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Review: the Holiday Inn Express London Ealing hotel

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This is my review of the Holiday Inn Express London Ealing hotel.

Last week had a wild and crazy travel schedule even by HfP standards.  As well as visiting Southend on Monday, I headed out to West Ealing on Friday.

The reason for my visit was to take a look at the new Holiday Inn Express London Ealing.  This is the first Holiday Inn Express in the UK to feature a new ‘next generation’ design which will be the template for all new properties going forward.

I have to say I was impressed.

Holiday Inn Express Ealing review

The first wave of Holiday Inn Express hotels was developed around a ‘cheap and not hugely cheerful’ prefabricated room template.  There was nothing wrong with the quality but it was pretty dispiriting.  If you’ve ever stayed in one, you will have marvelled how the bathroom door also doubles as the toilet door.

The problem is that chains like Premier Inn, which are pitched at the same market, chose to invest in a more upmarket design and HIX was getting left behind.  This ‘new generation’ of design is meant to reverse that trend.

Here is an overview of a room at the Holiday Inn Express Ealing.  I saw a corner room so it is brighter than usual:

Holiday Inn Express Ealing review

The room is bright with neutral colour scheme, offset by red accents in the Bodum kettle, chair, document rack and cushion.  I liked it.

Let’s look in detail at some of the features.  There is no wardrobe, just a few open hangers:

Holiday Inn Express Ealing review

The TV is a Smart TV.  This is the first time that I have seen one in a hotel as far as I can remember.  You can call up BBC iPlayer, YouTube etc.  It swings back from the wall to face the bed.  You still get a kettle, tea, coffee etc.

Holiday Inn Express Ealing review

There is no desk.  You get a funky but not hugely comfy chair and the wooden table.  At least it is a wooden table and so can be used with a mouse, unlike the glass table I had at The May Fair Hotel last week.

Holiday Inn Express Ealing review

Unfortunately, they messed up here.  There is no plug socket anywhere near the desk so unless you have a 10 foot power cable you will be doing some furniture rearranging if you want to work.

Speaking of power cables, the hotel has powered USB sockets as well as traditional plugs.

Here is a nice touch.  What you have below is a mirror which, instead of being fixed flat to the wall, pivots out at 30 degrees.  This creates a void where an ironing board and iron can sit.

Holiday Inn Express Ealing review

The net impact of all of the above is that the room felt very spacious even though it was actually relative small in square metre terms.  Even the lighting had been well done – you can see the hidden downlights in this photo:

Holiday Inn Express Ealing review

I then opened the bathroom door and was genuinely surprised.

What you have is a huge open plan wet room.  I have stayed in five star hotels with far smaller bathrooms.  (EDIT: the comments below suggest that I may have been shown a wheelchair-accessible bathroom.  It may also have been, as a corner room, the bathroom was simply bigger to fill the space.  I know from the fire escape floor plan that normal rooms are the standard shoe box shape.)

Holiday Inn Express Ealing review

and

Holiday Inn Express Ealing review

Down in the lobby, there was also a fresh new look.  Here is the dining area:

Holiday Inn Express Ealing review

…. with a rack of free magazines to read:

Holiday Inn Express Ealing review

…. and an all-day coffee machine (tokens bought from reception):

Holiday Inn Express Ealing review

…. and a lighter, brighter bar:

Holiday Inn Express Ealing review

I would be perfectly happy to spend a few days in a hotel like this.  It reminded me of the Hampton by Hilton in Berlin where I had a great stay around five years ago and when I first realised that Holiday Inn Express was going to be in serious trouble if it didn’t modernise.

But what about the hotel itself?

I should add a few words about the hotel itself rather than just the ‘next generation’ design.  Holiday Inn Express London Ealing is not the best located hotel in the world.  It is well over a mile from Ealing Broadway underground station.  A far better option is West Ealing mainline station, about 6-7 minutes walk away, but that has only four trains an hour and is closed on Sunday.  West Ealing trains connect to the tube at Ealing Broadway or you can travel into Paddington.

Sitting directly on Broadway, you are not short of shopping options – although mainly of the Poundworld variety.  I can imagine that it could also get noisy at night in the rooms overlooking the street.

This is all reflected in the price – one of the cheapest Holiday Inn Express properties in London.  Given the high quality and general all-round ‘newness’ of the hotel (with free breakfast for everyone) I would recommend it as a decent option if your budget is low but your standards high.  You can find out more and book on the hotel page of the IHG website here.


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Comments (46)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Mark says:

    “The TV is a Smart TV. This is the first time that I have seen one in a hotel as far as I can remember.”

    You reminded me of a stay in a south coast Travelodge where the TV was fixed to the bracket by some kind of industrial bicycle chain/lock.

  • Fenny says:

    For me, the biggest requirement of the television is an HDMI socket, so I can plug my laptop in and play Amazon Prime/Now TV etc through it. There are still hotels with old CRT style tellies which have no inputs, or flat screen with no HDMI in.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Agree its the HD TVs with no usable HDMI that really disappoint

      • Alan says:

        Must say I was very impressed at a recent Hyatt Place stay in California – nice big HDTV with a full breakout set of connectors on the side of the unit below it – VGA, composite, HDMI, the works! Very nice. Decent breakfast spread included too – can see why HIX are upping their game.

        Have got a HIX San Francisco stay from tomorrow – booked on the 20k/night rate mentioned earlier this year which was a total steal 🙂 Will be interested to see how it is, US HIXs generally been better than UK ones from my previous experience.

  • Geoggy says:

    Middle of nowhere?! Londons queen of the boroughs! Outrageous comment ;0)

    • William says:

      He’s got a point…if you’re from out of town 😉

      If you are staying there i’d thoroughly recommend a trip to Persian Palace for some outrageous portions of kebab and rice.

  • Fenny says:

    Not sure whether you think this is a kind or an unkind review.

  • Raffles says:

    In the context of what?

    This is not a hotel review per se, more a design review, and the photos tell the story. Not funded by IHG in any way!

  • jovanna says:

    OT: Curve card – ‘Make sure first purchase is Chip & PIN’ When does the PIN arrive? Have I set it on the App at some point? I really can’t remember as it was so long ago when I applied for the card.

    • blenz10 says:

      when you activate the card in the app the PIN is displayed.

    • CV3V says:

      yip, the app will give you the pin.

    • Alex W says:

      When you first set up the card in the app, there is a screen which pops up with your pin. You have to re-enter it to make sure you remembered it. If you’ve forgotten you may need toe ring them up.

    • jovanna says:

      Cheers. I probably know what I entered. I’ll give it a go in the morning.

  • Nick says:

    “Free breakfast for everyone”… Didn’t IHG get in to trouble for describing the breakfast as free?! I thought it was technically an included breakfast.

    Anyway, it looks great (the room, not the breakfast). I really like holiday inn express hotels, I don’t even mind the quirky bathroom/toilet door. The new design looks even better. Happy.

    • Rob says:

      Yes they did. Legally they cannot call the breakfast free because no-one is charged for it. One of the more bizarre ASA verdicts!

  • William says:

    I have to say the ‘wet room’ looks superb for what it’s worth. Wet room, Waitrose, 4 trains per hour and Persian Palace nearby. What more does one want?

    • Rob says:

      If there is anything else you want, Poundworld and the 97p Store will probably have it 🙂

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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