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Hampton reveals the hotel of the future …. in Ealing

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Back in 2018, Hilton announced an overhaul of its Hampton by Hilton budget hotel brand for the first time in 10 years.

Building hotels takes time, of course, so it has taken two years for the first new-look hotel to open in the Europe / Middle East / Africa region.

Hilton chose Ealing! I’m not sure why, but given they could have picked anywhere in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, Ealing was too convenient to ignore. I popped over to take a look.

Review Hampton by Hilton Hotel London Ealing

Regular readers will know that I am a big fan of Hampton by Hilton, Courtyard by Marriott and Holiday Inn Express hotels, as well as Premier Inn, if they are new builds. The quality level is very high these days and they are sweeping away bed and breakfast and low-quality independent competition wherever they open.

The new look Hampton by Hilton raises the bar further. The quality of this hotel is SUBSTANTIALLY better than the Holiday Inn Bournemouth which I reviewed on Monday. There is real pressure now on the core Hilton, Marriott and Holiday Inn brands to raise their game before they get eaten by their own children.

The new-look Hampton by Hilton room

Let’s take a look at what I found. Fundamentally, Hilton has used a number of clever innovations to allow it to fit a lot into a small room. (Hilton has an ‘Innovation Gallery’ in the hotel attached to its Head Office in Virginia, which I visited in 2018.)

Part of the ‘next generation’ strategy is to reduce room size without making them feel smaller. To be fair, I think Hilton has pulled it off.

Let’s look at a few features:

Review Hampton by Hilton London Ealing hotel

Above the bed are a number of pictures and artefacts. You can see a framed record, and the one on the left is a made from an old letter. It is not behind a frame, interestingly.

Here is another shot which shows the artwork off in a better way:

Hampton by Hilton London Ealing hotel review

The floor is wooden with a large rug under and around the bed.

There are a lot of sockets. Two plugs on each side of the bed plus a USB.

There is large padded headboard behind the pillows, for people who like to work from their bed.

So far, so standard. It then gets more interesting:

Review Hampton by Hilton London Ealing hotel

Next to the bed is a modular green sofa. This is basically made out of four different units which can be moved around, and could even be used to create an extra sleeping area.

Thankfully, Hilton has not gone down the – perhaps now abandoned – industry trend of dumping desks. Yes, it saves space, but it also annoys your customers. Instead you have this:

Review Hampton by Hilton London Ealing hotel

A huge 55 inch TV – as good, if not better, than most people would have at home. More interesting is the area below:

Review Hampton by Hilton London Ealing hotel

There is a flip-out desk. This is very clever, allowing you to have a virtually full depth work area which only takes up a very small amount of room space when not in use. It doesn’t wobble at all, before you ask. This has another two plugs plus a USB.

There is a fridge provided (not always a given in budget or even mid-range hotels) and a kettle. This was a surprise though – the fridge and kettle are from Smeg. High quality, attractive and not cheap. Note also the leather handles on the drawers.

Review Hampton by Hilton London Ealing hotel

The ‘wardrobe’ is what you come to expect from low cost hotels these days, ie an open rail. The coathangers are ‘proper’ ones and not the silly ‘unstealable’ ones I had to contend with at Holiday Inn Bournemouth.

Review Hampton by Hilton London Ealing hotel

There isn’t much you can do to revolutionise a hotel bathroom of course. Toiletries are from dispensers.

Review Hampton by Hilton London Ealing hotel

The one novel element is that the sink surface is made as one piece. They haven’t cut a hole in the counter top and dropped in a sink – it is one large moulded chunk of plastic. It looks different and is presumably a lot easier to clean.

Review Hampton by Hilton London Ealing hotel

The shower has a rainfall and a traditional head.

Down in the lobby ….

The lobby follows the current trend of being a combined eat / drink / work / socialise space. See:

Review Hampton by Hilton London Ealing hotel

and:

Review Hampton by Hilton London Ealing hotel

There is no restaurant but you can order paninis and other snacks 24/7 from the bar or reception.

The breakfast room in the basement is currently closed. I popped down there but it was in darkness (and has no windows!). Guests receive a ‘brown bag’ breakfast of croissant, muffin, cereal bar, orange juice, a mandarin and coffee, to eat in the lobby or their room.

There is a good sized gym in the basement.

About Hampton by Hilton London Ealing

As I visited the hotel, I should round out the article to make it a full review. It’s a great hotel, in a brand new building. The only thing I don’t understand is why it was built where it is.

It isn’t just the Hampton. Within 90 seconds walk on Uxbridge Road you have an ibis Styles and a Travelodge, and a Premier Inn is under construction. Why?! You are still 10 minutes walk from Ealing Broadway tube station, which is quite a trot at night or in bad weather or with luggage.

