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EXCLUSIVE: I get a hard hat tour of Park Hyatt London River Thames

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As part of my day with Arnaud de Saint-Exupéry, the Area Vice President for Hyatt in the UK and Ireland, I joined him on a hard hat tour of Park Hyatt London River Thames.

Part 1 of this article, looking at the rest of my day with Arnaud, is here. This part looks specifically at Park Hyatt London River Thames.

I need to say upfront that I was not allowed to take any photographs inside the hotel. It is keen to keep its secrets under wraps until the grand opening later this year. There were also certain features I was asked not to mention.

Park Hyatt London River Thames tour

Park Hyatt London River Thames is in Nine Elms. It is at the far end of a surprisingly long swathe of new buildings, including the American Embassy, that has sprung up on the South Bank of the River Thames. The run of buildings starts just beyond the MI6 building, which some rooms at Park Hyatt overlook, and carries on via a green grassy ribbon towards the reborn Battersea Power Station.

Let’s discuss the elephant in the room first. Nine Elms is not known for its upscale hotels, and especially not a high-end luxury brand such as Park Hyatt. Even accounting for the huge number of new luxury residential blocks nearby (you may have seen photos of the two apartment blocks which are joined by a glass bottomed swimming pool), there seems little local demand.

Park Hyatt London River Thames tour

Part of the appeal of the project is the residential element. The hotel tower is the smaller of the two twin towers in the photos here. Over 50% of the tower will be apartments with astonishing views. The hotel itself only occupies the lower 18 floors.

The other part of the appeal is the concept of an urban resort. The leisure side of the hotel is close to completion so I got a good feel for the finished product. The hotel swimming pool is very large and is not in the basement – it is above ground with lots of light. The spa and gym look amazing. The hotel rooms are a good size for Central London and mainly have good views and lots of light. The hope is that guests will be happy to base themselves here and spend time relaxing in the hotel.

We entered the site via a neighbouring residential building. This was, frankly, astonishing and I’ve been in most high-end London apartment complexes at one time or another. The swimming pool for residents was bigger than any city hotel pool you have ever seen (and was empty) and opposite was a residents kids play centre. The apartments being built in this part of London are on a different scale to the rest of the city, yet alone the rest of the country.

Park Hyatt London River Thames tour

The pre-opening General Manager of Park Hyatt London River Thames is Rike Erdbrink. Rike has had an amazing career with Hyatt, starting out as an apprentice at Park Hyatt Hamburg over 20 years ago. Jump forward a decade and she had her first Pre-Opening role as Front Desk Manager at Hyatt Capital Gate Abu Dhabi. Jump forward another seven years and she was the Pre-Opening Hotel Manager at Hyatt Regency Beijing Wangjing. After a stint as General Manager at the (for once, already open) Park Hyatt Chicago she joined Park Hyatt London River Thames last October.

If I thought managing an established hotel was difficult, being the Pre-Opening General Manager is on a totally different scale. The hotel only has a handful of operating staff – the Executive Chef was just due to start, the Front Office and Sales Manager were in place – and all were based in a basement room in the tower.

The scope of the role, as you can imagine, is immense. On one table were samples of welcome cards (left in the rooms of arriving guests) from other Park Hyatt hotels so the team could decide on its own look. A few minutes later you’re dealing with a technician from the lift manufacturer who you need to sign off on the internal hotel lifts.

On the higher floors – because they are easily accessible from the residential lift which was fully functional – a number of suites and rooms have been decorated. Rike walked us around, highlighting items she loved and issues which still concerned her. Wherever we went, the views from the rooms dominated.

Once the room design is fully signed off, all of the loose items for each room will arrive in a box. Everything required (hangers, coffee machine, cups, make up mirrors etc) is collected off-site and individual containers made up for each room. The team can then unpack an entire room in one go.

Park Hyatt London River Thames tour

The image above is a Hyatt PR image of the all day dining restaurant.

As well as this, on the ground floor, what looks like it will be a beautiful Chinese restaurant is coming together. The hotel has a Chinese owner, and their representatives were also onsite when we were there. Part of Rike’s job is balancing their requirements – it is their money, at the end of the day – with those of Hyatt and with her own career-long experience of what she knows will work.

When will Park Hyatt London River Thames open?

There is no published opening date for the hotel. ‘Late 2024’ says the Hyatt website, and nothing I heard during my tour contradicted that. That said, you can go from looking at a 95% finished bedroom and then turn around to find yourself in a totally unfinished part of the property.

