, yet the rooms (depending on location) are superior to both hotels, which are more expensive.