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Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

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This is our review of the One Hundred Shoreditch hotel in London.

Working for Head for Points has many perks but one of the best is getting to stay in and review some fantastic hotels. However, when asked to review One Hundred Shoreditch, located a 30 minute tube ride from my house, on a hot Friday night and with a toddler in tow, I was perhaps a little jaded about the prospect.

But as it turned out, One Hundred Shoreditch is the sort of hotel that can turn round even a grumpy old Londoner like myself.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

The hotel offered us a free room for a review to promote their current American Express cashback offer. If your account is targetted, you will get £60 back if you spend £300 at One Hundred Shoreditch by 30th September.

For clarity, the hotel is not part of any chain or major loyalty programme.

Location and arrivals

One Hundred Shoreditch occupies the building that housed the Ace Hotel, which shut during the pandemic. The hotel has been fully refurbished although the Lore Group, who now own and operate the hotel, did retain some elements of the Ace

The Lore Group also owns Sea Containers House in London, Riggs Washington DC, Lyle Washington DC and Pulitzer Amsterdam.

Located a five minute walk from Shoreditch High Street station, the hotel is very much in the heart of Shoreditch. It’s also just a 13 minute walk from Liverpool Street station (I timed it!) and is therefore also a decent option if you have meetings in The City.

It’s difficult to miss One Hundred Shoreditch as you walk up Shoreditch High Street. The modern, black façade, with angular protruding windows, is eye-catching even amongst the many funky store fronts and bars that line the road. The entrance is set back into the hotel up a few steps (there is also an accessible mini lift) so whilst it’s easy to find, it feels discreet and understated.

The hotel’s overall aesthetic is very contemporary and this is clear from the moment you enter the hotel. Large wooden sculptures sits either side of the entrance and the reception area is shrouded from the street with soft white drapes.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

There were a few people checking in, but I was immediately greeted and assisted by a friendly receptionist. Check-in was very quick and efficient – I was handed an iPad to complete some outstanding information, given a set of keycards and an explanation of how they worked, and was ready to go.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

The reception area is just part of the multifunctional hotel lobby. There’s a long slim table apparently reclaimed from the Ace that operates as a workspace (the Ace chain is well known for encouraging hot desking, even by non guests) and dotted throughout were well designed seating areas and nooks, each styled slightly differently.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

Whilst the design aesthetic is clearly fundamental to the hotel, it didn’t seem to compromise on comfort or practicalities. Armchairs were comfortable and situated next to coffee tables at exactly the right height and clever lighting meant it was cosy after dark, but you could still see your drink.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

There’s a lobby bar with further seating, plus a coffee shop serving pastries and snacks alongside good coffee.

Bedrooms at One Hundred Shoreditch

All rooms are called studios – the smallest room is simply called a studio, and the largest are studio suites. I was given a studio loft room.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

These are bigger than the entry-level studio at 248sq ft (vs 205 sq ft) and feature either an oriel window or Juliette balcony.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

The oriel window studios have bay windows that jut out over the street making up the angular hotel frontage, not dissimilar to the frontage of The Standard in Kings Cross. These bays are a good spot to sit and watch the action unfolding on the high street below, and are set up with a comfortable (and of course, ultra-stylish) armchair, coffee table and reading lamp.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

The bed was huge and very comfortable, with a soft mattress and puffy duvet and pillows. Whilst there wasn’t a desk (good job Rob didn’t take this review …..) there was a good sized round table and two chairs to use, lit by a low-hanging pendant light.

Turning into Rhys for a second, I’m happy to let you know that were plenty of sockets available around the room and one beside each side of the bed. They were tucked away, almost behind the headboard, which meant they weren’t immediately obvious.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

Some lovely glasswear is provided for use – sleek wine glasses, tumblers and a lovely carafe that you are encouraged to fill using the filtered water taps (sparkling and still) located outside by the lifts.

I really liked the industrial-style unit that housed the teas, coffees and snacks. It felt very efficient, with a slide out drawer and chic rattan compartments.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

Instead of the standard Nespresso machine, One Hundred Shoreditch provides a cafetiere and ground coffee. It felt both a little bit retro and a little bit chic.

My one constructive point for the room is that there wasn’t a clear place to plug in and use the kettle. The lead was rather short and it meant we had to use it on the ground which is not ideal with a toddler and her clumsy dad wandering about.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

The mini-fridge was surprisingly located away from the rest of the food and drink, in the wardrobe, but was very well stocked. The minibar very much reflected the achingly hip hotel ethos. Forget mini bottles of Smirnoff and Gordons gin, One Hundred Shoreditch offers Patrón tequila, canned cocktails by Whitebox, gluten-free beer by London brewery Two Tribes, and a sparkling CBD drink brand called Little Rick.

