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My Lounge in Heathrow Terminal 3 is now open – take a look

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No1 Lounges has officially opened its new My Lounge at Heathrow Terminal 3.

The old Club Aspire lounge has been fully refurbished and rebranded ‘to deliver a bold new My Lounge experience, laid-back, sociable, and full of character’.

What it actually does is properly differentiate the three lounges that No1 operates in Terminal 3, with Clubrooms as the most premium, No1 Lounge as the mainstream offering and My Lounge as the more casual, family friendly option.

My Lounge in Heathrow Terminal 3 is now open

No1 has publicly said that it intends to phase out the Club Aspire brand, which implies that we can expect a change to the Heathrow Terminal 5 site at some point.

The Club Aspire lounge at Gatwick South will be more of a challenge because there is already a My Lounge, No1 Lounge and Clubrooms in the terminal. I suspect the easiest option will be to knock-through to the existing My Lounge behind it – these two lounges were originally one space, used by Virgin Holidays, if you go back a decade.

The My Lounge Heathrow Terminal 3 website is here.

My Lounge in Heathrow Terminal 3 is now open

What can you find in My Lounge Heathrow Terminal 3?

The new My Lounge covers 3,200 sq ft and offers 112 seats with an open-plan layout.

There wasn’t a press preview (the team has been focussing on Jersey, which opens today) and the photographs here have been supplied by No1.

To quote:

Designed as a flexible, informal space for modern travellers, it offers a laid-back alternative to the traditional airport lounge, where guests can unwind, play, or simply switch off before they fly.

My Lounge in Heathrow Terminal 3 is now open

The lounge features a self-service grazing menu with hot and cold snacks, sweet treats and a pancake machine, alongside bistro-style dining and a fully tended bar serving beer, wine and spirits. Guests can also help themselves to soft drinks, juices, teas and coffees throughout the day. 

Entertainment and social zones include a games area with arcade table and PlayStation, and a cosy ‘den’, perfect for catching up on TV, films or live sport. Additional amenities include fast and free Wi-Fi, plentiful charging points, accessible toilets, baby-changing facilities, and live flight information screens to keep guests informed.

Casual seating throughout is designed with groups, families and solo travellers in mind, creating an atmosphere that is easy-going, energetic and refreshingly different, with playful design touches and an inclusive feel.

My Lounge in Heathrow Terminal 3 is now open

The opening of My Lounge completes a trio of refreshed spaces under the No1 Lounges portfolio at Heathrow T3. Each brand offers a distinct experience, from the indulgence of Clubrooms to the refined familiarity of No1 Lounge, and now the relaxed spirit of My Lounge – giving travellers greater freedom to choose the space that best matches their personality and reason for travel. 

How to access My Lounge at Heathrow Terminal 3

This lounge is located airside. You should follow the signs to Gates 1–42 and ‘All Airline Lounges’. Follow the signs to ‘Lounges B–J’ – My Lounge is ‘Lounge D’.

My Lounge in Heathrow Terminal 3 is now open

You can get into the lounge for free via Priority Pass, Lounge Key and DragonPass, subject to availability.

(American Express Preferred Rewards Gold comes with four free Priority Pass lounge entries per year, and the card is free for your first year. The Platinum Card from American Express comes with two unlimited Priority Pass cards, each allowing two people to enter. The Lloyds Bank World Elite Mastercard offers a Priority Pass as part of its package.)

You can pre-book access on this page of the No1 website for a £6 fee, which will guarantee you access with your lounge club card.

If you are booking for cash, there is a 15% discount running for visits made by 16th August. You need to use code MYLOUNGE-LHR3 at checkout on this page of the No1 Lounges website.

Comments (35)

  • Barry says:

    3,200 sq ft. At least put the equivalent metric measure in as well. I’m in my 50s and don’t recall being taught in anything but the metric system.

    • Born2sKydive says:

      297.29 square metres….. the power of Google

    • JDB says:

      That particular conversion is very simple to do in one’s head. It’s difficult to imagine not also being taught the imperial system that one still comes across pretty regularly including in the US with its slight differences to ours.

    • Flyoff says:

      Agreed. It is over 50 years since it was taught. I find it very odd that the BBC still use imperial mostly in their news broadcasts.

    • Wally1976 says:

      I tend to use the rough conversation 1 sq meter = 10 sq feet

    • Yorkie Aid says:

      How on earth do you cope with the daily trauma of distances being in miles? Do you have to do a mental conversion into km every time you see a road sign?

