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Review: the Crowne Plaza hotel at London Heathrow Terminal 4

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This is my review of the Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 hotel.

The Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 opened in 2018.  It shares a building with the Holiday Inn Express London Heathrow Terminal 4 and the two hotels have 700 rooms combined. It represented a chunky £80m investment by Arora Group, which also own the Sofitel Heathrow Terminal 5 amongst other properties.

I first stayed here just after opening in 2018. In recent weeks I stayed in both hotels – it was my first time in the Holiday Inn Express side – and got to see what, if anything has changed. We’re running the reviews back to back this weekend because so many facilities are shared. I paid cash for both nights.

We also recently re-reviewed the Hilton London Heathrow Airport Terminal 4 hotel – see here.

Crowne Plaza Heathrow Terminal 4

‘Two in one’ hotels are becoming more common

‘Two in one’ hotels, where one building contains two properties owned by the same group, are becoming more prevalent.  IHG has a joint Staybridge Suites and Holiday Inn on Bath Road which is also relatively new.  There is logic to it – you can justify a bigger building on scarce airport land, and there are cost savings to be had behind the scenes.

‘Two in one’ hotels vary in terms of how many, if any, facilities are shared. This Terminal 4 development is the most integrated I have ever seen – only time will tell if the Crowne Plaza suffers because of this, because you can pay less for a Holiday Inn Express bed and still use the same restaurant and bar, plus get free breakfast.  I’m getting ahead of myself though ….

Getting to the Crowne Plaza Heathrow Terminal 4

You access the hotel via the Departures level at Heathrow Terminal 4.  (Don’t go to Arrivals if arriving by tube or train, despite some signage encouraging it.)

If you have ever stayed at the Hilton Terminal 4 (review) or Premier Inn Terminal 4 (review) you will know the gangway that leads from the terminal to the hotels:

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 hotel tunnel

If you taking the tube or Elizabeth line from Central London, make sure you get a Terminal 4 train – not all stop there.  If you take the Heathrow Express, you need to change at Terminal 2/3 for an Elizabeth line train to Terminal 4.

Getting to Terminal 5 from these hotels is a bit messy, unfortunately – it is also a quite a distance if you look at a map.  You need to take the train or tube via Terminals 2/3.  Other options are the Hotel Hoppa bus or one of the local buses that stop nearby.  The hotel can also order you a taxi.

The Crowne Plaza Terminal 4 is the first hotel on the gangway.  You save a couple of minutes compared to walking to the Hilton or Premier Inn.

My room

One benefit of having a Holiday Inn Express in the same building is that the Crowne Plaza has had to invest in good quality rooms to stop guests trading down.  As you can see, they are classy:

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 bedroom

There are not huge, however, and there isn’t a lot of difference in terms of space between the two hotels.  The two key things you get in the Crowne Plaza and don’t get in the Holiday Inn Express are a bath tub and a full size desk.

The little things are all there – individual reading lights, USB sockets by the bed, a variety of pillow types, a coffee machine, a robe in the wardrobe etc.

What you don’t get is anything with a big ‘wow’ factor. Whilst the room delivered everything I would expect from a Crowne Plaza, it doesn’t go above and beyond. I would have liked something – anything – special to make me feel that the premium over the Holiday Inn Express was worth it. Even the throw on the bed had disappeared since my last visit.

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 hotel bedroom

The standard rooms only sleep two people.  For a family, I would recommend a suite which is about 75% more expensive than a room but has a capacity of four people, as long as two are children under 12.

The fruit bowl and box of chocolates I received when I stayed here back in 2018 were absent. Whether this is covid or costcutting is not clear but it removed another reason to stay here vs the Holiday Inn Express side.

I did have a coffee machine in my room. Last time I stayed here these were not in the standard rooms (I had a Club room here) so you may not get one. All rooms have a kettle, two packets of biscuits (including Biscoff!), tea, coffee and two free bottles of water.

There is a fridge in the room, but it is empty – no mini-bar here.

If you need to work, this is where the Crowne Plaza scores over the Holiday Inn Express with a good sized desk complete with power sockets and a decent light.  Wi-fi was free and of excellent quality, although I struggled to get a good Vodafone calling signal on my phone.

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 desk in room

Bathrooms at Crowne Plaza Heathrow Terminal 4

The bathroom had some snazzy silver tiling.  There was only one sink.