The overall room design was attractive, white and bright, with a tapestry wall hanging, cool art and a beautiful vase of eucalyptus. It did make me chuckle though to see the room’s styling slightly marred by my requested travel cot:

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

Whilst it was immaculately clean and my daughter was very comfortable, it seems that even the most stylish of hotels can’t improve the aesthetics of the universally ugly travel cot.

Bathroom

The bathroom was functional and attractive and included a decent sized bath.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

Again, I liked the use of rattan baskets to store clean towels and amenities and I appreciated the size of sink to surface space ratio. My pet hate in hotel bathrooms is when there’s an impressive-looking giant sink but nowhere to put your toiletry bag.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

The sink unit was an unusual black matt unit, which was quirky but rather cool.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

Toiletries were provided by D.S. & Durga, a brand I hadn’t heard of before but are seemingly a Brooklyn based perfumer whose candles retail for $65, so suitably high-end. Everything smelt great and I thought the refillable glass bottles ticked both the sustainability and attractiveness boxes.

Dining at One Hundred Shoreditch

One Hundred Shoreditch invited me to sample dinner at their Tom Moore- helmed restaurant, Goddard & Gibbs.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

Billed as ‘an all-day restaurant and wine bar specialising in British seafood with a focus on ethical sourcing and local suppliers’, Goddard & Gibbs exudes a ‘70s elegance. The restaurant has terrazzo marble tables, funky little table lights and leather banquettes.

Cocktails are unusual; I was tempted by a butter and sage gimlet but the maître d’ encouraged me to sample a tequila-based ‘Smoked Paloma’ instead.

There’s a raw bar offering mussels, prawn cocktail and ceviche, along with a full, seafood-heavy menu. My husband and I loved the prawn cocktail (I’m so glad this once unfashionable dish is back again) and the tempura vegetables were lightly battered with a lovely miso dressing.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

I went for a spelt risotto which was unusual and tasty, but my husband’s choice of roasted skate wing with XO dressing (at the recommendation of the excellent maître d) was the real winner, and something that isn’t commonly seen on menus.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

The service in the restaurant was outstanding. We were there early (classic toddler parents) so the restaurant was quiet, but the balance was found between being helpful and not too smothering. Everyone was helpful and friendly and unfailingly kind to my little girl.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

Breakfast at the hotel was buffet style, laid out in the wine bar section of Goddard & Gibbs. The usual hot options of scrambled eggs, bacon and sausages were well cooked according to my meat-eating husband.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

I enjoyed the fresh berries and bircher muesli and was tempted by a huge blueberry muffin.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

I also had a freshly-made spinach, apple and many-other-ingredients green smoothie which was delicious and made me feel I was counterbalancing said muffin. My daughter ate her body weight in blueberries, so everyone was happy.

Drinking and social spaces

When I first spoke to our contact at One Hundred Shoreditch about this review, she was very keen for me to experience the social spaces at the hotel, telling me that these set the hotel apart.

I have heard statements like this before and been underwhelmed so I politely nodded along. However, she was absolutely right. If you are planning a night out in Shoreditch, I can recommend the One Hundred Shoreditch rooftop.

Of course, it helped that I visited as the sun set over the City on an August evening but, even closed to the elements, the rooftop would be a beautiful spot for a drink.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

A narrow balcony covered in plants and palms stretches along the main bar, meaning tables feel private and secluded from the other drinkers. A DJ booth is set up and judging by the clientele it’s attracting the glamourous East End crowd. Sadly I am now a paid up member of the ‘South London buggy pushing’ crowd.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

The lobby has its own bar too, serving drinks and pizza from under an eye-catching art installation.  

On a late night or a cold winter evening however, I would be tempted to head to the Seed Library in the basement of the hotel:

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

Created by high profile bartender ‘Mr Lyan’ (or Ryan Chetiyawardana to his Mum), Seed Library is the polar opposite to the rooftop. Snug and rather sexy, it offers a 60s vibe with lots of warm orange colours and dim lighting.

Gym

The gym was filled with brand new equipment including Peloton bikes, a treadmill and free weights. I would like to have seen a few lighter free weights for those of us without guns of steel, but other than that, it looked like it would do the job.

Review: One Hundred Shoreditch hotel, London

Conclusion

I was impressed by One Hundred Shoreditch. The design of the hotel is contemporary without compromising on comfort and I found every aspect of the hotel considered and chic.