      • Barry says:

        Thanks for your input. I don’t live in the UK (or the US)

      • Greg says:

        @Yorkie. I calculate miles per gallon every time I fill my car with petrol.

      • JDB says:

        And what about pints, mpg or furlongs if interested in racing.

        • JDB says:

          And for anyone who reads literature, does crosswords or just likes knowing stuff – there are many plenty of old measures – quires, reams, chains, perches, bushels or old money terms like crown, farthing, guineas etc.

    • MrWhite says:

      You’re in your 50s and can’t use google or a calculator …

    • Mrs Trellis says:

      I thought that “football pitches” and “Wales” were the acceptable units of area.

  • Greg says:

    Seems like yet another lounge without a smoking area.

    Imagine flying from Cape Town to Seattle without a U.K. visa. What is the harm in providing a passenger with a discreet area of a lounge (or the airport for that matter) for them to enjoy a puff in private. Lounges and airlines ply drinkers with some of the most luxurious and expensive alcohol on the planet yet smokers are always penalised.

    Bizarrely one can smoke in My Lounge Gatwick South and there was a smoking terrace at LHR T4 the last time I passed through. Cape Town has several such areas as do a large number of other airports

    I’m not advocating the throwing of butts off the Clubhouse terrace, but don’t believe a discreet smoking area has ever encouraged anybody to take up the filthy habit.

    If My Lounge at Gatwick can provide this service, why not Heathrow

    • kevin86 says:

      Have a cig before you arrive at the airport?

    • ChrisBCN says:

      There isn’t a sex room either, but guess what people cope and can wait until they get where they are going. I’m ok with not pandering to smokers – they have had free reign to smoke in many places affecting others where there is no escape (eg at bus stops) for a very long time.

      • kevin86 says:

        They’re worse than the can’t survive for a few hours without a drink types. Love playing the victim

      • David says:

        Brought me back to going to pubs/clubs as a nonsmoker and coming back clothes absolutely reeking. As for a sex room, that should be a thing. Good revenue in that.

      • Novice says:

        😂

    • Barrel for Scraping says:

      Presumably UK law comes into play here. They can’t just have a smoking room, it’s not allowed. Any smoking facilities have to be outside and maybe it’s difficult/impossible to fit one in that location. If smoking areas can be provided that don’t impact non smokers then great but remember UK law is very strict on this so if there’s no way to go outside it’s not happening

    • Edd L says:

      Such rooms aren’t uncommon in DE/AT/CH but I am yet to see one that doesn’t ‘leak’, so I’m glad we don’t have them in the UK

  • HughM says:

    That’s a pancake machine, not pancakes.

  • apbj says:

    Looks like a Wayfair catalogue.

    But a big improvement nonetheless.

  • Lumma says:

    I remember when you could get in the Gatwick one for something like £12 with a couple of hundred Virgin points on top.

    For the date I looked at, this was £36, No1 was £44 and the Clubrooms were £50. No wonder people try to get value by drinking as much as possible before flying.

    • Rob says:

      I remember that too! However that was when My Lounge served food on paper plates with disposable wooden cutlery.

  • elguiri says:

    I walked past this yesterday, looked like a sleazy club from the outside. If I had known it would have better food options than quantus I would have headed here instead.

    • JDB says:

      @elguiri – I saw your forum post re the T3 Qantas lounge which does seem rather overrated. Its big merit is that it’s often very quiet, but the food is very second rate, bordering on nasty and the wine is now actually worse than BA which is quite an achievement! Loos much better than BA though.

      The lounge scene at T3 isn’t quite what it was with CX often turning away alien passengers, Centurion full or a zoo at mainstream hours and Qantas downgraded.

      • Rob says:

        T3 Qantas lounge review on Monday!

      • Lumma says:

        Want as lounge is great, if the downstairs bar/restaurant is open. Outside those times I’d rather be in the AA or BA lounges. At least you’re trusted to pour your own drinks and you’re not waiting while everyone is ordering a “batista made coffee”

    • acewoking says:

      Sleazy club? Maybe it is a sex room after all.

  • Simon says:

    Is there a simple list / comparison anywhere of the T3 lounges accessible with PP/LK? (I think one of them is currently closed under refurb…)

    I’ve lost track on the new names etc… TIA

  • Alex says:

    Using coupon “AUDIN1” gets you 20% discount on cash booking.

    You can also redeem the cash component with Yonder card at 2% redemption rate.

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