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Review: the Andaz London Liverpool Street hotel

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This is our review of the Andaz London Liverpool Street Hotel, part of World of Hyatt.

Not wanting £200 of Hyatt / American Express cashback to go to waste, I decided to book a staycation at the Andaz Liverpool Street before the offer expired two weeks ago. In one of the more bizarre coincidences of my life, a few days later I was invited to Ryanair’s press conference at the hotel, on the same day.

With Hyatt due to re-open the old Crowne Plaza The City as Hyatt Regency Blackfriars later this year, I thought it was worth taking a look at Hyatt’s older City hotel. We will take a look at the new Hyatt Regency as soon as we can – the current opening date, which has slipped multiple times, is 22nd December.

Andaz Liverpool Street exterior

The hotel has a bit of history, including part ownership by Terence Conran in the early noughties. It was turned into Andaz in 2006.

The hotel website is here.

Where is the Andaz London?

There is just one Andaz in London, located right next to London Liverpool Street Station. It occupies the Grade II listed Great Eastern Hotel building, built in 1884 to serve passengers from the railway lines which predominantly serve the East of England. It was built on the site formerly occupied by Bedlam, the first hospital for the mentally ill.

The location is excellent. You obviously have the train station right next door, but it also straddles the City (the CBD for non-UK readers) and Shoreditch with its myriad bars, restaurants and pubs.

Andaz London Liverpool St location

Whilst the Andaz was one of the first hotels in the area there has been a spate of new openings in recent years as Shoreditch continues its upwards trajectory as the home of trendy techies. A Pan Pacific has opened in a new tower just opposite, whilst Hilton has opened its first UK Canopy (review here) and Hyatt opened its budget-but-trendy Hyatt Place London City East (review here) near Aldgate.

In terms of transport connections, you have easy access to the Central Line, plus the Circle, Hammersmith & City and Metropolitan Lines.

It is also one of the stations for the newly opened Elizabeth Line, which also makes it one of the best hotels for the Soho and the West End. The journey time is five minutes to Tottenham Court Road, and when the line fully opens on the 6th November you’ll have a direct rail link to Heathrow, no changes needed.

Inside the Andaz Liverpool Street hotel

Because of the heritage of the building the main entrance is actually on the side, down Liverpool Street itself, rather than the busier Bishopsgate.

You’re immediately greeted by a doorman and the the lovely scent of T London’s ‘Darjeeling’ fragrance, as well as a lovely, lobby styled with lots of dark, rich colours:

Andaz Liverpool Street check in

I immediately checked in and was offered a drink – tea, coffee or water – whilst I did so. With Hyatt Globalist you are also entitled to a 4pm late checkout and was asked if I wanted to make use of this.

Rooms at the Andaz London Liverpool Street hotel

I booked a bog standard queen room knowing that booking with Emyr would get me an upgrade or, if available, a standard suite thanks to Globalist status. The front desk gave me a King room. Although it appeared that there were junior suites still available for cash, I decided not to fight it as my room was exceptionally large anyway.

As a result of its period conversion, the Andaz is a bit of a warren and finding your way around isn’t always the simplest. I ended up taking the lifts to the second floor where there’s a big, modern atrium with funky circular cut out letting you peer all the way down into the lobby:

Andaz Liverpool Street atrium

…. before walking down a corridor and a small flight of stairs to get to my room.

The room was impressive. As you enter there is a wardrobe to your right with black wooden doors, whilst the bathroom is on the left, with a porthole in the door:

Andaz Liverpool Street room

The wardrobe features robes, slippers, ironing board, shoe shine kit, safe etc:

Andaz Liverpool Street wardrobe

To the left of the wardrobe is the mini bar. One of the Andaz brand standards is that the mini bar is free and restocked daily. In this case, it came with two bottles of still and sparkling water each, apple and orange juice, a bag of crisps and some cookies:

Andaz Liverpool Street mini bar

Four Nespresso pods for the Nespresso machine are also included.

The bathroom is a good size, although not massive.

Andaz Liverpool Street shower

It features white subway tiling with a black marble shelf above the sink that elevates it slightly:

Andaz Liverpool Street bathroom

The sink annoyingly doesn’t drain that fast, which I now realise I forgot to mention at check-out.

A big bath (long enough for me to stretch out in!) is at the end:

Andaz Liverpool Street bath

The only criticism I have is the shower, which is in a raised cubicle. This feels oddly unpremium for a hotel of this calibre and is a bit claustrophobic when showering. Even adding a frosted glass panel, rather than tiled sidewall would have helped.

