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The Park Hyatt London River Thames hotel is open – we went down for a look

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In May, Rob wrote about his tour of the new Park Hyatt London River Thames hotel when it was still under construction. Back then he had to wear a hard hat!

On Tuesday, the long awaited opening of the hotel took place. HfP was invited to an exclusive media event in their Presidential Suite to celebrate, followed by a tour.

The hotel is located very close to the south end of Vauxhall Bridge in the newly developed district of Nine Elms. Battersea Power Station, the US embassy and New Covent Garden Flower Market are a few of its illustrious neighbours.

Park Hyatt London River Thames map

We will publish a full review of the hotel in a few weeks’ time. For now, I wanted to share a few images from my tour.

The Park Hyatt London River Thames website is here.

The basics

As you can see from the map above, the tube (via Vauxhall or Nine Elms) is a few minutes walk away, with Vauxhall being nearest. However taxis seem the easiest option for getting around given that a bridge over the Thames is at your doorstep.

The hotel has 203 rooms and suites over the first 18 floors in the tower on the left (see photo below) with the higher floors occupied by 103 Park Hyatt-branded residences which share the facilities.

Park Hyatt London River Thames

There are also 334 apartments in the adjacent tower. These are connected to the hotel via a glass bridge above the entrance, although they do not appear to be serviced by the hotel.

Park Hyatt London River Thames entrance

One of the luxuries when building from scratch in an area undergoing massive redevelopment is the abundance of space and light you can achieve. Here is the reception area with the newly recruited staff eager to welcome guests.

Park Hyatt London River Thames reception

What strikes you right away is how well designed it is, both in practical and pure aesthetic terms. The interior design is by renowned Japanese firm Super Potato.

The combination of materials, both modern and traditional (I spotted William Morris wallpaper in some rooms), is just beautiful. It is understated luxury whilst also being very homely and inviting.

Park Hyatt London River Thames lobby

This is an art installation by Charlie Whinney who specialises in steam-bending wood designs and whose work can be admired throughout the hotel.

Park Hyatt London River Thames artwork

Presidential Suite

The reception took place in the Presidential Suite.

As I am unlikely to ever stay here I shot a few photos to show you the furnishings and views.

Park Hyatt London River Thames presidential suite

This is the bedroom of the Presidential Suite – you are on the 18th floor here so the views are amazing:

Park Hyatt London River Thames presidential suite 1

The bathroom of the Presidential Suite is simply stunning. The glass bricks to the right separate the walk-in shower from the sinks and reminded me of an ice hotel I visited a few years ago. I loved the effect. Just imagine having a bath here ….

Park Hyatt London River Thames presidential suite bathroom

This is the river view from the Presidential Suite. In the far distance is the London Eye, the City of London and The Shard. Big Ben can just be spotted on the left. There are not many hotels in London which can compete with these views except for the Shangri-La in The Shard.

Park Hyatt London River Thames view

Coming down a few categories (and a few floors) I was shown a basic twin bed room which is a more realistic option if you stay here. This is a 35 sq m room which is generous for London – entry level rooms at the Four Seasons Park Lane are 25 sq m for comparison.

Park Hyatt London River Thames basic twin

One of the tenets of Park Hyatt London River Thames is ‘your home from home’, although you’re lucky if you have such a smart place to live in!

Park Hyatt London River Thames basic twin 1

Marble, wood and texture dominate the two-tone bathroom design.

Park Hyatt London River Thames basic twin 2

The Nine Elms Bar and Lounge

The bar and lounge area is just opposite the entrance and one of the first areas you see when coming in. I was told the inspiration came from the flower market next door. The colorful accents are gorgeous.

Park Hyatt London River Thames bar

The Nine Elms Kitchen and Terrace

The Nine Elms Kitchen offers all-day dining with an open kitchen in the middle. Not pictured is a large outdoor terrace which will be great in summer.

Park Hyatt London River Thames resto nine elms

A cantonese restaurant, currently without a name, will also open later this year.

The gym, pool and spa

This is where the hotel really comes into its own, and will be a key factor in persuading people to pick the Park Hyatt over a West End hotel.

The corridor to the gym was drenched with light:

Park Hyatt London River Thames gym corridor

It has one of the most stunning gyms I have ever seen, and with floor to ceiling windows I am sure you won’t even notice that you are exercising.

Park Hyatt London River Thames gym

The spa is on the first floor and is also flooded in light. The pool is of very generous proportions and unusually wide – easily the biggest I have seen in a London hotel, and one of very few (in fact I struggle to think of another apart from The Berkeley’s rooftop pool) with natural light.

I couldn’t take any photos of the treatment rooms as they were all occupied, even on the first day of operations.

Park Hyatt London River Thames pool

Conclusion

Although not all-encompassing I got a good glimpse of the hotel during my tour. It is using the tagline “London in a new light” which I think hits the nail on the head.

It is close enough by taxi to key destinations in London whilst being set apart, although admittedly there is little on your doorstep apart from Battersea Power Station. The interiors are absolutely stunning and it will suit people who want to mix business / shopping / sightseeing with some downtime.