Toiletries were the standard Crowne Plaza ‘Antipodes’ brand in refillable bottles. I felt that the security put in place to stop these bottles being stolen (they are basically bolted down so you can’t pick the bottles up) was a bit pathetic in what is meant to be a premium hotel.

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 hotel

You get a big shower with a choice of rainfall or traditional water jets. You also get a totally separate bath. Full credit to the hotel here – it’s been a while since I stayed at a hotel with a bath and a standalone shower. There were also some additional toiletries beyond the usual, including lip balm and hand cream, plus a shower cap.

Views and noise

It goes without saying that soundproofing is EXCELLENT.  I did not hear any aircraft noise at all. 

In terms of views, some rooms directly face the Hilton Terminal 4 across the road which is quite an impressive bit of architecture by airport hotel standards. Others, including mine, look over the large model Qatar Airways aircraft on the approach road and the dull warehouses behind. Some rooms also face inwards over the atrium.

Let me show you how it looks inside.  The hotel is rhombus shaped.  Whilst both the Crowne Plaza and Holiday Inn Express have their own check-in areas and receptions, they share the lift bank.  Not only that, but each floor has a mix of Crowne Plaza and Holiday Inn Express rooms.  You walk out of the lifts and turn one way for the CP and the other way for the Holiday Inn Express.

This is a view from the 6th floor, where I was, looking down on the Crowne Plaza lobby cafe:

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 cafe

Food and drink

Talking of the cafe, here is a shot from the ground floor:

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 lobby

Below is the bar.  This is an interesting arrangement.  The Holiday Inn Express side of the ground floor – the areas are separated by the lift lobby – has its own bar / restaurant which serves drinks and a standard Cafe Rouge-style food menu.

There is also, behind the lifts, a stand-alone bar with two doors – one on each brands ‘side’ of the ground floor – which is pictured below.  Whilst decoratively it looks more like the Crowne Plaza, it is open to all guests.

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 hotel bar

Let’s talk about the club lounge

I had booked a club room so I could take a look at it, since IHG One Rewards status does not give you this automatically. You need to select an annual lounge pass as your milestone benefit after 40 nights. When I last stayed here, just after the hotel had opened, it wasn’t finished.

In truth, it was a waste of money.

Whilst open all day, the lounge only serves anything substantial between 6pm and 8pm. You can pick up ‘complimentary canapes and selected alcoholic beverages’ during this time. Unfortunately I wasn’t in the hotel then so I can’t tell you what it was, but judging by the size of the serving area it won’t have been much.

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 hotel lounge

There is no breakfast served in the lounge. You are sent to the main restaurant. Since I would have got free breakfast in the restaurant anyway due to my IHG One Rewards Diamond status, paying for a Club room turned out to be a bit pointless.

Whilst the spread is always bigger in the restaurant, I prefer lounge breakfasts because they are easier. I don’t feel worried if I leave my belongings to head to the food, and I will often pop in and out within five minutes if I’m busy. You can’t easily do this in a big buffet.

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 club lounge

During the day, the lounge has a coffee machine as well as a fridge of soft drinks plus some crisps and biscuits. As you have a coffee machine, water and biscuits in your room, only the free soft drinks add value.

Frankly, if you have free breakfast via status, there is little point in paying the £30-£40 premium for a club room unless you plan to hit the evening canapes and drinks hard.

However, as restaurant breakfast is £18 for a full breakfast and £15 for a continental, a couple without top-tier IHG status may find the Club premium worth paying. For the same price as you’d pay for two breakfasts you also get some evening canapes and drinks throw in, plus a coffee machine in your room.

Restaurant

The main restaurant is called Urban. Whilst on the Crowne Plaza side, it is usable by guests at either hotel. Last time I stayed here I said that it was the best meal that I had ever had in an airport hotel. Sadly my schedule didn’t allow me to eat here this time so I can’t say if that is still the case.

I did see a menu. To be honest, the food was a lot less ambitious than what I ate four years ago.

The mains are a mix of crowd pleasers (fish and chips, palak paneer, murgh makhani, gnocchi, nasi goreng, chicken biryani, sirloin, peri peri chicken, pork belly, seared salmon, beef burgers) at between £14 and £22.