There is certainly no shortage of money being spent on this project, and it was very clear that Rike is committed to delivering an outstanding property.

I can’t wait to see the finished product, and to see the team without their hard hats. Will the wealthy be willing to head out to Nine Elms? This is the key question, and the one which won’t be answered until the doors are open.

Thanks to Rike, Arnaud and Hannah at FTI for being so generous with their time, for letting me sit in on their private meetings and for putting up with my stupid questions.

The Park Hyatt London River Thames website is here.


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Comments (48)

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

  • Geoff says:

    *Must resist temptation to make hard hat Alan Partridge reference *

  • kpworldtravels says:

    Park Hyatt have some absolute gems in their portfolio and some not so great brands. The Japanese ones are very well-known and you have little gems like PH Zanibar. The PH Dubai remains one of my favourite for its very un-Dubai like characteristic. I had an exclusive tour of soon-to-open PH Marrakech and that is going to be a great addition to their portfolio. Let’s see how PH London fares.

  • Novice says:

    Sounds good but recently I found out that I think I have fear of heights. I have always been a bit anxious when I go near full glass windows in a tall building and helicopter rides with glass bottom make me regret them. In South Korea, I went on a very high up cable car and it was an absolute nightmare and a lot of buildings are full glass windows so I realised I can’t handle being too close to the full glass windows high up for that long.

    Seems like the full glass thing is here to stay. I think if it covered the bottom part where a person’s legs are I probably would be ok.

    • Gordon says:

      If you could overcome your fear of heights, I’d thoroughly recommend a helicopter ride through the Grand Canyon! The pilots get as close as they can to the canyon walls, it’s an experience I’ll never forget. Rob Burgess can vouch for this, as he has done it!

      Something a little more subdued, would be the Skywalk, glass walls and floor looking down into the canyon.
      Although you have to pass through a metal detector first, for security, also because your not allowed to take any cameras or mobile phones to take pictures, you have to buy one of theirs, taken by the tour guides. Penny pinching in my book.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        Imagine how many Phones and Cameras would be lost over the edge of Skywalk and the loitering for the best selfie if everyone was allowed to take pics though.

        • Gordon says:

          There has been a few fatalities from selfie attempts, as you can stand on the edge of the canyon, no safety barriers anywhere! People were actually sitting on the edge when I was there, just needs a slip and it’s “catch you later”

      • Novice says:

        I will definitely do anything once, Gordon. So I probably will do it. I just don’t like my legs surrounding by glass as otherwise I don’t have the same level of freak outs. I have done hot air balloon ride over Serengeti and I don’t remember being scared then. I loved it.

        • Novice says:

          Also glass bottom helicopter ride over the optical illusion waterfall in the ocean in Mauritius wasn’t as bad as the cable car in South Korea.

          I wouldn’t like the skywalk if it’s glass. That’s the entire point. I don’t think I feel safe with everything glass. I don’t know why they need to make the floor to ceiling glass windows because surely you can see the same view if you have the bottom bit a little covered.

        • Gordon says:

          Never been in a hot air balloon, we have a 3 week safari in August In Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda, and hoping the wind is ok for a hot air balloon trip in the Maasai Mara.

          The below walkway bridge in the East Taihang Mountains, in China should be on your bucket list Novice, haha.
          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oo0NJsr5m4I

          • Novice says:

            If I ever want to leave this earth via a heart attack then yh I will head to China to that mountain 😂

            I do recommend the Masaai Mara balloon ride if weather permits you. I went Kenya/Tanzania as it seemed better to do it that way.

            Was going to go Zambia/Zimbabwe but COVID hit that year. Hopefully, will do it within this decade.

            Enjoy your trip Gordon. It sounds amazing.

  • Bervios says:

    I wonder when the Vauxhall roads and bus station redevelopment will take
    place ? This was meant to happen a few years back but seems to have stalled. It’s a mess currently.

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    Half way between MI6 and the American Embassy suggests a certain type of natural client?! At least the bar there is now the obvious place for James to meet Felix.

  • Bernard says:

    iPhone mugging zone too.
    Sainsbury’s Nine Elms seems to be the highlight of the area.
    Weird

  • Richie says:

    Staying/living here would be like staying in Jersey City and not Manhattan. It just isn’t London.

  • David says:

    Who remembers the Vauxhall market. Don’t know if it’s still there but there was a time you could buy ANYTHING in there. Counterfeit dvds, what look liked stolen gear and I remember clearly someone selling machetes, knives and samurai swords on a blanket on the floor. It was like Baghdad.

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