We will follow up with a full review soon. Rates are very competitive if you are looking for a London luxury hotel over the next couple of months – you can pay as little as £477 and on some nights it is cheaper than Hyatt’s Great Scotland Yard and Hyatt Regency The Churchill. With respect to those two hotels, they are not comparable.

If you are planning a visit, our hotel booking partner Emyr Thomas can get you Hyatt Prive benefits which include a guaranteed upgrade (locked in within 24 hours of booking), free breakfast and $100 of food and beverage credit. You would pay the standard Best Flexible Rate and pay at check-out as usual. You can contact Emyr via the form here.

Many thanks to Rike Erdbrink, the General Manager, and Hannah Butler from FTI for the opportunity to be one of the first to see this gem of a hotel.

The Park Hyatt London River Thames website is here.


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Comments (52)

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

  • OP says:

    Nice coverage, the leisure facilities make this hotel interesting. You might want to update the point about the tube, the hotel is literally next to Vauxhall station (Victoria line) and Nine Elms is less than a 5 minute walk.

  • Lumma says:

    Isn’t Vauxhall tube station a lot closer than Nine Elms station to this hotel?

    • Rob says:

      Yes

    • Matt says:

      Yes, the comment about taxi being easiest was a bit strange….Vauxhall Tube or South West Trains is less than 8 minutes walk and Nine Elms is 12 minute walk… all very easy. Not to mention the big bust station opposite.

      • Rob says:

        Not sure you quite understand the target market for this hotel ….

        • Niall says:

          Not the tube taking plebeians who read here, eh?

        • LittleNick says:

          Yes but given all the traffic these days, surely the tube is just one of the most convenient and quickest forms or transport? Does said ‘target market’ not value their time?

          • James says:

            Agree with others – taxi is rarely the answer in London. I’ve stayed at plenty of 5 star hotels fresh of the tram / tube or (god forbid) even bus! A short walk is always preferable to being stuck in traffic in most cities.

  • executiveclubber says:

    Bathrooms and restaurant already look mid-2000s and dated to me, but to each their own!

    • Anouj says:

      I thought the same

    • Tom says:

      The bathroom in particular is hideous and has that US-style fake historical vibe you get in a lot of NY and Chicago hotels. I don’t get the choice of a Japanese-based designer here that’s done a lot of bland corporate Hyatt Regency and Grand Hyatt properties in Asia rather than a decent London-based designer.

  • DanATC says:

    “the tube (via Vauxhall or Nine Elms) is a few minutes walk away, with Vauxhall being nearest. A taxi seems the easiest option” – as a Zone 1 resident, I can’t see the connection between these two sentences?

  • EP says:

    Re: pools with natural light, the Pan Pacific has a great facility.

  • John says:

    477 a night. Crazy prices

    • Rhys says:

      For Hyatt’s top brand in London? Hardly. This isn’t a Holiday Inn!

    • Thywillbedone says:

      Name a comparable hotel in London with significantly better rates? I suspect you will struggle …

    • Rob says:

      That’s peanuts. Where have you been for the last 3 years? I have seen Holiday Inn Express hotels charge £500 at peak times in the last 2 years.

      A 9sq m windowless room at Four Points Express is £170 tonight. This is 35% more per sq m than PH which also has windows!

      • Simon says:

        London hotel pricing is insane. Even so, £500 to stay in the arse end of Vauxhall is a step too far.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        You’re going to compare per per sqm in Vauxhall vs Euston?

        • Rob says:

          If you’re running around town in taxis all the time – which is what the target market here does, and indeed what I did in Warsaw last week for example – then arguably (within reason) location isn’t that much of an issue.

          • Tom says:

            Location will ensure this can never price / compete as a proper luxury hotel, though. Imagine this will remain priced at a discount to the likes of JWM-level properties in proper central London, let alone the proper luxury ones.

          • LittleNick says:

            That might not be a bad thing then, you can experience PH levels of service on the cheap. Shame I don’t think it’s on the recent hyatt offer, which would knock off another £200 off the bill (splitting into two cards)

          • TGLoyalty says:

            Possibly, I absolutely would have tried it with £200 off but as it is I’ll burn them elsewhere over the next few months

      • John says:

        That’s the problem I ve not adjusted to post Covid pricing. Who can afford these rates.

  • Nick G says:

    Looks great and having stayed at the Pestana at Chelsea for a weekend visit recently for nearly £300 a night I would quite happily stay around that area again as a base which is lacking in decent hotels (the art hotel only had suites available at crazy prices as we would have stayed there) Pity it’s not in the Amex spend £250 get £100 back offer….otherwise I would have booked straight away!

    • Rob says:

      Pestana has a bit more going for it because it is 5 minutes across the bridge to Chelsea and you’re directly opposite Battersea Park, albeit actually worse than PH for tube access.

      • jjoohhnn says:

        It’s only a 15min walk to Tate Britain or The Oval from Park Hyatt, so there are attractions nearby!

  • Phil G says:

    As it is next to some very busy roads, what is the sound proofing like ?
    Can you hear the road noise from the room ?

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

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