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Virgin Hotels Glasgow closes suddenly with all staff fired

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Virgin Hotels Glasgow has closed with immediate effect.

Staff were reportedly told of the closure in a meeting on Tuesday morning.

The hotel is no longer bookable online.

Virgin Hotels Glasgow closes suddenly, goes into administration

Virgin Hotels issued the following statement:

“Lloyds Developments Limited – the owner of Virgin Hotels Glasgow, which Virgin Hotels has a management contract with – has financial problems and on 1 December its lenders put it into administration.   As a result, the directors of V Hotel Glasgow Ltd, the employer and operating company in respect of the hotel, are being advised by FRP Advisory LLP as they place that company into liquidation.  These financial issues mean that the hotel cannot continue operating and now has to close. 

Virgin Group tried to find solutions, including offering to purchase the hotel in order to keep the hotel open, keep the team in employment and ensure the completion of the development of the hotel, creating something the City of Glasgow could be proud of.  Unfortunately, the lenders have not accepted Virgin’s offers and intend to pursue a sales process with the hotel closed. Virgin Hotels is very disappointed by this decision after the hard work everyone has put into the hotel and because of the impact it will have on the team that works there.

Virgin Hotels’ heartfelt thanks and gratitude are to those employees, suppliers and guests who have been integral to the hotel’s launch in the City of Glasgow. Virgin Group and the owners are committed to ensuring employees are paid for every day they have worked this month.  

The Virgin Hotels team continues to have great ambitions for managing the hotel in Glasgow and looks forward to re-opening once a new owner is in place.  No other Virgin hotel is impacted – all other Virgin Hotels remain open and operating as normal as all Virgin Hotels are independently owned.” 

Virgin Hotels Glasgow

The hotel opened in August after substantial pandemic-related delays.

Set on Clyde Street it had 242 rooms, a ‘Commons Club’ restaurant and a cafe. Many rooms had panoramic views of the river – see above.

Pricing was always punchy, with rooms being priced around the £300 mark at opening.

Virgin tells us the hotel was performing as expected, and that the closure was “caused by the financial problems of the owner …. not underperformance by Virgin Hotels as the manager or brand.”

Virgin Hotels Glasgow closes suddenly, goes into administration

I would expect, given the excellent condition of the hotel, that it will be swiftly bought out of administration by a new owner. That said, nothing seems to be in hand.

Geoff Jacobs, managing director at Interpath Advisory said:

“We will focus our efforts on working with stakeholders to facilitate a sale of this significant and attractive property for the benefit of the creditors of Lloyds Developments Ltd.

“Although the property is not actively on the market as yet, those with an interest should get in touch with the Joint Interim managers to register their early interest.”

Whether it retains the Virgin Hotels branding under new ownership is a different question. Even if it does reopen soon, it is likely that anyone who has prepaid a stay will lose their money. With no sale process in hand, a reopening would seem some months away.

In an email to staff, Virgin Hotels CEO James Bermingham said:

“We plan to re-open the hotel once a new owner is in place and we hope we can work together to give you priority on jobs as before.”

All of Virgin’s hotels are owned and managed separately, and this closure doesn’t affect any other Virgin Hotels site. Our review of Virgin Hotels Edinburgh is here and our review of Virgin Hotels New York City is here.


How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards

How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards (April 2025)

As a reminder, there are various ways of earning Virgin Points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses.

You can choose from two official Virgin Atlantic credit cards (apply here, the Reward+ card has a bonus of 18,000 Virgin Points and the free card has a bonus of 3,000 Virgin Points):

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

18,000 bonus points and 1.5 points for every £1 you spend Read our full review

Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard

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You can also earn Virgin Points from various American Express cards – and these have sign-up bonuses too.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold is FREE for a year and comes with 20,000 Membership Rewards points, which convert into 20,000 Virgin Points.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

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The Platinum Card from American Express comes with 50,000 Membership Rewards points, which convert into 50,000 Virgin Points.