Toiletries are by T London and smell divine. Definitely one of my new favourites!

Once you’re out of the mini corridor the room opens up and it is massive. It has by far the highest ceilings of any hotel I’ve stayed at – they must be 4m or more:

Andaz Liverpool Street room (2)

The king bed is right there, with floating bedside tables on both sides:

Andaz Liverpool Street bed

Connectivity is good with both a UK three-prong and USB socket.

Andaz Liverpool Street bedside

Turn around and you’ll see an armchair, massive TV (although not massive enough given the size of the room!) and good sized desk:

Andaz Liverpool Street TV

and

Andaz Liverpool Street esj

Given London hotel rooms normally barely have enough room to turn around in this felt like almost too much space. There is enough floor space for 3 or 4 people to do yoga!

Andaz Liverpool Street room space

The vast windows flood the room with light, so despite the fairly dark decor it never felt particularly dark as a whole. The only comment I would make is that the windows are absolutely filthy and in desperate need of a clean, both on the outside and within the two secondary an tertiary glazing. At least there wasn’t any road noise.

Andaz Liverpool Street view

As a whole, the styling of the room is fairly muted, with lots of greys and darker colours. It’s surprisingly inoffensive for an Andaz – when I stayed at the Andaz Amsterdam, for example, I had a wallpaper print of a massive fish. The Andaz London Liverpool Street is almost boring in comparison, albeit the good kind of boring.

Dining at Andaz London Liverpool Street

The Andaz offers a number of dining options, which I’ll quickly summarise here. You have:

  • Lady Abercorn’s Pub & Kitchen
  • Rake’s Cafe Bar
  • Eastway Brasserie
  • Miyako

Both Lady Abercorn’s and Rake’s are in beautiful, heritage rooms which are incredibly stylish. I was hoping to have dinner at Miyako’s but only found out on arrival that it was closed after the bank holiday, so I ended up going to Rake’s instead which was fairly average – certainly nothing special, although with a very sweet Romanian waiter we had a nice chat with about Romanian food.

Andaz Liverpool Street Miyako

I managed to grab lunch at Miyako’s the next day, which was fab – a teeny tiny hole-in-the-wall restaurant with less than 20 seats and delicious Japanese food, so I’d definitely recommend that if you’re staying here.

Eastway Brasserie serves all-day dining and is also where breakfast is served. This was my second time having breakfast at the Andaz – the first time was with a good friend who was staying – and I have to say I continue to enjoy breakfast here.

Andaz Liverpool Street Eastway brasserie

Last time, I asked if they could make me eggs royale and they said no, despite offering poached eggs on demand and having smoked salmon at the buffet. They did finally relent when I queried if they had hollandaise sauce and why they couldn’t do it for me if they had other a la carte options on the menu, but it was a bit like pulling teeth, particularly for a five star hotel.

This time round, the provided an a la carte menu (no extra charge) with eggs benedict and eggs royale some of the options. I asked if they did eggs royale and they said no problem, so that’s a big service improvement in my book.

Here they are, in all their delicious glory:

Andaz Liverpool Street eggs royale

There is also an excellent buffet. You get all the usual full English items, including bacon, sausages, scrambled eggs, hash browns, tomatoes and mushrooms:

Andaz Liverpool Street hot buffet

There’s also a range of breads, pastries and a honeycomb:

Andaz Liverpool Street pastries

Cold cuts, including various salamis, salmon, smoked mackerel (I think) and other bits and bobs including stuffed peppers and guacamole:

Andaz Liverpool Street cold cuts

Plus cheeses and special hanging salami:

Andaz Liverpool Street cheese salami

…. and your usual range of cereals, yoghurts, fruit and juices:

Andaz Liverpool Street breakfast buffet

I always really like the breakfast here and would definitely come back.

Conclusion

I have to admit I had a really good stay at the Andaz Liverpool Street. The exceptional location makes it a no-brainer if you’re travelling for business or leisure, particularly with the new Elizabeth Line.

Rooms are very spacious, and although I imagine each room is slightly different since this is a historic building, I have seen previous rooms that were equally large. If it wasn’t so big I definitely would have pushed harder for a junior suite upgrade with Globalist status.

Prices typically start at around £350 per night. The Andaz London Liverpool Street is a Category 5 hotel so you’ll need between 24,000 and 27,000 points. You can find out more, and book, on the hotel website here.

