We loved Rome and thought that the Astoria Palace was cute and quaint. It's in what we considered a great location; about 500 feet from the metro and only four stops (about a 15 min ride) to the Colosseum. Because it's out of the city center, it was relatively quiet, save for sirens, and nearly deserted outside at night, with few dining options. The room was clean, the breakfast sparse but sufficient, and the workers friendly.
Taken on its own, the B&B is a great deal. But it falls short when you compare what its Web site promises to what you actually get. Everything on the site is a bit of a stretch. The car service was not available to pick us up, and when we needed a ride to the airport to go home, the "car service" consisted of the manager arranging a cab for us. Although there was free Internet, it came in the form of a free-to-use computer in the common room and accessible wifi, rather than rooms equipped with laptops. The Web site promises 360-degree views of Rome; there are, just not the views one would imagine (apartments instead of the sites).
Web site discrepancies aside, our only real gripe was the plumbing: The shower would suddenly get scalding hot and the pipes rumbled loudly each time someone (us or our neighbors) flushed the toilet or ran water.
When we got a phone call, the person at the desk neither put the call through or gave us the message. Chalk that up to a language barrier.
Visitors should also be aware that no one mans the Astoria Palace desk after hours.
Generally speaking, I'd skip the restaurant next door. I'd also advise people to ride the metro, it's awesome and really cheap and clean. We were first time visitors to Rome and speak no Italian and had no problems getting around via public transportation (the metro and bus). We only used cabs to and from the airport.
All in all, we were happy with the Astoria Palace because it was pretty and clean and an easy place from which to see Rome. Just take everything on the Web site with a grain of salt and don't expect luxury.