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Small business owners should consider the two American Express Business cards. Points convert at 1:1 into Virgin Points.

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American Express Business Gold

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Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which earn Virgin Points

Comments (66)

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

  • GaryS says:

    This is a shock! The Virgin Hotel was becoming one of my favourite places for a drink. I was really looking forward to the summer next year and seeing the retractable roof in the upper bar in action. Staff were really friendly, this is a terrible thing to happen to them at Christmas.

  • Andy says:

    You’d have thought they’d want it open for Celtic Connections in January and the Glasgow (Europe’s largest) Comedy Festival in March. Kind of suggests that they don’t have a lot of bookings for then. Any Glasgow hotel that’s not booked out for CC is doing something wrong. Like pricing itself out of the market…

    • Stu_N says:

      The Glasgow hotel market is very different from Edinburgh, both in tourism and business.

      Not sure about Celtic Connections driving demand – even if you fill Barrowlands, Symphony Hall and half a dozen smaller venues that’s probably only 10-15,000 people. Loads of options on the opening weekend for <£100 including new AC.

      Never heard of Glasgow Comedy Festival despite living 45 mins away from the weege – I thought Edinburgh Fringe was the biggest in the world, let alone Europe?

      • Ryan says:

        I wrote about this a number of weeks ago on here.

        A far bigger conference market in Glasgow than that of Edinburgh, and as others have said, a more solid tourist market in Edinburgh.

    • Andrew. says:

      You’re seriously overestimating the impact of the CC or CF in Glasgow.

      There’s no shortage of known brand City Centre hotel rooms from £70 a night at the weekends during this “festival”. You’ll find that most people who go will simply go home afterwards.

      The £300 a night price tag was clearly set to meet the loan repayments rather than set at what the local market is willing to pay.

      I caught up with some old weegieland workmates in November. Glasgow used to be absolutely buzzing at night, they were supposed to be open until 11pm, but closed up the pub when we left at 21:30.

  • Ryan says:

    All a bit fluffy this announcement from earlier this morning.

    **
    An Important Update on Virgin Hotels Glasgow: It is with a heavy heart that we announce the immediate closure of Virgin Hotels Glasgow.

    Lloyds Developments Limited – the owner of Virgin Hotels Glasgow, which Virgin Hotels has a management contract with – has financial problems and on 1 December its lenders put it into administration.

    As a result, the directors of ‘V Hotels Glasgow Ltd’, the employer and operating company in respect of the hotel, are being advised by FRP Advisory LLP as they place that company into liquidation. These financial issues mean that the hotel cannot continue operating and now has to close.

    Virgin Group tried to find solutions, including offering to purchase the hotel, to keep the hotel open, keep the team in employment and ensure the completion of the development of the hotel, creating something the City of Glasgow could be proud of. Unfortunately, the lenders have not accepted Virgin’s offers and intend to pursue a sales process with the hotel closed. Virgin Hotels is very disappointed by this decision after the hard work everyone has put into the hotel and because of the impact it will have on the team that works there.

    Virgin Hotels’ heartfelt thanks and gratitude are to those employees, suppliers and guests who have been integral to the hotel’s launch in the City of Glasgow. Our team is working hard to contact all guests with future bookings, but for those with immediate inquiries, please email info.glasgow@virginhotels.com.

    No other Virgin hotel is impacted – all other Virgin Hotels remain open and operating as normal as all Virgin Hotels are independently owned.

  • Red Flyer says:

    Agree 100% – Corbyn’s 2019 manifesto said just that and look what the establishment did to him when he showed potential to raise awareness of basic rights to the masses!

  • BP says:

    As seen on Facebook: “No Virgin lasts long in Glasgow” 😂

  • Pb says:

    Be interesting to know how much Virgin offered , clearly not enough in someone’s view .

    • Rob says:

      Yes, given the fact that the lenders now get nothing for a few months and any new owner has to pay to finish the hotel off, it must have been well off what they expect.

    • Catalan says:

      They didn’t offer enough for bmi either!

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