If you are booking for cash, I strong recommend using a Hyatt Prive travel agent, such as our partner Emyr Thomas. You get the following extra benefits which, at an Andaz, are available even on one night stays:

  • $25 to $100 hotel credit per stay, depending on brand (Andaz is $100)
  • One category room upgrade confirmed within 24 hours of booking
  • Daily full breakfast for two
  • Early check-in (from 9am) and late check-out (to 4pm) subject to availability
  • Welcome gift and letter

As you imagine, I had a fun time trying to get the bill up to £500 to trigger the £200 of American Express cashback – especially as breakfast was already included and I had an extra $100 of credit for booking via Emyr.

Bookings via Emyr will be identical to the ‘Best Flexible Rate’ showing on hyatt.com. You can contact him with booking enquiries here and learn more about Hyatt Prive here.

PS. Rob adds: ‘It seems that no-one told Rhys about the huge masonic hall that was found when the building was renovated in 2005. It had been bricked up since 1939. I covered that story here.”


World of Hyatt update – April 2025:

Get bonus points: Hyatt is not currently running a global promotion

New to World of Hyatt?  Read our overview of World of Hyatt here and our article on points expiry rules here. Our article on what we think World of Hyatt points are worth is here.

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Comments (32)

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

  • Roberto says:

    Opposite Dirty Dicks Pub, a place I have a soft spot for as my Grandfather worked in Liverpool Street Station in the fifties and sixties spending most evening in this old (circa 1750’s) boozer. I too worked not too far away in the 1980’s well before all the gentrification in that local area (Hoxton etc). I may have had a few jars at the same bar……

    I wish I had been brave enough to go through with an huge property purchase (a furniture yard and outbuildings by the Birdcage Pub) that was about £800,000 at the time – I hate to think how many millions the flats on that site are now worth. Ho hum.

  • Henry Young says:

    White tiles with black grout in bathrooms is a very practical solution. Stylish look and long term maintenance free – out of sight, out of mind 😉

  • jj says:

    I used to stay in the Andaz quite regularly when my favourite hotel in that area, Batty Langley’s, wasn’t available. The Andaz always had late availability then, and I wonder how it’s fairing now. Personally, I haven’t stayed overnight in the City since Jan 2020, as financiers prefer to meet clients over Zoom these days.

  • RKEdin says:

    I also stated here recently but didn’t have quite as good a room experience. I had booked with Emyr and also didn’t receive an upgrade, however my King room was much much smaller than the one reviewed.
    Hotel service was very good, as was dinner in Eastway, but overall I didn’t feel that the room details were of the quality I expected. It was a bunch of little things like complicated lighting which meant I couldn’t work out how to just have one light on, the shower controls were separate hot & cold controls so I ended up v cold while trying to turn it on, I couldn’t get the sink plug to work, not all the tv channels worked, there was only one robe in a room for 2….
    I had been really looking forward to staying here so was a bit disappointed.

    • Rhys says:

      Weird. I had two robes in the cupboard, unlike most hotels where one is out and one is stored.

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    “I booked a bog standard queen room knowing that booking with Emyr would get me an upgrade“. Just a small sequencing point: as you don’t explain who Emyr is until much later in the article, this sentence might leave non-regular readers a bit nonplussed?

  • Michael C says:

    The Japanese restaurant used to do a bottomless “Sumo” lunch on Saturdays, but think it stopped, sadly!

  • memesweeper says:

    I’ve stayed and loved it. I booked through hotels.com and got the same upgrade! Admittedly at a very quiet post-lockdown reopening moment. The Elizabeth makes this a great weekend option for leisure travellers who want to see the west end, or wander east on foot to Shoreditch.

    • Save East Coast Rewards says:

      Currently the central section of the Elizabeth line is closed on Sunday’s except for special occasions (I think it’s open this Sunday due to the extra visitors to London for The Queen’s funeral on Monday). The reason it is usually closed is to provide a day for working on the remaining tasks needed to integrate the three sections of the route so you’ll in future be able to go direct to Heathrow, Reading or Shenfield without changing trains. I think November if the predicted time for this

    • Gordon says:

      This will be ideal for me for one of my trips to the west end to watch a show, Agree on Hotels.com, Just booked my 10th night in Birmingham for the Motorhome show at the NEC next month. Free night in the bag….

      • Gordon says:

        Provided I make it back to Blighty in one piece, As I have just arrived in Punta Cana and storm Fiona is due to hit the island tomorrow….

  • Andrew (@andrewseftel) says:

    A feature not mentioned is that the rooms’ TVs have Chromecast built-in (this is a thing at newer Hyatt hotels). This is a big step up in utility if you tend to stream your media.

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

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