Urban isn’t open for lunch. Breakfast is served 6-10 (11am at weekends) and in the evening from 5.30pm until 10pm. Given that this is an airport hotel with people coming and going at all hours and in various states of jet lag, I would have expected a little more flexibility.

It’s a smart albeit windowless space as you can see:

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 urban restaurant

…. with a decent, although not life changing, buffet selection:

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Airport hotel Terminal 4 buffet

and

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 breakfast

It was very quiet when I went down at 9.30am – the room photo above wasn’t taken out of hours, it was taken during the breakfast service.

Gym

There are a couple of other facilities worth mentioning.  There is a gym in the basement.  This is ONLY for Crowne Plaza guests so don’t book into the Holiday Inn Express side if you want to exercise.

Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Airport Terminal 4 gym

There is a meeting room at the lobby level which can be booked even if you are not a guest.

Conclusion

The Crowne Plaza London Heathrow Terminal 4 hotel is an impressive property by airport hotel standards.

And yet ….

I can’t deny that it isn’t as good as it was when it opened. It is still in excellent decorative order. However, some elements are clearly worse (a less ambitious restaurant, no bed throw, no fruit or chocolate in the room, bolted down bathroom toiletries) and I couldn’t find any real improvements.

The Club lounge adds very little, given that it doesn’t serve breakfast and has little available apart from a two hour evening window of canapes. Giving Club room guests free restaurant breakfast probably seemed generous but, now that top tier IHG One Rewards members get free breakfast anyway, it simply devalues the lounge offering further.

You can’t knock the value on off-peak nights

That said, I can’t argue that the £30-£40 premium for the Club lounge is worth paying if there are two of you and you would pay for breakfast anyway.

Whilst I have been a little critical here, I should also say that pricing is currently very low. I paid £195 for a Club room, but there are standard rooms from around £100 on some days in December. This is actually cheaper than it was four years ago, despite rampant inflation since then.

A typical £135 standard room, which is about average at present, is 21,000 IHG One Rewards points. This is 0.64p per point which is decent value and well above our 0.4p target.

Throw in the free breakfast that an IHG One Rewards Diamond Elite member would get, and the Crowne Plaza Heathrow Terminal 4 begins to look very good value. In fact, with the Elizabeth line whisking you from Terminal 4 to the West End in 40 minutes, it is arguably worth considering even if you are not flying anywhere.

Tomorrow I will share a few thoughts from my night in the Holiday Inn Express which shares the building.

You can read our full series of London airport hotel reviews here.

The hotel website is here if you want to find out more.  You can compare and contrast with the Holiday Inn Express Heathrow Terminal 4 website which is here.

Our recent review of the adjacent Hilton London Heathrow Airport at Terminal 4 is here.


IHG One Rewards update – April 2024:

Get bonus points: IHG One Rewards is offering 2,000 bonus points for every two cash nights you stay (not necessarily consecutive) between 1st April and 31st May 2024. You can read our full article here and you can register here.

New to IHG One Rewards?  Read our overview of IHG One Rewards here and our article on points expiry rules here. Our article on ‘What are IHG One Rewards points worth?’ is here.

Buy points: If you need additional IHG One Rewards points, you can buy them here.

Want to earn more hotel points?  Click here to see our complete list of promotions from IHG and the other major hotel chains or use the ‘Hotel Offers’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.

Comments (96)

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

  • Paul says:

    I stayed in the CP in July not long after T4 had reopened. I paid around £90 for the night but also paid for dinner which was underwhelming. Service at reception both checking in and out was appallingly slow. The room bed and facilities are fine for a short stop. You don’t want to be there for any more than a day.

    At this price band, it’s acceptable but you are spot on that paying for lounge access when holding status, it is pointless.

    Your picture of the walkway suggest it’s been painted since July, back then it looked awful with acres of peeling paint and it had a run down, unpleasant, almost nasty feeling to it. My wife commented that she probably wouldn’t want to use it at night when alone. I think there are lots of cameras but it’s condition then was dredful.

    • chrism20 says:

      The paintwork was still a mess when I was the second week in September so it’s been done in the last eight weeks or so

      • Save East Coast Rewards says:

        Sometimes things look better in photos. The Tyne Bridge usually looks nice in photos unless they’re deliberately focusing on the paintwork to highlight the extensive rusting. As for this walkway I was going through it about 2 weeks ago and it hadn’t been refurbished. Perhaps they should have painted it when it was closed along with T4 (even when the hotels were open this bridge wasn’t open until the hotels reopened).