OK, Crossrail will eventually open, but the distance from the station won’t change. West Ealing station is a little nearer – this is National Rail serving Paddington, and Heathrow via the TFL Rail services.

Ealing Broadway itself is a decent area, with a huge number of shops and restaurants between the hotel and station.

At the moment you can get rooms for £56 per night which is ludicrously good value, given that this includes breakfast and everything is brand new.

Review Hampton by Hilton London Ealing hotel

Conclusion

If this is the Hampton by Hilton of the future, then I’m impressed.

(I accept that this one, as the first ‘next generation’ Hampton in EMEA, will be used by Hilton to market the brand to potential franchisees. It may have been a little over-specified for this reason.)

You have what is, effectively, a budget hotel with a more sockets, a better TV, a better kettle, a better fridge, a better shower and arguably better decoration than many people have at home. The pressure on the four-star hotel brands is going to get tougher.

The Hampton by Hilton London Ealing website is here.


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Comments (98)

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

  • ChrisW says:

    Desk looks great. Was that green sofa comfortable? It doesn’t look it!

  • rob(staaaar) says:

    This is very similar to the Hilton Garden Inn at Bucharest airport I stayed at last November; desk, drobe, bath sink, fridge. There was a full size restaurant however. It was near enough brand new then. I was impressed and intend to return (sometime).

  • BJ says:

    Based on the review and previous comments I am getting the impression that peoples expectations are declining. I am unimpressed, it all sounds very ibis-novotelish. Too much junk on the walls to gather dust. They spoil the huge plus of a wooden floor with a rug that will het dirty. Those sofa bed things quickly get shabby and are not comfortable. Pull out desks! Who wants that? Are they not a danger to young kids fingers? OK, fridge is a plus but who cares what brand they and kettles are provided they do the job. Are the bathrooms prefabricated, are the showers big enough? Would like to have seen them have toilet separate from bathroom like HIX. What is with a windowless breakfast room in a new build hotel, are they mad? Despite all that I do like HbH but the article does not convey to me that the standard has been raised, it suggests quite the opposite in fact. I stayed at HbH Croydon when it was new and I loved it. I stayed again last year and it was a shadow of its original self, it was becoming tired and shabby already, rooms were falling into disrepair with poor standards of housekeeping. Felt like it was becoming a victim of high guest throughput and lack of attention to housekeeping and maintenance due to presumablthroughput ands.

    • John says:

      I agree. They’re not bad but I only stay in them when I can avoid doing so! The hotels are so cheap to build that the wear and tear is factored in. I really dislike the HbH bed. Too small for a couple and it’s just a mattress placed on a box that easily slides off, not forgetting the scratchy sheets and poor pillows. HbH offers the worst sleep in the Hilton brand for me.

      Look at CleanStay, rooms are no cleaner than they were before, ie, not clean and maybe even worse due to reduced HK hours. We consider it a seal to keep the dirt in…marketing BS.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        mistake is by deep clean they just mean having sprayed around some santiser rather than what I would consider a deep clean and that’s a proper scrub/wipe with a cloth and a duster in every possible nook and cranny

        • Lady London says:

          for me to believe a deep clean I want that, and steam over every surface including soft furnishings that are not washed every guest, and in every nook and cranny. Also under surfaces, which they forget.

    • Lady London says:

      I agree with you about the tattiness of the HbH Croydon – it feels like a converted 1970’s office building that is finally falling apart – but would say high standards of housekeeping and Hilton professional running standards are what actually saves it.

      YMMV on the housekeeping but I have never had an issue.

    • cinereus says:

      Have to agree looks hideous and that desk seems barely useable. Give me the airbnb or even bnb any day.

      • Rob says:

        Yeah, right, because London is overrun with B&Bs with rainfall showers, fridges in the rooms, high quality beds, USB sockets, six plug sockets and 55 inch TVs in the rooms for £56 per night.

        That’s before you get to little factors such as many B&B’s throw you out at 10am and won’t let you back into the building until the evening.

        Be quite clear. The standard of B&B and independent low-cost hotel accommodation in this country is appalling and bordering on a disgrace. The fact that they are closing at an aggressive rate as hotels like this spring up is proof of that. Once the Hampton opens in Torquay it should knock 25 B&Bs out of business overnight, and rightly so.

        The desk works fine, I promise you 🙂

        • Nathan says:

          Couldn’t agree more Rob 🍻

        • Oh! Matron! says:

          What Rob Said. This is not a Conrad. This is a HbH. My first thoughts were that it’s appealing to the same demographic as Aloft, and, therefore, not the majority of the readership of HfP.

          But, it looks infinitely more pleasable than many other hotels at double the price.

