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Introduces Emory
As the hotel loved by Princess Victoria and the late Queen and Madonna and almost all who are worthy of admiration, Claridge is regarded by those who are lucky enough to go as the top of London Luxury. Even if you visit once a year for their afternoon tea or to stare at the Christmas tree, or, as I do, to hike through the lobby to gabby at the original Art Deco typography on the restaurant doors, you are the type of person who will know about Emory.

The first new property from the Maybourne group, which owns Claridge, in 50 years, Emory is all that Big C is not: fresh, funky, disturbing. With rooms starting from £ 1,100 per night, it is also a third more expensive. So if you are bent on Maybourne’s Brook Street address, is it worth changing things to try their new child on (nearby) block?

READ MORE: Claridge’s Hotel Review: Is this the best sleep in London?

What is vibe?

In many ways Emory feels like something new for the travel industry. “It’s in, through and up,” explains my dinner guest when we eat in the hotel’s delicious restaurant, ABC Kitchens (yes, without caps, very cool) where every dish is a memorable taste and color wash, especially the signature English peaguacamol and dover Sole tacos. When we wave with her arms to explain what she was talking about, the idea is that Emory guests get the sumptuous treatment without Pomp and Pageantry: the entrance is hidden in a sideall, there is no check-in, just someone who shows you to your lodging, where you go straight.

Instead of catching around in the lobby and people watching as you would do at Claridge’s, you spend on Emory 90 percent of your time behind the closed doors in your room. Actually no, suite: Each room is a suite, a news proclaimed by Emory as a first for a London hotel.

The Maybourne group, thanks to Qatari supporters, has spent £ 24 million to encourage guests to bring the party to their private neighborhoods. Unique art adorns each room, as well as floor -to -ceiling windows that look out over the knotted tree tops in Hyde Park, which from the perspective at the height of the suite look like an impossibly lush jungle.

Alexandra Champalimaud, Pierre-Ves Rochon, Patricia Urquiola and André FU have made every dormitory gleam with playful ingenuity; Ours had a gold pair of oversized glass that begging to be picked up and used as a props for photos after we popped the champagne from the minibar, which is included in the price of the room.

The suites

Everything is tailor made. Of the designers, insiders believe that the colliding structures in Urquiola’s maximum carpets and walls are the most marble; My suite had Andre Fu’s Genteel in the middle of the century aesthetics, all sweeping wooden panels that were given glowing by high camp pops of glittering gold on table tops. The bathroom’s symmetry is so pleasant that it encourages relaxation in itself, and then there is the lighting, which looks like release a long sigh. In some way, the sum gives the impression that the space continues forever, even if my apartment was 530 foot square.

The guests follow their favorite designers from Claridge’s or adjacent Maybourne Hotel Berkeley to Emory; FU has designed room for all three properties. This Murviga likes to experience these hotels as a night spent at an exhibition: There is already a trend that appears in the guests to spend two nights on Berkeley and two nights on Emory (this new building was originally an extension of Berkeley; the hotels are interconnected) to get a feeling for both. The attention to detail is what you will notice first: my room had four types of race hangers.

There is also a wonderful spa, where I thought the design information was most provocative: in cabinets there is a shelf that is only too small to place your phone on, even if it looks designed for that purpose. Everywhere you go, the design is to think.

The metal reinforcements that point incredibly from the ceiling will be as iconic as the swing circle at Savoy or the flags outside Claridge’s

The rest: Gwyneth Paltrow’s personal trainer, Tracy Anderson, runs the gym in the basement. She hadn’t been yet when I went in but her staff drove me broken in the bouncy floor. Then there is the roof bar, only for the guests, which offers a new perspective on western London, which highlights the best of the late Richard Rogers architecture, the metal reinforcements that point from the roof will be as iconic as the swing circle at Savoy or the flags outside Claridge.

The verdict: Emory is part of a new cohort of luxury hotels in the capital together with the new Owo at Whitehall and the peninsula at Hyde Park Corner which costs north of a grand for one night. The management motivates the cost with the inclusion of two car transfers and breakfast in the morning and added extra as a free champion in the room. Claridge still wins if you want to dress to be seen, but Emory’s attention to details is unsurpassed. Lock yourself away and have the most amazing behind closed-door party.

What these prices mean for hotel room prices in the capital in the coming years is mild, but if you can afford, go: A stay will make you feel as important as the people who are photographed who fall out of Claridge during the early hours. And who doesn’t want to feel that way sometimes?

Suites on Emory starts from £ 1,100 per night; Book online

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