“Kit Kemp’s design creation in South Kensington combines quiet English charm and playfully eclectic prints with a little garden.”
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“Kit Kemp’s design creation in South Kensington combines quiet English charm and playfully eclectic prints with a little garden.”
From GBP 170.00 Read review
“Bright, fashionable and fun, the South Kensington townhouse is both mature and playful – this is Kit Kemp at her best.”
From GBP 150.00 Read review
“The conservative Victorian townhouse hotel is quintessentially English, on the residential backstreets in South Kensington.”
From GBP 205.00 Read review
“The home-from-home in South Kensington trades in lavish, unnecessary extras to offer unbeatable value in the capital city.”
From GBP 89.00 Read review
Rates from: GBP 300.00
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"This Anouska Hempel creation is the original 70s boutique hotel where drinking champagne in the Jacuzzi still seems okay."
Blakes is not your average London boutique hotel. The first of its kind, its demure location on a quiet street in South Kensington belies the fact that it enjoys a rock star status. Since it opened in 1976, Blakes has been a firm favourite with the affluent, the A-list and the aristocratic, as it has decadence and drama by the champagne bucket. Little wonder it counts Sharon Stone, Phillip Seymour Hoffman and Martin Sheen as past guests.
Anouska Hempel took inspiration from myriad destinations when designing Blakes, which has resulted in a chic patchwork of styles throughout. In the main lobby, antiquated-looking trunks (many of them YSL) are stacked up before delicate bamboo screens, whilst a pair of lovebirds look on from a wrought-iron cage. Precious trinkets from the Far East, India, Italy and Egypt jostle for space between bespoke furniture and sumptuous fabrics.
The facilities
Blakes Restaurant is an Orientalist paradise, serving up sophisticated Thai-Med fusion cuisine in a dimly-lit and incense-infused dining space. Black lacquer screens separate the main area from the Chinese Room, which is used for private banquets. Portraits of Chinese concubines and warriors look over the chic red-and-black seating, whilst vases of orchids provide solitary splashes of brightness.
There is a petite terrace at the back of Blakes, which is clean-lined and leafy. Less well-known is the even tinier terrace that’s tucked away on the top floor. Blakes benefits from being one of the tallest buildings in its immediate area, so a quiet hour enjoying afternoon tea up here is a real treat.
The rooms
The forty-five bedrooms of this boutique hotel are the most important of all. This was the first boutique hotel in London to have individually-designed rooms, and each has stood the test of time impeccably well. They vary enormously, from the delicate muslins and distressed white furniture of the Corfu Suite to the opulent velvet finishes and imposing four-poster bed in the Cardinal Suite. The lavish minibars are crammed with everything from Blakes fair-trade chocolate to Eucalyptus oxygen canisters. Staying at Blakes is the ultimate boutique hotel experience in London.
"Conjuring up images of the luxuriant Orient, the decor is dramatic, dark and decadent ... Despite all the pretenders, Blakes is still the original boutique hotel." The Independent 07
Blakes is the London base for film stars, musicians and all the top designers (so much so that it's called the Couture Hotel). It's also a wonderful place for a glamorous and romantic, don't-get-out-of-bed weekend in the city.
Blakes Hotel welcomes children, and provides extra cots for the room as well as a babysiting service. The hotel restaurant offers a reduced menu for children.
An eclectic menu with fashionable Asian influences is served up in a dark, exotic, seductively lit room, perfect for liaisons.