One thing I found consistent was service that was 5* efficient but very warm and human.

The maître d couldn’t do enough for us, but also chatted about where he thinks the best tomatoes can be bought in London, a waiter served us beautifully but also told us stories about babysitting his niece, the doorman cracked jokes with my husband as he showed us around. For a modern hotel, I feel it’s a very modern type of service that is hard to get right, but One Hundred Shoreditch hit the mark.

Obviously I was there as the guest of the hotel, so the service I experienced was always going to be influenced by this. However, I was watching the staff’s interaction with other guests and the times when they would have no idea that I was reviewing the hotel (the doorman being a good example of this).

Studio rooms start at £262 per night, the Studio lofts are available from £347, and the American Express ‘£60 back on £300 spend’ offer runs to 30th September.

You can visit the One Hundred Shoreditch website here. If you need to earn a reward on your stay, book via this page of Hotels.com here and pick up Hotels.com Rewards credit – if you pay at check-out you will also trigger the Amex cashback.


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Comments (53)

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

  • Ian M says:

    Did the bathroom have a separate shower or just the bath? Looks like a shower curtain is visible in the photo. Bath with a shower curtain seems rather outdated for this level of hotel

  • jj says:

    Looks effortlessly chic, and a cut above the oh-so corporate look offered by many London hotels. Could be an option next time I have meetings in the City, although these have largely been replaced by Zoom and Teams.

    But, seriously, a breakfast buffet? No table service at all? In a high-end hotel? I loathe buffets, and I actively avoid hotels that don’t pamper me with fresh food, cooked the way I like it and brought to my table while I relax. Given the hotel’s location, though, I guess that you’re not short of high quality local options.

  • lumma says:

    That “Power Point” gluten free beer is one of the worst beers I’ve ever tasted. It’s not bland like some lagers, it’s actually unpleasant.

  • MaukSW9 says:

    Great review, makes me want to go north of the river.

  • Notmyrealname says:

    Another freebie”review”

    Pictures are pretty and your opinion is worth a note but nothing else has any weight as the hotel was aware of why you were there so service and food would have been skewed.

    I would expect a travel site to review hotels\airlines when they are not given freebies to do it!

    I’m sure you can still write off the cost as a business expense 🙂

    • Rob says:

      You totally fail to understand how we operate. This is not some kiddy travel blog which the writer uses to tap up freebies.

      I, as owner of the business, do not accept free trips unless absolutely necessary. It is over 3 years since I did anything for free that wasn’t linked to an event. I’d rather be at home with my kids.

      The rest of the team are salaried employees and go where they are told to go. It doesn’t matter to them if HfP pays or if it is a freebie – they personally don’t pay either way – and I decide on what we accept based on whether it will make an interesting and relevant article.

      For anything outside the UK there is no such thing as ‘free’ either – a typical review will cost us £500 in expenses plus the loss of 2-3 days of ‘in office’ time.

      • Bagoly says:

        “It doesn’t matter to them if HfP pays or if it is a freebie – they personally don’t pay either way ” – that is indeed how you would see it if you were the employee, and I expect that is true of most of the regular commenters too (it’s more difficult to say anything about the wider readership)
        But that doesn’t mean that other people see it that way when they are in the employee position.

        P.S. I don’t think HfP is accepting too many freebies.

        • Notmyrealname says:

          HfP can accept as may freebies as they want-Good for them I say-But don’t then expect any report to be looked at seriously.

          • RussellH says:

            I imagine that you place zero value on published theatre, film, TV, book and restaurant reviews too?
            But even if you have paid your way and then reviewed something, how do I know that what you value is the same as what I value?
            Frankly, I value a review of something here around 10x that of a review of the same place on, say, trip advisor, because over the years I have come to trust the opinion of the writers..

      • Notmyrealname says:

        ” do not accept free trips unless absolutely necessary”
        So this was absolutely necessary? Doesn’t sound like it from this quote-you also took your kid with you 🙂

        “located a 30 minute tube ride from my house, on a hot Friday night and with a toddler in tow,…. I’d rather be at home with my kids.!

        And this
        “For anything outside the UK there is no such thing as ‘free’ either – a typical review will cost us £500 in expenses plus the loss of 2-3 days of ‘in office’ time.”

        There have been several reviews where the airline has given a freebie then at location there has been a hotel freebie.
        Both end up with glowing reviews (quell surprise)

        Remote working-lounge access\ business seating means there is no real loss of Office time -apart from physically standing by the water cooler of course 🙂
        And you’re saying you cannot write off any expenses off as a business cost?
        Pull the other one.