        • BJ says:

          Don’t disagree with any of that @Rob. My problem is that if hotels like this are not maintained to high standards akin to their condition soon after opening then they will end up just like those B&B but that can happen to any hotel not just those at the budget end. For example, look what happened to many Hiltons. My experience last year at HbH Croydon was different from that of @Lady London, and it wasn’t just down to housekeeping and wear and tear. Drains in bathrooms were smelly and slow-running, there was mould in the shower, blinds were broken, lights were not working. It’s a slippery slope when hotels let standards drop but I have no idea of the bigger picture for the brand as Croydon is the only one I’ve stayed at more than once.

          • Gormlesstraveller says:

            I like how you tell it how it is. Would be good if you shared your tripadvisor username on here so we can read more.

          • BJ says:

            I don’t do Tripadvisor but I am sure others here do. Despite my comments I would stay at HbH again, I might just have got a worse than average room, YMMV as @Lady said. However, if I get an equally bad room next time then it’ll be time to look for an alternative.

          • Lady London says:

            If it’s that bad it makes you wonder whether an end of lease is coming up.
            I will look out for those problems next time I stay at HbH Croydon @BJ.

            If I do find them my attitude would be the same as yours – may be one more time but not after that.

            They have treated me well though – it may be I got a nicer room because I stayed a few times last year and, I think, the year before that.

        • Callum says:

          Perhaps I’m “reading the room” wrong here, but although you may be too good for a B&B, rubbing your hands with glee at the prospect of 25 (often family) businesses being shut down overnight by a major corporation in the middle of a brutal recession caused by a global pandemic seems incredibly heartless.

          Its not as if their mere existence is causing you any harm…

          • Rob says:

            1. Hopefully covid will be virtually forgotten by the time the hotel opens. 2. It isnt owned by a major corporation, 99% of Hilton hotels are franchised and the owner is probably a local businessman, and clearly all the staff will be local. 3. If customers immediately desert local B&Bs for the Hampton then it is quite obvious that they aren’t fit for purpose and should go. Decent ones will survive.

            Show me one person who doesn’t consider the state of UK seaside accommodation to be an absolute disgrace ….

          • The Savage Squirrel says:

            Pre-Covid, the vast majority of UK seaside accomodation outside the high-end boutique segment was aimed at the person who was too poor, too infirm or cared too little to take a short flight to Europe. You have to be very poor, very infirm or very lazy to fall into that demographic. Standards reflect that.

  • Anna says:

    I wonder if the “coming soon” Hampton at J7 of the M65 will be like this. Smeg fridges are a rarity in these parts, I hope they are securely fixed to the walls 🤣

    • Anna says:

      J6 even!

      • Chris Heyes says:

        Anna,opening February will be stopping there on our next visit to Blackburn (our house occupied niece) not happening until next year due to Covid

        • Anna says:

          I’m eyeing it up for when the in-laws come to visit, Chris, I’m sure they’d be much more comfortable in a hotel 😂

  • Chrisasaurus says:

    The comment about internal competition is very on point, and fundamentally I think an issue for Hilton etc.

    Once there’s a HbH offering room rates well below Hiltons, who is booking the Hilton? Price sensitive retail are going for the Hampton – it still even has the Hilton name for them to feel warm and fuzzy.

    But bigger threat is that the Hilton’s have to go upmarket and have a rate differential and at what point do those rates wind up the wrong side of the corporate travel policy maximum line? At what point, who are they catering for at all?

    • Lady London says:

      I think it’s an evolution done by the cleverer hotel chains and the old brands are meant to die. Even if they carry the original name of the hotel group the overall branding is strong enough to let the original brand hotels go eventually. Easier to launch a new brand with new build/very exyensive refurbishments than to revitalise a Hilton in an old building it would be cheaper to let be torn down.

      Unless the really top end old hotels, the ones that are likely world famous, it’s really not worth investing, better to develop dynamic new brands instead.

  • Alice says:

    This doesn’t look substantially different to the other Hampton by Hilton properties across the UK that I’ve stayed in recently.

  • ThinkSquare says:

    Ealing is the sort of place I stay when on a business trip to London. The company budget won’t cover anything decent more centrally.

    That fridge handle looks like an accident waiting to happen

    • ChrisW says:

      I don’t get the expensive retro fridge. It looks out of place in a modern room especially because of its shape. Provided it works I couldn’t give a rats about it’s other benefits. Much rather than they spend the money on better linen/pillows instead.

  • Dave says:

    Having stayed 3 nights there completely agree with Rob but would also mention the staff who were excellent.Plenty of buses pass by from Ealing Broadway and there is a pay and display car park opposite.As for local restaurants you can’t go wrong and the family run Greek restaurant close by is excellent.

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