        But who owns the walkways? It was built for the Hilton as that hotel has been there the longest, they also seem to own all the advertising positions along the walkway so it might be their overall responsibility for maintenance with some contribution by the other hotels, or it may be managed by the airport

  • David says:

    Have never not got complimentary lounge access when staying here as spire/now diamond.

  • Yarki says:

    The bolted down toiletries are not necessarily to keep them from being taken, but to keep them from being tampered with…

    I have no issues with this.

    • Paul says:

      Very standard practice now at even 5 star US hotels (stayed in 2 last week).
      I think it’s a good thing and nice to see hotel doing away with millions of mini plastic bottles.

      • E4 Traveller says:

        It’s not a good thing when you go for a shower and find that the bolted down bottles are empty because housekeeping didn’t bother to fill them up.

    • Rich says:

      Exactly, bulk dispensers are fine and significantly reduce plastic and other waste but you want to feel assured that they haven’t been tampered with.

      • Bagoly says:

        Latest EU proposal will enforce these.

        I did find one issue in the IC Warsaw recently – the shower had all three bottles, but the bath had only a bar of soap.
        Presumably whoever designed that did not realise that some people wash their hair in the bath (in the hospitality business one should seek out what other people do) so to get shampoo and conditioner to the bath I had to pump them into cup/saucer.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        Completely agree with this. Makes me feel better that they’re locked down.

        If you really want to steal some toiletries just take your own bottle.

    • Gordon says:

      Premier inn soap dispensers give the smallest about of soap per press, So to save fingers and time you can lift the lid lift the bag out and rapidly push the internal vacuum chamber while under the bath taps to have a nice bubble bath.

  • Terry says:

    Stayed here a couple of weeks ago and got a free upgrade to Club Room with lounge access, plus free breakfast with my temporary free Diamond starus. Thought it was great value, especially as price was not much different to the Holiday Inn Express. Club Lounge had two hot nibbles, plus a couple of other bits. Drinks are served by staff, although refills were offered quite quickly.

    Interesting reading your review, as I did the opposite with food. Went to Holiday Inn Express bar for drink and dinner, as it was cheaper.

  • Phillip says:

    Same here on upgrade to Club as a Diamond member.

    One thing I did notice is that the carpets were quite worn for such a new hotel. I appreciate there’s a lot of foot traffic and luggage dragging but that’s something you take into account when building an airport hotel attached to a major international terminal!

  • Andrew J says:

    Holiday Inn Express every time for me with amazing runway views, the best views of all four of the hotels at T4. So bizarre that they built the CP rooms the other side of the hotel and the HIX rooms on the side with panoramic runway views.

    • TB says:

      Agree – they definitely got this wrong. It’s a rather bland view from any of the CP rooms. If you end up on the left side, you can just get a glimpse of the south runway….

  • NigelthePensionerr says:

    Sofitel every time. £205 for the night with 7 days underground parking and Club access. Also a nice fragrance in the link to T5.
    We stay here no matter what T we are flying from. The Belle Epoque is also probably a bit better than the Urban at the CP at T4!

    • Tom says:

      Yeah it is nonsense to pay 150 for any IHG hotel when you can get a Sofitel for 200. I’d rather stay at the T4 Premier Inn, was 40 last time!

  • Andrew J says:

    “Whilst decoratively it looks more like the Crowne Plaza, it is open to all guests.” Surely all hotel bars are open to anyone who is willing to pay, regardless if they are staying at the hotel. In the same way, the CP restaurant is open to HIX guests, Hilton guests or indeed anyone happening to be at T4 and wanting dinner with only Caffè Nero in the terminal.

    • Rob says:

      Obviously true – was just making the point clear!

      • Andrew J says:

        “it is intended to serve both hotels” might be clearer/more accurate wording.

    • Fraser says:

      Not quite. The Sky Bar at the Hilton Garden Inn T3 is indeed open to non-residents but with a (not difficult) £25 minimum spend.

      • Andrew J says:

        “Surely all hotel bars are open to anyone who is willing to pay”

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