        Bottom line:-
        Paying for the trips and reporting back would give these articles a LOT more weight.

        • S says:

          “ Doesn’t sound like it from this quote-you also took your kid with you 🙂”

          Except Rob didn’t write this review! Very strange thing to get yourself worked up over on a Sunday morning…

        • Rob says:

          I don’t disagree with you on that. If we’ve paid real money then you should treat the review slightly differently.

          However, let’s assume I’d just happened to be at this hotel paying cash. I wouldn’t have gone near the gym, I wouldn’t have gone to the rooftop bar and I wouldn’t have eaten in the restaurant – this is exactly what happened with the York review yesterday. Would this have been a ‘better’ review? Probably not. Wouldn’t the York review yesterday have actually been better if the hotel had arranged it, we’d eaten in the restaurant and I’d had a full tour, allowing me to see all the different sorts of rooms and then suggesting which would work best for readers? Yes, it would. Instead you just got a rant from me and some backstory on the Principal hotel chain.

          Irrespective … we always declare how a stay was funded and you are free to make up your own mind.

          Let’s just clarify one thing about expenses – do you have any idea, at all, about how tax works? I don’t save £500 in tax by writing off £500 of expenses. I save (£500 x my tax rate). If Rhys runs up £500 of expenses, I am still personally £300 out of pocket for letting him do it.

          • ChasP says:

            wow – why all the negative comments
            Great review – which like all HFP articles makes clear at the start that it was a freebie arranged by the hotel – thats all I ask then I can make my own mind up.
            As Sinead further points out she knows she was a special guest but thought the service looked good for other guests

            All the info was there – make your own mind up about the hotel but don’t winge at HFP

    • RussellH says:

      Of course Sinead’s opinion has weight.
      Hotels constantly offer both travel journalists and tour operators ‘free’ stays, but surprise, surprise, we/they are certainly experienced enough to be able to see beyond the fact that some of the hotel staff know that they are effectively inspecting.

      Further, you might be surprised by the number of hotels that do not make any special effort for the people who they supposedly are trying to impress.

      I think of the hotel where the person serving the breakfast said to me “you are from the trade, do you mind waiting until I have served all the paying guests?” Clearly he did not not know that I was not on a freebie, though I was on a heavily reduced rate.

      Then there was the 5*(allegedly) hotel that refused to let us take our bags up to our rooms, but just left them in the lobby when we were all desperate for a shower and some clean clothes.

      Or the other 5*(allegedly) hotel where we arrived very late (around 2400 instead of 2100) and the receptionist handed the person in charge of our group a tray full of keys and a sheet of room assignments and then disappeared.

    • Comment says:

      I agree FWIW. Freebie reviews are inherently biased. I prefer blogs that don’t do freebie reviews (like omaat), but read both.

      • Rob says:

        Everything is biased, it is just that the bias is often less obvious. Would someone trash a hotel brand if they were currently negotiating a big ad contract with that brand for example? OMAAT reviews often come with a big plug for their booking service and the rooms are booked at heavily discounted travel agent rates via Ben’s hubby which limits the ability to criticise. Look at their St Regis Venice review vs mine.

        • Bagoly says:

          I certainly did appreciate reading your review of the St Regis after his!
          But it’s interesting to read his again – despite saying he would be very keen to go back, he doesn’t omit several criticisms.
          How much of the difference in conclusion is bias v luck is an interesting question.

  • John D says:

    In god knows how many years it makes no difference over a dressing table mirror for the wife having to be part of our luggage. Do hotels not know women. and some men, wear makeup or need to see their face other than in a steamy bathroom. A huge mirror provided in this hotel report but you have to lie on the floor as it is the side of the bath!!!!

    • Bagoly says:

      Even in a steamy bathroom the lighting is often done badly so that one cannot see ones face clearly in the mirror above the basin.
      Relevant for those of use who shave using foam (not a particularly small proportion of men) as well as you mention who wear make-up (a large proportion of women and a small proportion of men)
      How do they miss this? (Answer, probably the designer/investor never actually try out as a pilot before deciding)
      Could we add both these requirements (lighting on bathroom mirror, and useful mirror outside bathroom) the the HfP checlists along with USB and electrical sockets? 🙂

  • Nick says:

    Wow, what an amazing hotel. Sounds absolutely perfect, got to be up there as one of the best in London.

  • BSI1978 says:

    FYI, this offer is on my card but it’s runs to the 20th, not quite month end which is a shame as I am planning a Bank Holiday weekend jaunt into town.

    • aseftel says:

      If you have the Hyatt offer and want to be close to Shoreditch, the Andaz is worth a look.

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